politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » GE2017 looks such a certainty that it could end up like GE2001 – boring with a low turnout
Many of the Labour MPs who will be voting for a general election this afternoon will be doing so in the pretty certain knowledge that they are ending their political careers earlier than planned.
I see guido was mocking labour for not having a campaign slogan ready to go. What is the Tory slogan? The lds I assume are going for 'open, tolerant and united', I've seen that plastered in many places these last months.
'Stability and security', as the slogan? Keep it simple.
"Destroy all traitors", judging by the front pages of the Sun and Mail today.
I suspect they'll go for a slightly more conciliatory tone. But I hope those headlines cost the Tories a few votes - perfectly designed to tell any waverers 'you may hate corbyn, but you cannot sit this one out'.
Boring and predictable will not motivate the electorate to turn out in great numbers as seen with Brexit. 60-65% turnout has become the norm for an average general election, so unless a black swan appears on the scene, I’d expect the lower end.
Probably will be boring. I'm expecting the tory lead to come in a bit, perhaps even to since figures, and people to get overexcited by a good showing by the lds in be locals, beer return to 12-13 point lead for the result. The complacency that will be inevitable and non corbynsas terrified labour will be annihilated returning o the fold will see the worst avoided, even as more casual voters stay home.
I see guido was mocking labour for not having a campaign slogan ready to go. What is the Tory slogan? The lds I assume are going for 'open, tolerant and united', I've seen that plastered in many places these last months.
'Stability and security', as the slogan? Keep it simple.
"Destroy all traitors", judging by the front pages of the Sun and Mail today.
I suspect they'll go for a slightly more conciliatory tone. But I hope those headlines cost the Tories a few votes - perfectly designed to tell any waverers 'you may hate corbyn, but you cannot sit this one out'.
Surprised no ones photoshopped May as a Dalek.
It's such a shame it is Corbyn. I cannot vote for a party he leads. I suspect there are many more like me. May and the cabinet she leads are profoundly mediocre and her constant pandering to the right wing press is a sign of immense weakness; but when the choice is her or Corbyn it is perfectly understandable that most voters have concluded there is no choice.
The one good thing in all this is that it is happening three years earlier than expected. That means there is now slightly more of a chance that I will live to see another Labour government; or, failing that, the creation of a new centre-left party that can seriously challenge for power.
I continue to be hugely grateful that I was born when I was.
Probably will be boring. I'm expecting the tory lead to come in a bit, perhaps even to since figures, and people to get overexcited by a good showing by the lds in be locals, beer return to 12-13 point lead for the result. The complacency that will be inevitable and non corbynsas terrified labour will be annihilated returning o the fold will see the worst avoided, even as more casual voters stay home.
The most motivated voters in the election will be die hard Remainers and the Scots.
I see guido was mocking labour for not having a campaign slogan ready to go. What is the Tory slogan? The lds I assume are going for 'open, tolerant and united', I've seen that plastered in many places these last months.
'Stability and security', as the slogan? Keep it simple.
"Destroy all traitors", judging by the front pages of the Sun and Mail today.
I suspect they'll go for a slightly more conciliatory tone. But I hope those headlines cost the Tories a few votes - perfectly designed to tell any waverers 'you may hate corbyn, but you cannot sit this one out'.
Surprised no ones photoshopped May as a Dalek.
It's such a shame it is Corbyn. I cannot vote for a party he leads. I suspect there are many more like me. May and the cabinet she leads are profoundly mediocre and her constant pandering to the right wing press is a sign of immense weakness; but when the choice is her or Corbyn it is perfectly understandable that most voters have concluded there is no choice.
The one good thing in all this is that it is happening three years earlier than expected. That means there is now slightly more of a chance that I will live to see another Labour government; or, failing that, the creation of a new centre-left party that can seriously challenge for power.
I continue to be hugely grateful that I was born when I was.
aw come on
you do this every election. You wobble like SeanT in a referendum and then vote Labour anyway.
I see guido was mocking labour for not having a campaign slogan ready to go. What is the Tory slogan? The lds I assume are going for 'open, tolerant and united', I've seen that plastered in many places these last months.
'Stability and security', as the slogan? Keep it simple.
"Destroy all traitors", judging by the front pages of the Sun and Mail today.
I suspect they'll go for a slightly more conciliatory tone. But I hope those headlines cost the Tories a few votes - perfectly designed to tell any waverers 'you may hate corbyn, but you cannot sit this one out'.
Surprised no ones photoshopped May as a Dalek.
It's such a shame it is Corbyn. I cannot vote for a party he leads. I suspect there are many more like me. May and the cabinet she leads are profoundly mediocre and her constant pandering to the right wing press is a sign of immense weakness; but when the choice is her or Corbyn it is perfectly understandable that most voters have concluded there is no choice.
The one good thing in all this is that it is happening three years earlier than expected. That means there is now slightly more of a chance that I will live to see another Labour government; or, failing that, the creation of a new centre-left party that can seriously challenge for power.
I continue to be hugely grateful that I was born when I was.
aw come on
you do this every election. You wobble like SeanT in a referendum and then vote Labour anyway.
Not a chance. In fact, I have only voted Labour once in a GE since 2005.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
On the expenses cases, it is reported by the Indy that the CPS has confirmed that it is required by law to decide whether to press charges (if appropriate) in those cases it already has received from local forces before June 8. Most probably such decisions will be made later in May.
Now the Tory lead with over 65s, that was chilling - so much more then last time, when it was already high. That and the higher turnout from the old are the on,y reason I am not wholly certain of my 60-80 majority prediction.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
I see guido was mocking labour for not having a campaign slogan ready to go. What is the Tory slogan? The lds I assume are going for 'open, tolerant and united', I've seen that plastered in many places these last months.
'Stability and security', as the slogan? Keep it simple.
"Destroy all traitors", judging by the front pages of the Sun and Mail today.
I suspect they'll go for a slightly more conciliatory tone. But I hope those headlines cost the Tories a few votes - perfectly designed to tell any waverers 'you may hate corbyn, but you cannot sit this one out'.
Surprised no ones photoshopped May as a Dalek.
It's such a shame it is Corbyn. I cannot vote for a party he leads. I suspect there are many more like me. May and the cabinet she leads are profoundly mediocre and her constant pandering to the right wing press is a sign of immense weakness; but when the choice is her or Corbyn it is perfectly understandable that most voters have concluded there is no choice.
The one good thing in all this is that it is happening three years earlier than expected. That means there is now slightly more of a chance that I will live to see another Labour government; or, failing that, the creation of a new centre-left party that can seriously challenge for power.
I continue to be hugely grateful that I was born when I was.
aw come on
you do this every election. You wobble like SeanT in a referendum and then vote Labour anyway.
Not a chance. In fact, I have only voted Labour once in a GE since 2005.
I see guido was mocking labour for not having a campaign slogan ready to go. What is the Tory slogan? The lds I assume are going for 'open, tolerant and united', I've seen that plastered in many places these last months.
'Stability and security', as the slogan? Keep it simple.
"Destroy all traitors", judging by the front pages of the Sun and Mail today.
I suspect they'll go for a slightly more conciliatory tone. But I hope those headlines cost the Tories a few votes - perfectly designed to tell any waverers 'you may hate corbyn, but you cannot sit this one out'.
Surprised no ones photoshopped May as a Dalek.
It's such a shame it is Corbyn. I cannot vote for a party he leads. I suspect there are many more like me. May and the cabinet she leads are profoundly mediocre and her constant pandering to the right wing press is a sign of immense weakness; but when the choice is her or Corbyn it is perfectly understandable that most voters have concluded there is no choice.
The one good thing in all this is that it is happening three years earlier than expected. That means there is now slightly more of a chance that I will live to see another Labour government; or, failing that, the creation of a new centre-left party that can seriously challenge for power.
I continue to be hugely grateful that I was born when I was.
aw come on
you do this every election. You wobble like SeanT in a referendum and then vote Labour anyway.
Not a chance. In fact, I have only voted Labour once in a GE since 2005.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
What about Dan Jarvis?
He has the safe seat, but is unpopular on the left - seen as disloyal to the Dear Leader.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
I'd be surprised if she stood and more surprised still if she won. She's hated by the Left for resigning merely because Corbyn is a crap leader who showed her no respect or even gratitude for agreeing to work with him. She is also seen as too close to the Blair/Brown years the party is frantically trying to move on from.
I'd agree with your second point but we don't know who's going to survive yet. In a northern working class seat with a large UKIP vote to squeeze she might just be a shock victim.
Creagh incidentally looks like toast in Wakefield and good riddance to bad rubbish.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
For me, the most telling number about this election is the 4m who voted UKIP last time. I would guess that something like 3m of them will be at least potentially in play by election day. I suspect some won't even have a UKIP candidate to vote for.
A significant number will not vote. A more important number will support the Tories. This is what has driven them to the low to middle 40s. Others will splinter and everyone will get a share, even the Lib Dems in their re-found NOTA mode. But the Tories will gain the most and I suspect in some areas the Lib Dems will be chasing a moving target that remains beyond their reach as a result.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
The lack of a clear challenger with a strong third to squeeze is what makes me think it's probably safe this time, whereas I'm not so sure about Normanton.
For me, the most telling number about this election is the 4m who voted UKIP last time. I would guess that something like 3m of them will be at least potentially in play by election day. I suspect some won't even have a UKIP candidate to vote for.
A significant number will not vote. A more important number will support the Tories. This is what has driven them to the low to middle 40s. Others will splinter and everyone will get a share, even the Lib Dems in their re-found NOTA mode. But the Tories will gain the most and I suspect in some areas the Lib Dems will be chasing a moving target that remains beyond their reach as a result.
In much of the shires, I don't agree. Many of the UKIP voters are people who won't vote Tory. They chose ukip because the LibDems were in coalition with the Tories last time and because voting Labour is unthinkable. In terms of the LibDem/Tory contest I wouldn't see the existence of a higher or lower ukip vote as of much significance either way.
For me, the most telling number about this election is the 4m who voted UKIP last time. I would guess that something like 3m of them will be at least potentially in play by election day. I suspect some won't even have a UKIP candidate to vote for.
A significant number will not vote. A more important number will support the Tories. This is what has driven them to the low to middle 40s. Others will splinter and everyone will get a share, even the Lib Dems in their re-found NOTA mode. But the Tories will gain the most and I suspect in some areas the Lib Dems will be chasing a moving target that remains beyond their reach as a result.
In much of the shires, I don't agree. Many of the UKIP voters are people who won't vote Tory. They chose ukip because the LibDems were in coalition with the Tories last time and because voting Labour is unthinkable. In terms of the LibDem/Tory contest I wouldn't see the existence of a higher or lower ukip vote as of much significance either way.
Ian, have you canvassed Tory/LD marginals? The reason I ask is that immigration is always the top national issue mentioned for me in these shires.
UKIP won votes for many reasons; but far more for policy than not being the Libs.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
I'd be surprised if she stood and more surprised still if she won. She's hated by the Left for resigning merely because Corbyn is a crap leader who showed her no respect or even gratitude for agreeing to work with him. She is also seen as too close to the Blair/Brown years the party is frantically trying to move on from.
I'd agree with your second point but we don't know who's going to survive yet. In a northern working class seat with a large UKIP vote to squeeze she might just be a shock victim.
Creagh incidentally looks like toast in Wakefield and good riddance to bad rubbish.
I think there is a tendency to think of the "left" as one great big Corbynite mass. I don't think that it is really like that. There is, of course, a die-hard Corbynite tendency, but that is not the same as all those who voted for him in the last leadership election. The first thing you have to remember is that a Corbynite is actually quite unlikely to be in the next leadership election in the first place.
The next few weeks should be entertaining as the likes of Farage, Arron Banks and George Galloway announce their comeback tours, along with Uncle Vince. We’ll be saying goodbye to some old faces like Ken Clarke and perhaps as many as half the old Labour front bench. – I doubt GE2017 will excel in turnout, but the sweeping away of the old school MPs will be huge imho, may be up there with 1997.
60% turnout seems a good bet. An indication of the sad state of our democracy and politics in general. Compare that to my country of birth when the turnout was 81% in the last presidential election.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
I'd be surprised if she stood and more surprised still if she won. She's hated by the Left for resigning merely because Corbyn is a crap leader who showed her no respect or even gratitude for agreeing to work with him. She is also seen as too close to the Blair/Brown years the party is frantically trying to move on from.
I'd agree with your second point but we don't know who's going to survive yet. In a northern working class seat with a large UKIP vote to squeeze she might just be a shock victim.
Creagh incidentally looks like toast in Wakefield and good riddance to bad rubbish.
I think there is a tendency to think of the "left" as one great big Corbynite mass. I don't think that it is really like that. There is, of course, a die-hard Corbynite tendency, but that is not the same as all those who voted for him in the last leadership election. The first thing you have to remember is that a Corbynite is actually quite unlikely to be in the next leadership election in the first place.
Surely a massacre reducing the number of nominations required to sub 30 (maybe even 20) MPs more or less guarantees that a Corbynista will make the ballot?
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
The lack of a clear challenger with a strong third to squeeze is what makes me think it's probably safe this time, whereas I'm not so sure about Normanton.
Playing on Electoral Calculus it is hard to get Labour below 150 seats or to lose Leicester South
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
I'd be surprised if she stood and more surprised still if she won. She's hated by the Left for resigning merely because Corbyn is a crap leader who showed her no respect or even gratitude for agreeing to work with him. She is also seen as too close to the Blair/Brown years the party is frantically trying to move on from.
I'd agree with your second point but we don't know who's going to survive yet. In a northern working class seat with a large UKIP vote to squeeze she might just be a shock victim.
Creagh incidentally looks like toast in Wakefield and good riddance to bad rubbish.
I think there is a tendency to think of the "left" as one great big Corbynite mass. I don't think that it is really like that. There is, of course, a die-hard Corbynite tendency, but that is not the same as all those who voted for him in the last leadership election. The first thing you have to remember is that a Corbynite is actually quite unlikely to be in the next leadership election in the first place.
Surely a massacre reducing the number of nominations required to sub 30 (maybe even 20) MPs more or less guarantees that a Corbynista will make the ballot?
It depends on who is massacred. You also have to throw MEPs into the equation. If Labour gets down to 150 MPs, then any leadership candidate will need 26 nominations from MPs and MEPs combined.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
The lack of a clear challenger with a strong third to squeeze is what makes me think it's probably safe this time, whereas I'm not so sure about Normanton.
Playing on Electoral Calculus it is hard to get Labour below 150 seats or to lose Leicester South
Electoral Calculus is going to be a particularly weak tool this time round, if the polls are anything like correct.
The next few weeks should be entertaining as the likes of Farage, Arron Banks and George Galloway announce their comeback tours, along with Uncle Vince. We’ll be saying goodbye to some old faces like Ken Clarke and perhaps as many as half the old Labour front bench. – I doubt GE2017 will excel in turnout, but the sweeping away of the old school MPs will be huge imho, may be up there with 1997.
Arron Banks's humiliation - if he does actually have the guts to stand for election - promises to be one of the few bright spots of the next few weeks.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
Yes I think Leicester South is safe, if Labour lose that then they're down to 50 seat territory - so they won't.
But no Labour candidate ought to be 3-1. I think Starmer was ok yesterday at 7-1 (And I had a betting hole there), but 3-1 would be too short for even him I think.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
65/1 on Betfair at the mo. I've just had a pint's worth on him.
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
The lack of a clear challenger with a strong third to squeeze is what makes me think it's probably safe this time, whereas I'm not so sure about Normanton.
Playing on Electoral Calculus it is hard to get Labour below 150 seats or to lose Leicester South
Electoral Calculus is going to be a particularly weak tool this time round, if the polls are anything like correct.
Yes - it's quite fun to see that Labour on 11% still leads the Lib Dems on 28%!
One thought occurs to me - at what point does UNS become utterly meaningless and we prepare for a total Labour collapse? If the polls are anywhere approaching correct sub-20% for Labour is not a wholly unrealistic possibility. At that point, surely, all bets are off on the results in individual seats. As we saw in Scotland, there is a cliff edge.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
The SLDs do not seem to do well in polls (Scottish subsample alert!). I think the LD revival will mostly be in the SE and SW of England and in University seats.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
Yes I think Leicester South is safe, if Labour lose that then they're down to 50 seat territory - so they won't.
But no Labour candidate ought to be 3-1. I think Starmer was ok yesterday at 7-1 (And I had a betting hole there), but 3-1 would be too short for even him I think.
Starmer was 12-1 when I looked.
However, Corbyn was 1-10 which was a bit peculiar.
Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
The lack of a clear challenger with a strong third to squeeze is what makes me think it's probably safe this time, whereas I'm not so sure about Normanton.
Playing on Electoral Calculus it is hard to get Labour below 150 seats or to lose Leicester South
Electoral Calculus is going to be a particularly weak tool this time round, if the polls are anything like correct.
Despite its faults UNS did prove pretty reliable in England and Wales last time.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
The SLDs do not seem to do well in polls (Scottish subsample alert!). I think the LD revival will mostly be in the SE and SW of England and in University seats.
Would be surprised if they did well in the SW although that depends on your definition of 'well' - they should pick up 2-3 seats. I think the are fighting Labour in the conurbations and the universities, and will do well in the latter. Gorton, Cardiff Central, Cambridge may be attainable. Thornbury is not.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Ashworth also has good Union support, and is someone who despite his Brownite background is willing to sit in the shadow cabinet.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
Yes I think Leicester South is safe, if Labour lose that then they're down to 50 seat territory - so they won't.
But no Labour candidate ought to be 3-1. I think Starmer was ok yesterday at 7-1 (And I had a betting hole there), but 3-1 would be too short for even him I think.
Starmer was 12-1 when I looked.
However, Corbyn was 1-10 which was a bit peculiar.
12-1 might have been too short a few weeks ago, but 7-1 is fine now. The timeframe of Corbyn's probable departure shifts the odds towards known candidates with a platform (Which Starmer has) and away from rank outsiders.
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
On the boundary changes, the position appears to be that unless parliament decides otherwise, the Commission will slog on to its existing timetable, the new proposals will still come before parliament in 2018 and, if agreed, be implemented for the next GE thereafter, presumably 2021/22.
However there is an interesting problem in that the 2013-2018-2023 etc. timetable for reviews is hard-written into law, designed to tie up with the FTPA. In the HoC briefing papers, civil servants identify the potential problem if an earlier election is called (amusingly in one paragraph using a 2017 GE as a hypothetical example) but the paper doesn't offer any solution.
Most probably, legislation will have to be amended to reset the timetable or, more sensibly, to remove the hard-wired dates and go for some more flexible formula in terms of scheduling future reviews.
The likelihood, however, is that the need to amend legislation, coupled with the extra time before the subsequent GE, the local electoral numbers changing as people rush to sign up in advance of June, and the data being used for the 2018 review becoming more out of date, will generate calls for the review to be re-started on different criteria. The new (current) criteria - particularly the inflexible +/- 5% tolerance - has been widely criticised by both academics and polticians, including some Tories.
If the Tories have a big majority, they may well press ahead - and indeed the timing question doesn't actually need to be addressed until the current review is completed. With a smaller majority things might become more interesting. In amending the Act, the HoL too gets a say - indeed the setting aside of the 2013 review began as a Lords amendment.
My best guess is that the Tories will implement the new boundaries in 2018 (for 2021/2) and then amend the future arrangements thereafter, postponing the subsequent review until after the 2022 GE. But this now looks less certain than it did last week.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
The SLDs do not seem to do well in polls (Scottish subsample alert!). I think the LD revival will mostly be in the SE and SW of England and in University seats.
Would be surprised if they did well in the SW although that depends on your definition of 'well' - they should pick up 2-3 seats. I think the are fighting Labour in the conurbations and the universities, and will do well in the latter. Gorton, Cardiff Central, Cambridge may be attainable. Thornbury is not.
I think the LDs will struggle to break past 20 seats, but will build up quite a lot of strong second places, for a springboard for 2022. This was never going to be a quick revival.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
Let it be Cooper, she is useless. She has hips baggage too.,
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
The dangers of trying to analyse Scotland based on previous elections.
The 2011Holyrood election had 50% turnout and the 2016 had 55% turnout where the Conservatives managed to capture almost the entirety of that extra 5%.
The 2015 Westminster General Election also had unnaturally high turnout which almost certainly favoured the SNP.
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
You wouldn't want the job of arranging his election tour and the route for Corbyn's battle bus!
Usually every party's HQ is besieged by eager candidates wanting a visit; if not a target seat they'll be pleading for a 15 minute stop-off and quick photo opportunity, if their seat is anywhere near a motorway. Somehow I think the dynamic in Corbyn Towers might be a little different this time?
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
He may even try to hang on afterwards, successfully.
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
He is the anti-Kinnock. Rapidly taking his party back to the 'glory days' of the early eighties.
Why would he go? His party will be cast more in his image after a shellacking...
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Good call. However, I think if Cooper stands she'll probably win. I'd like to see Nandy myself.
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
Let it be Cooper, she is useless. She has hips baggage too.,
HIPS were a joke but versus the baggage of Corbyn and McDonnell???
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
You wouldn't want the job of arranging his election tour and the route for Corbyn's battle bus!
Usually every party's HQ is besieged by eager candidates wanting a visit; if not a target seat they'll be pleading for a 15 minute stop-off and quick photo opportunity, if their seat is anywhere near a motorway. Somehow I think the dynamic in Corbyn Towers might be a little different this time?
It'll be besieged by hundreds of volunteers from any seat with under a 15,000 majority to make sure he stays where he is and no messages or images get out to cause trouble?
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
60% turnout seems a good bet. An indication of the sad state of our democracy and politics in general. Compare that to my country of birth when the turnout was 81% in the last presidential election.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
Nae chance. Nae chance in hell.
If it does prove to be a surprise SNP win (and I was talking about the outliers) I will remind you and Mr Smithson Jr of this.
My own expectation is that it will stay LD, but I think it could be much tighter than expected.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
Nae chance. Nae chance in hell.
If it does prove to be a surprise SNP win (and I was talking about the outliers) I will remind you and Mr Smithson Jr of this.
My own expectation is that it will stay LD, but I think it could be much tighter than expected.
So you now have some money on two horses, and are only wrong with a stonking LD win? I still think you are wrong
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
He may even try to hang on afterwards, successfully.
Not a chance. He will be challenged and he will lose.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
The SLDs do not seem to do well in polls (Scottish subsample alert!). I think the LD revival will mostly be in the SE and SW of England and in University seats.
Would be surprised if they did well in the SW although that depends on your definition of 'well' - they should pick up 2-3 seats. I think the are fighting Labour in the conurbations and the universities, and will do well in the latter. Gorton, Cardiff Central, Cambridge may be attainable. Thornbury is not.
I think the LDs will struggle to break past 20 seats, but will build up quite a lot of strong second places, for a springboard for 2022. This was never going to be a quick revival.
Getting near 20 with strong second places restored for 2022 would be a quick recovery.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
The SLDs do not seem to do well in polls (Scottish subsample alert!). I think the LD revival will mostly be in the SE and SW of England and in University seats.
Would be surprised if they did well in the SW although that depends on your definition of 'well' - they should pick up 2-3 seats. I think the are fighting Labour in the conurbations and the universities, and will do well in the latter. Gorton, Cardiff Central, Cambridge may be attainable. Thornbury is not.
I think the LDs will struggle to break past 20 seats, but will build up quite a lot of strong second places, for a springboard for 2022. This was never going to be a quick revival.
Getting near 20 with strong second places restored for 2022 would be a quick recovery.
And I would see 20 as at the lower end of possible outcomes.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
Nae chance. Nae chance in hell.
If it does prove to be a surprise SNP win (and I was talking about the outliers) I will remind you and Mr Smithson Jr of this.
My own expectation is that it will stay LD, but I think it could be much tighter than expected.
We'll need what Shadsy's odds are but I will not be tempted at almost any price to back the SNP.
The SNP screwed up their Orkeny and Shetland campaigns for Holyrood in a way that poisoned the well.
I do have doubts about strength of LDs in SW, given the Referendum results in seats in the region, it wasn't a hotbed of support for Remain. It is possible that LDs might recover in Bath or Cheltenham. The notion that Tory MPs not have an incumbency effect strikes me as naive.
I do have doubts about strength of LDs in SW, given the Referendum results in seats in the region, it wasn't a hotbed of support for Remain. It is possible that LDs might recover in Bath or Cheltenham. The notion that Tory MPs not have an incumbency effect strikes me as naive.
The SW was leave and a lot of former LD seats there are now large Tory majorities, but the things can be strange - I could see 4 or 5 turn back.
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
He may even try to hang on afterwards, successfully.
Not a chance. He will be challenged and he will lose.
Isn't his chief goal to get the McDonnell amendment on the rule book? I don't think he will resign until he can guarantee the left wing of the PLP a horse in the next leadership race.
If you were an MP in a reasonably safe Labour seat and because of the leadership of Corbyn you were in danger of losing it you'd be furious.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
Too late to get rid now.
I just can't see how he can stay. He'll be like a bad smell wherever he goes. The incontinent great aunt
He may even try to hang on afterwards, successfully.
Not a chance. He will be challenged and he will lose.
I hope that you are right, but he does have the hide of an armour plated rhinoceros.
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
Nae chance. Nae chance in hell.
In such an uncertain election the ground war may be critical. As such the Lib Dems have got to be fancied to pick up some seats. They have an energised membership and strong tactical skills.
In Scotland the post referendum election was won by the losers as they were more determined and more united. I am not sure this election is the slam dunk the pollsters predict.
I do have doubts about strength of LDs in SW, given the Referendum results in seats in the region, it wasn't a hotbed of support for Remain. It is possible that LDs might recover in Bath or Cheltenham. The notion that Tory MPs not have an incumbency effect strikes me as naive.
I will be very surprised indeed if the Liberal Democrats retake Cheltenham. Put it this way, it would be the equivalent of Labour taking Cannock. Bath with its two universities looks a lot more plausible.
Yes - they clearly don't expect to hold all their seats
Given they did better than they could have dreamed last time, and the worst prediction I've seen for them is high 40s with most predicting in the 50s, I dont think they'll be weeping into their porridge if they lose a few.
I do have doubts about strength of LDs in SW, given the Referendum results in seats in the region, it wasn't a hotbed of support for Remain. It is possible that LDs might recover in Bath or Cheltenham. The notion that Tory MPs not have an incumbency effect strikes me as naive.
The LD advantage of the LDs in SW and SE is that with only a handful of exceptions Labour is not in the game, so they can hoover up anti-Tory votes, not all of them Brexit related.
The other aspect is that there is only a couple of years since having LD MPs, so not a distant memory.
- won't express support for Corbyn as PM, although she still wants people to vote Labour - says Labour won't win - says she expects Labour to campaign for Brexit
No joke - he's built for campaigning and has the hide of a particularly tough rhinoceros, and 160 seats are safe even if he shoots the queen during the campaign. While I'd expect he and labour to do badly under the assault they will face, that they at least hold up better then anticipated cannot be discounted.
Comments
Surprised no ones photoshopped May as a Dalek.
Boring and predictable will not motivate the electorate to turn out in great numbers as seen with Brexit. 60-65% turnout has become the norm for an average general election, so unless a black swan appears on the scene, I’d expect the lower end.
The one good thing in all this is that it is happening three years earlier than expected. That means there is now slightly more of a chance that I will live to see another Labour government; or, failing that, the creation of a new centre-left party that can seriously challenge for power.
I continue to be hugely grateful that I was born when I was.
you do this every election. You wobble like SeanT in a referendum and then vote Labour anyway.
I'm sure I will go to the polling booth but I have no idea who, if anyone, I will vote for.
So, anyway, on to more important matters: the next Labour leader.
First of all, it has to be someone with a rock-safe seat. That lets out the egregious Cat Smith, also Clive Lewis and despite earlier posts very probably Jess Philips too (heck, even Yvette Cooper doesn't look totally safe).
It has to be someone who can pass for sane. That lets out Abbott, Macdonnell, Burgon, Rayner, Long-Bailey and Thornberry.
It has to be someone in Parliament. That lets out Burnham and Khan.
It has to be someone who can't be blamed for the defeat. That lets out Trickett.
It has to be someone acceptable to the left. That lets out almost every other plausible candidate including Benn, Watson and Creasy.
Two obvious front runners are left. Starmer is favourite with the bookies. However, there is rumoured to be some bad stuff about his disastrous time as DPP which somebody as ruthless as May will undoubtedly use. Moreover as a posh London lawyer he's completely out of touch with the voters Labour need to reach.
Which leaves the other one. Jon Ashworth meets all the criteria above. Also, if the Labour campaign is to be on the NHS - and it has to be because that's the one topic Labour agrees on and has a realistic angle of attack on - he will get a lot of airtime. He is also, along with Starmer, a rare example of an effective shadow Minister. Moreover, he doesn't carry much baggage.
At the moment he's 80/1. Those odds seem insane to me. 3/1 would be more like it. DYOR but I'd say he's value.
Now the Tory lead with over 65s, that was chilling - so much more then last time, when it was already high. That and the higher turnout from the old are the on,y reason I am not wholly certain of my 60-80 majority prediction.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/article/32658907/election-2015-mp-thanks-voter-for-penis-ballot-paper-mark
I'd say that realistically any Labour MP who gets back into the Commons by whatever margin probably has a safe seat or an immensely strong personal vote.
I'd agree with your second point but we don't know who's going to survive yet. In a northern working class seat with a large UKIP vote to squeeze she might just be a shock victim.
Creagh incidentally looks like toast in Wakefield and good riddance to bad rubbish.
I think Leicester South is pretty safe, but it did go Tory in 1983.
A significant number will not vote. A more important number will support the Tories. This is what has driven them to the low to middle 40s. Others will splinter and everyone will get a share, even the Lib Dems in their re-found NOTA mode. But the Tories will gain the most and I suspect in some areas the Lib Dems will be chasing a moving target that remains beyond their reach as a result.
UKIP won votes for many reasons; but far more for policy than not being the Libs.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/scotlands-key-battlegrounds-2017-general-10251668
Interestingly despite the ridicule I got for pointing out the SNP will be gunning for Carmichael, they also tip Orkney as vulnerable and for the same reason.
But no Labour candidate ought to be 3-1. I think Starmer was ok yesterday at 7-1 (And I had a betting hole there), but 3-1 would be too short for even him I think.
I've just had a pint's worth on him.
I can't see huge numbers of Labour MPs who come into that category keeping quiet for the next six weeks. I think there will be a massive amount of pressure on Corbyn to get out. I think the warfare will be open and bloody and if it isn't it should be..
One thought occurs to me - at what point does UNS become utterly meaningless and we prepare for a total Labour collapse? If the polls are anywhere approaching correct sub-20% for Labour is not a wholly unrealistic possibility. At that point, surely, all bets are off on the results in individual seats. As we saw in Scotland, there is a cliff edge.
However, Corbyn was 1-10 which was a bit peculiar.
However there is an interesting problem in that the 2013-2018-2023 etc. timetable for reviews is hard-written into law, designed to tie up with the FTPA. In the HoC briefing papers, civil servants identify the potential problem if an earlier election is called (amusingly in one paragraph using a 2017 GE as a hypothetical example) but the paper doesn't offer any solution.
Most probably, legislation will have to be amended to reset the timetable or, more sensibly, to remove the hard-wired dates and go for some more flexible formula in terms of scheduling future reviews.
The likelihood, however, is that the need to amend legislation, coupled with the extra time before the subsequent GE, the local electoral numbers changing as people rush to sign up in advance of June, and the data being used for the 2018 review becoming more out of date, will generate calls for the review to be re-started on different criteria. The new (current) criteria - particularly the inflexible +/- 5% tolerance - has been widely criticised by both academics and polticians, including some Tories.
If the Tories have a big majority, they may well press ahead - and indeed the timing question doesn't actually need to be addressed until the current review is completed. With a smaller majority things might become more interesting. In amending the Act, the HoL too gets a say - indeed the setting aside of the 2013 review began as a Lords amendment.
My best guess is that the Tories will implement the new boundaries in 2018 (for 2021/2) and then amend the future arrangements thereafter, postponing the subsequent review until after the 2022 GE. But this now looks less certain than it did last week.
What are they frightened of?
The 2011Holyrood election had 50% turnout and the 2016 had 55% turnout where the Conservatives managed to capture almost the entirety of that extra 5%.
The 2015 Westminster General Election also had unnaturally high turnout which almost certainly favoured the SNP.
What that means? Buggered if I know.
Usually every party's HQ is besieged by eager candidates wanting a visit; if not a target seat they'll be pleading for a 15 minute stop-off and quick photo opportunity, if their seat is anywhere near a motorway. Somehow I think the dynamic in Corbyn Towers might be a little different this time?
Why would he go? His party will be cast more in his image after a shellacking...
Edit:.. I approve of your avatar change!!
My own expectation is that it will stay LD, but I think it could be much tighter than expected.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-39638012
The SNP screwed up their Orkeny and Shetland campaigns for Holyrood in a way that poisoned the well.
Still surprised Labour's apparent position is to support this.
I don't think he will resign until he can guarantee the left wing of the PLP a horse in the next leadership race.
Labour could be down to zero with the LDs on 2/3.
In Scotland the post referendum election was won by the losers as they were more determined and more united. I am not sure this election is the slam dunk the pollsters predict.
The other aspect is that there is only a couple of years since having LD MPs, so not a distant memory.
- won't express support for Corbyn as PM, although she still wants people to vote Labour
- says Labour won't win
- says she expects Labour to campaign for Brexit