Last week there were a number of stories sparked off first by George Eaton in the New Statesman about a series of private Crosby Textor polls that the Tories are said to have commissioned in many of the 27 seats that were gained from the LDs at GE2015.
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Mrs May and her government loses her majority and can't pass a budget or even Brexit related legislation such as The Great Repeal Bill (sic), fun times ahead.
Oh and primus inter pares.
Edit: Second if you disregard TSE cheating!
@GeoffM
go fuck yourself.
I do recall seeing a Labour MP in charge of their election team on the BBC saying they would vote for a snap election. Admittedly, that could just be bluster.
Still, if you're cool with that, then all's well in the world.
They've helped imprison five sitting/recent MPs in the last few years, including one cabinet minster.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/apr/10/tory-election-spending-johnny-mercer-mp-police-some-claims-were-wrong
Hope it can live up to its promise (the game's set in Bohemia, 1403, telling a largely historical story of woe, treachery and so forth. It's been described as dungeons, but no dragons).
On-topic: hmm.
Could be looking at a snap election.
For the future, the relevant Acts may need rewriting to clarify things.
I can't imagine the Lib Dems would support a Corbynite government (hell, it's hard to imagine many Labour MPs supporting a Corbynite government), even if the SNP could be got on board. So there isn't an alternative government in the wings.
I have 2017, 2018 and 2019 elections all covered at odds of 12/1 upwards and I'm happy with that.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-derbyshire-39531246
Ever fancied living as a Byronic hero ?
Off on a slight tangent but that rule certainly applies to hereditary peerages.
Useless factoid of the day: The first and second Barons Stamp were killed by the same German bomb but the son is legally presumed to have died a fraction of a second later and therefore inherited the title for that very brief time.
The fear was that an early election called by Cameron might have hurt the Lib Dems?
As opposed to the 2015 one in which they did so well...
12/1 seems good value, but can't say I think it's likely.
So your first point illustrates neatly how much of a fucking moron you are.
Second, you and Sean were being bullying, pure and simple, last night. If you really can't work out the difference between me calling you a dickhead (which to be fair you are, so it is really only a statement of fact) and you two ganging up on a woman poster, then you are even more cretinous than I had previously believed. And I had previously believed that you were pretty cretinous.
http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2017/04/china-post-race-analysis-2017.html
Also, Bahrain's only a few days away. Will give the Ladbrokes market a second look later this morning, but nothing leapt out yesterday.
https://twitter.com/RyanRuggiero/status/851577150117425154
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-39564825
Can we tone it down from eleven please.
Mercedes might be paying close attention. Not sure when Ricciardo's contract runs its course, but he may be looking for Bottas' seat as well.
But maybe there are some historical counter-examples somewhere in this list, especially if you include Australia and Canada:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prime_ministers_defeated_by_votes_of_no_confidence
http://www.popularmechanics.com/flight/airlines/news/a26010/united-airlines-bump-passenger-rights/
So, he was still PM for 30 minutes after handing in his resignation?
Short notice period, admittedly!
Look, I understand. You embarrassed yourself last night so you're coming out swinging. Like a child. Edit: and as effective.
A bigger person would admit their error.
We sought volunteers and then followed our involuntary denial of boarding process (including offering up to $1000 in compensation) and when we approached one of these passengers to explain apologetically that he was being deined boarding, he raised his voice and refused to comply with crew member instruction.
My guess is that they went straight to selecting victims to reduce delay, as they were already fully boarded.
Seems optimistic Nick ....
All they have to say is that whilst they stand by their policies and procedures, they will be investigating how they were applied in this case!
But that doesn't exist in the UK as far as I know, so PeterMannion has a prima facie example here.
He (correctly, I think) progresses from 'would' to 'could' when describing the unfolding of his scenario.
https://constitution-unit.com/2017/04/11/can-the-brexit-clock-be-stopped/
That does not follow.
One very important aspect this narrative ignores is that this decision did not spring from the ether. The UK had been trying to get into the Community for a long time before that. MacMillan was a strong proponent of European integration. I even found a Pathé news clip from the 60s after the French veto which questioned whether De Gaulle's nationalism would put at risk 'the vision of a single currency and one general election from Sicily to the Orkney Islands'.
This link explains the compensation amounts mandated by the FAA for involuntary denial of boarding. The airline is required to pay back five times the ticket price in cash (including the original booking). But if the ticket was a low price advanced fare, that might not be so much?
Besides, if a room's cold and everyone with a torch leaves it for a warmer place, that only makes the room colder. Better to light a cliche than curse the grumpiness.
F1: I have cast my eye over the Ladbrokes' market. Nothing that really tempts. The only things I'm properly contemplating are points for Stroll or Ocon at 2.62 and 2.75 respectively. Stroll had the car for points in Australia (probably not China) but had two unlucky DNFs. Ocon has scored in both races so far, but only just. From memory, Bahrain's more like China than Australia, so Ocon would probably be the more appealing.
Tricky, though. The midfield's pretty tight.
Not betting at this stage.