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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Exit poll says Macron and Le Pen make it into round two.

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    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    Mr. T, the To Win Round One market on Betfair is going a bit mental, bouncing around 3 for Le Pen, 1.3-1.5 for Macron.

    Glad I was frit earlier and hedged him at 1.1 (after the initial 1.9 hedging). Green either way now.

    As I typed that it changed to 4 and 1.3 respectively.

    I think it's basically a 30% return in a few hours.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 61,005
    Anyway, I'm going to bugger off. The Le Pen total (under 30%) seems safe and I'm green on whoever wins round one. Best of luck to the rest of you.
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    felixfelix Posts: 15,125
    Freggles said:

    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    The French centre-right just fucked this up. They should have walked it. Tsk.


    Chortle.
    Why are you chortling? Fillon (sans scandals) would have been best for France, economically, and therefore best for the French people. And he might have won the Assembly, he could have pressed through real reform.

    I fear Macron will be a grave disappointment, and he doesn't even have a proper party, implying paralysis and further stagnation. As a supposed rightwinger, your delight is therefore a bit mystifying.

    I thought Boba was a committed lefty ?
    He certainly should be... committed.
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    rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787

    CNBC - latest Le Pen - 24.8 - Macron 22.19 from the Interior Ministry after 20 million votes

    Doesn't that contradict Macron's figures

    Paris and Marseilles not yet included, if I understand the Interior Ministry's figures and map correctly. But DYOR.
    I thought Marseille was Le Pen territory? Or is just the suburbs?
    Probably the opposite given the composition of most banlieues
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 54,061
    AndyJS said:
    Take all your money and put it on it.

    This reminds me of the US Presidential election when Trump was leading in the popular vote and you could get similar odds, even though it was clear that Clinton was going to end up ahead.
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,990
    Pulpstar said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    @afneil 2m2 minutes ago
    More
    TV coverage concentrating on exit polls rather than actual vote. After 20m votes counted, Le Pen on 25%, Macron 22%. Not representative?

    France 24's projections are getting more and more 'tight', with the spread for Le Pen now just 0.3% wide. I assume they know what they're doing.
    No, those were the estimates from the pollsters based off the sampling.
    I assume it is the same as this:

    https://www.thelocal.fr/20170423/interactive-map-of-the-2017-french-presidential-election

    20m votes counted, and no table? what's going on!
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    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,088
    La Réunion goes to Melenchon by about 1%.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,787
    Scott_P said:

    SeanT said:

    Uhm, I thought Leave was going to be reversed, and Brexit halted? If you have now accepted this is bollocks, can I have my £1000? Ta.

    @carlgardner: Brexit will never again be as popular as it has been this last year. twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/st…

    @MSmithsonPB: Latest YouGov Brexit right or wrong tracker
    Right 44% -2
    Wrong 44% +1
    DK 12%

    Surely not challenging Dr Eoin for 'doesn't understand MOE'?
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    Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,612

    When you've lost every single time for the last three years any win is worth celebrating. So tonight I am a very happy boy.

    Yes, likewise other than on Brexit. I'm happy because I'm a socialist and despite the present French political climate the right has been denied the top job once again. Yes Le Pen is into the 2nd round but she's facing the opponent she really wanted to avoid, so in effect it's a defeat for her.

    Though I feel absolutely vindicated in having taken out and advocated here a Le Pen - Melenchon run off bet at odds of 66/1, which clearly had value since based on the exit poll it would have taken only a 2% swing to become a reality. That said I'm still green if Macron wins which he will.
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    bobajobPBbobajobPB Posts: 1,042
    kle4 said:

    ToryJim said:
    If the Greens followed through with their own logic then they'd defend Brighton Pavilion, challenge Labour in Bristol West (where they're well-supported and the Tories are pretty weak,) and not bother anywhere else. Would save a tremendous amount of time, money and effort, and allow them to donate the rest of their voters to Labour or the Liberal Democrats.

    If the Greens were a serious political party and not a kind of cod socialist-environmentalist hobby outfit, for Waitrose-shopping yummy mummies who just want to feel smug and morally superior to their neighbours, then they would continue to stand candidates everywhere. Try to build support, overtake their rivals through the force of convincing argument and good policy, and win real power that way.

    But they aren't.
    Did a Green beat you up as a child? I don't recall seeing you so vehemently against a party before.
    Guffaw.

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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    edited April 2017
    Le Pen now ahead in 19 departements, Macron ahead in 14, Fillon in 2 and Melenchon in 2, Le Pen is sweeping the west of France and the northeast of France, Macron leading in Brittany and the Northwest and the Southwest
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    Jean Marine Le Pen now being interviewed on French TV
    http://www.lci.fr/direct/
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    bobajobPBbobajobPB Posts: 1,042
    SeanT said:

    @afneil 2m2 minutes ago
    More
    TV coverage concentrating on exit polls rather than actual vote. After 20m votes counted, Le Pen on 25%, Macron 22%. Not representative?


    If Neil's implication is right there is serious money to be made on backing Le Pen for Round One – she's available at about 2/1. I'm not (yet) moved.
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    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    So I google 'Macron gay sub relationship rumours' and got only articles dated either 7 or 8 February 2017. Was this a 24-hour story? If so, I presume it has no validity and hence holds no dangers for Macron.
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,131
    It's very interesting that the YouGov Brexit right/wrong poll is level pegging despite the massive approvals for May and signs of a landslide on the way.

    It emphasises that the Brexit vote was driven as much by discontent with the style of domestic politics than by anyone's views of the EU.

    The utter rejection of Corbyn's brand of post-imperial cringe politics will be another step on the road to us coming to terms with the reality of being a normal, mainstream European country that belongs in the political structures of normal, mainstream Europe.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,292
    Melenchon banging on about the media Oligarchs....Taps mic....sniff sniff....Rigged system...
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    DadgeDadge Posts: 2,038
    Is it fair to say that France isn't going to have another right-wing or centre-right president until MLP stops standing?
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,787
    Freggles said:

    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    The French centre-right just fucked this up. They should have walked it. Tsk.


    Chortle.
    Why are you chortling? Fillon (sans scandals) would have been best for France, economically, and therefore best for the French people. And he might have won the Assembly, he could have pressed through real reform.

    I fear Macron will be a grave disappointment, and he doesn't even have a proper party, implying paralysis and further stagnation. As a supposed rightwinger, your delight is therefore a bit mystifying.

    I thought Boba was a committed lefty ?
    He's a French Lefty - in theory, but not in practice.....you should have heard him go on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and when someone (himself) on well over average income had their child benefit taken away.....
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    Melenchon now conceding
    http://www.lci.fr/direct/
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    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    Melenchon banging on about the media Oligarchs....Taps mic....sniff sniff....Rigged system...

    Who does that sound like, I wonder?
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    But Macron will only win because he's facing the still-tainted Le Pen.

    He got 24%, at best. It's not some crowning endorsement or stunning triumph.

    The French are confused, conflicted and unhappy, and this is reflected in the wild spread of votes.

    That said I hear Macron is a mild Anglophile, and pro-business, so he might be OK for Brexit.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    Even now Le Pen is polling 35-40% in the runoff against Macron, Chirac slaughtered Jean Marie Le Pen, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    She may go forward in the next four years, she may go back. I think it largely depends on whether Macron is able to push through the reforms that France needs. (And it also depends on MLP not being deposed by MMLP.)
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
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    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549

    Freggles said:

    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    The French centre-right just fucked this up. They should have walked it. Tsk.


    Chortle.
    Why are you chortling? Fillon (sans scandals) would have been best for France, economically, and therefore best for the French people. And he might have won the Assembly, he could have pressed through real reform.

    I fear Macron will be a grave disappointment, and he doesn't even have a proper party, implying paralysis and further stagnation. As a supposed rightwinger, your delight is therefore a bit mystifying.

    I thought Boba was a committed lefty ?
    He's a French Lefty - in theory, but not in practice.....you should have heard him go on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and when someone (himself) on well over average income had their child benefit taken away.....
    Child benefit should be an universal benefit.
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    So far Le Pen is basically sweeping the departements Sarkozy won in 2012 bar Mayenne for Fillon and Macron is winning most of those won by Hollande but Le Pen is leading in the Somme and Charente-Maritime which Hollande won and Melenchon in the Dordogne which Hollande won
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    She's polling about 4% higher than in 2012 almost everywhere, which is why the forecasts for her to get about 22% sound pretty much exactly right.
    I'd put it closer to 6 - she's up 8-10 in parts of NE France.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    rcs1000 said:

    AndyJS said:
    Take all your money and put it on it.

    This reminds me of the US Presidential election when Trump was leading in the popular vote and you could get similar odds, even though it was clear that Clinton was going to end up ahead.
    It's odd how MLP is sticking at 5 despite all the results so far.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    The one thing we need is a website with actual vote totals counted so far for the whole of France and by department. Of course that's the one thing that doesn't seem to exist. The same thing happens at UK general elections: there's never a page with running vote totals.
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    SeanT said:

    MTimT said:

    So I google 'Macron gay sub relationship rumours' and got only articles dated either 7 or 8 February 2017. Was this a 24-hour story? If so, I presume it has no validity and hence holds no dangers for Macron.

    I heard lots of juicy gossip about Macron when I was in Paris last month (with some well-connected people).

    There is a chance it will harm him, at some point. I shan't repeat it on here, to spare OGH les lawyers.
    That is the Russian line, they do seem a little obsessed by gays.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,010

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    But Macron will only win because he's facing the still-tainted Le Pen.

    He got 24%, at best. It's not some crowning endorsement or stunning triumph.

    The French are confused, conflicted and unhappy, and this is reflected in the wild spread of votes.

    That said I hear Macron is a mild Anglophile, and pro-business, so he might be OK for Brexit.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    Even now Le Pen is polling 35-40% in the rul not slaughter her
    P.)
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    He deserves plenty of credit for that. Whatever the opposition he faces, and whether many end up disappointed if he turns out to be a blank screen for people to project on, he's had a fine achievement, and one can hope, a decent presidency awaits.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    So far Le Pen is basically sweeping the departements Sarkozy won in 2012 bar Mayenne for Fillon and Macron is winning most of those won by Hollande but Le Pen is leading in the Somme and Charente-Maritime which Hollande won and Melenchon in the Dordogne which Hollande won
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    She's polling about 4% higher than in 2012 almost everywhere, which is why the forecasts for her to get about 22% sound pretty much exactly right.
    She is still winning more departements than Macron though, it could be close for winner of the first round
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Melenchon refuses to endorse Macron.
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    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128

    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    The French centre-right just fucked this up. They should have walked it. Tsk.


    Chortle.
    Why are you chortling? Fillon (sans scandals) would have been best for France, economically, and therefore best for the French people. And he might have won the Assembly, he could have pressed through real reform.

    I fear Macron will be a grave disappointment, and he doesn't even have a proper party, implying paralysis and further stagnation. As a supposed rightwinger, your delight is therefore a bit mystifying.

    The same people who are so gleeful today were gleeful five years ago when Hollande won - with big predictions that his victory would bring a centre-left resurgence across Europe and, in particular, would be emulated by an EdM led Labour government.

    Instead France has shifted rightwards and to the extremes and the French socialists have just suffered a humiliating defeat.
    Ed Miliband plans a new Europe with François Hollande
    Ed Miliband has agreed to work with the new Socialist President of France to “tilt” Europe away from austerity.


    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/ed-miliband/9259475/Ed-Miliband-plans-a-new-Europe-with-Francois-Hollande.html

    How did that work out?
    Indeed.

    Five years ago it was all 'the future is left', EdM would be PM, there would never again be a Conservative majority, the 'coming Democrat majority'.
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    OUTOUT Posts: 569
    AndyJS said:

    Melenchon refuses to endorse Macron.

    He hasn't conceded.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,787

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    But Macron will only win because he's facing the still-tainted Le Pen.

    He got 24%, at best. It's not some crowning endorsement or stunning triumph.

    The French are confused, conflicted and unhappy, and this is reflected in the wild spread of votes.

    That said I hear Macron is a mild Anglophile, and pro-business, so he might be OK for Brexit.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    Even now Le Pen is polling 35-40% in the runoff against Macron, Chirac slaughtered Jean Marie Le Pen, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    She may go forward in the next four years, she may go back. I think it largely depends on whether Macron is able to push through the reforms that France needs. (And it also depends on MLP not being deposed by MMLP.)
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    Lets see how they do!
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    SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,970
    The polling stations closed an hour later in the big French cities. Most of the votes cast in them have not yet been counted.
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    bobajobPBbobajobPB Posts: 1,042
    felix said:

    Freggles said:

    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    The French centre-right just fucked this up. They should have walked it. Tsk.


    Chortle.
    Why are you chortling? Fillon (sans scandals) would have been best for France, economically, and therefore best for the French people. And he might have won the Assembly, he could have pressed through real reform.

    I fear Macron will be a grave disappointment, and he doesn't even have a proper party, implying paralysis and further stagnation. As a supposed rightwinger, your delight is therefore a bit mystifying.

    I thought Boba was a committed lefty ?
    He certainly should be... committed.
    Can someone tell me what I have done to deserve this, ce soir? Sean calls me a 'supposed rightwinger' You call for me to me slung into an asylum. Carlotta picks me up on opposing a change to the tax and benefits system... five years ago. Les autres??
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,292
    France24 female presenter and reporter giddy over Macron.
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    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited April 2017
    RobD said:

    SeanT said:

    @afneil 2m2 minutes ago
    More
    TV coverage concentrating on exit polls rather than actual vote. After 20m votes counted, Le Pen on 25%, Macron 22%. Not representative?

    Has anyone found a website that has a map AND a table? :o
    Use this with the 2012 comparison, Rob.

    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    It's easy to run checks against 2012 results - she's up 6 or more in most, 10 in some.

    Example - Somme 33.87 (2017) versus 23.77 (2012)

    Bloomberg are starting to sound panicky.
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    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195

    It's very interesting that the YouGov Brexit right/wrong poll is level pegging despite the massive approvals for May and signs of a landslide on the way.

    It emphasises that the Brexit vote was driven as much by discontent with the style of domestic politics than by anyone's views of the EU.

    The utter rejection of Corbyn's brand of post-imperial cringe politics will be another step on the road to us coming to terms with the reality of being a normal, mainstream European country that belongs in the political structures of normal, mainstream Europe.

    Yep, just not in the EU :-)
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,290
    Greens won't stand against Labour in Ealing Central and Acton.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/green-party-pulls-out-crucial-10281739#ICID=sharebar_twitter

    Worth watching - very marginal Lab seat majority 274 over Con. Haq backed Corbyn. UKIP polled above Greens by 85 votes. Will LDs want to back her or not?
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,787
    surbiton said:

    Freggles said:

    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    The French centre-right just fucked this up. They should have walked it. Tsk.


    Chortle.
    Why are you chortling? Fillon (sans scandals) would have been best for France, economically, and therefore best for the French people. And he might have won the Assembly, he could have pressed through real reform.

    I fear Macron will be a grave disappointment, and he doesn't even have a proper party, implying paralysis and further stagnation. As a supposed rightwinger, your delight is therefore a bit mystifying.

    I thought Boba was a committed lefty ?
    He's a French Lefty - in theory, but not in practice.....you should have heard him go on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and when someone (himself) on well over average income had their child benefit taken away.....
    Child benefit should be an universal benefit.

    Says the expatriate rentier......
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    AndyJS said:

    The one thing we need is a website with actual vote totals counted so far for the whole of France and by department. Of course that's the one thing that doesn't seem to exist. The same thing happens at UK general elections: there's never a page with running vote totals.

    You have a website with results coming in by departement here
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/
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    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128
    AndyJS said:

    Melenchon refuses to endorse Macron.

    Melanchon isn't going to need a Presidential Pardon.
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    bobajobPBbobajobPB Posts: 1,042
    MTimT said:

    So I google 'Macron gay sub relationship rumours' and got only articles dated either 7 or 8 February 2017. Was this a 24-hour story? If so, I presume it has no validity and hence holds no dangers for Macron.


    Given that the French (rightly) largely consider sex a private matter – who gives a fuck?
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    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    So far Mélenchon is beating Fillon.
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    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,895
    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    So far Le Pen is basically sweeping the departements Sarkozy won in 2012 bar Mayenne for Fillon and Macron is winning most of those won by Hollande but Le Pen is leading in the Somme and Charente-Maritime which Hollande won and Melenchon in the Dordogne which Hollande won
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    She's polling about 4% higher than in 2012 almost everywhere, which is why the forecasts for her to get about 22% sound pretty much exactly right.
    She is still winning more departements than Macron though, it could be close for winner of the first round
    Macron 24.0

    Le Pen 21.7

    Is latest forecast here www.thelocal.fr/20170423/interactive-map-of-the-2017-french-presidential-election
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,292
    edited April 2017
    He is both funny while making a lot of good points (again)....

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=up28hlTaqaA
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    DadgeDadge Posts: 2,038
    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    @afneil 2m2 minutes ago
    More
    TV coverage concentrating on exit polls rather than actual vote. After 20m votes counted, Le Pen on 25%, Macron 22%. Not representative?


    If Neil's implication is right there is serious money to be made on backing Le Pen for Round One – she's available at about 2/1. I'm not (yet) moved.
    Half the votes now counted. She's still ahead by nearly two percent.

    with half the vote in: LE PEN AT 24.13%, MACRON AT 22.42%: INTERIOR MINISTRY AT 9:48PM: BBG
    Macron will win. Smaller (hickier) communes are declaring first.
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,290
    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,010
    edited April 2017
    bobajobPB said:

    MTimT said:

    So I google 'Macron gay sub relationship rumours' and got only articles dated either 7 or 8 February 2017. Was this a 24-hour story? If so, I presume it has no validity and hence holds no dangers for Macron.


    Given that the French (rightly) largely consider sex a private matter – who gives a fuck?
    Again, it would not be a question of it being private, it would have been if it was secret and hidden. I don't give a crap either way, but someone being private in their own affairs is different than someone taking steps to conceal those affairs, because if you actively conceal one thing you might be concealing something else, something more significant. Though it seems to have been baseless either way.
  • Options
    bobajobPBbobajobPB Posts: 1,042

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    en, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    Lets see how they do!
    What's the inside view from the May household on M. Macron?
  • Options
    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    So far Le Pen is basically sweeping the departements Sarkozy won in 2012 bar Mayenne for Fillon and Macron is winning most of those won by Hollande but Le Pen is leading in the Somme and Charente-Maritime which Hollande won and Melenchon in the Dordogne which Hollande won
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    She's polling about 4% higher than in 2012 almost everywhere, which is why the forecasts for her to get about 22% sound pretty much exactly right.
    She is still winning more departements than Macron though, it could be close for winner of the first round
    Macron 24.0

    Le Pen 21.7

    Is latest forecast here www.thelocal.fr/20170423/interactive-map-of-the-2017-french-presidential-election
    What is the latest forecast from the other "Exit" poll (Kantar) though? I think that had 23 each for Le Pen/Macron.
  • Options
    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    Well done. I hope Labour should also follow suit. Labour should support LDs in Twickenham and Richmond.
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341

    France24 female presenter and reporter giddy over Macron.

    Bloomberg are starting to stress that the big city votes are not in.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,088
    This will just fuel the 'coalition of chaos' line.
  • Options
    bobajobPBbobajobPB Posts: 1,042
    SeanT said:

    bobajobPB said:

    SeanT said:

    @afneil 2m2 minutes ago
    More
    TV coverage concentrating on exit polls rather than actual vote. After 20m votes counted, Le Pen on 25%, Macron 22%. Not representative?


    If Neil's implication is right there is serious money to be made on backing Le Pen for Round One – she's available at about 2/1. I'm not (yet) moved.
    Half the votes now counted. She's still ahead by nearly two percent.

    with half the vote in: LE PEN AT 24.13%, MACRON AT 22.42%: INTERIOR MINISTRY AT 9:48PM: BBG

    I assume that is because the rural departments count earlier – but it might be worth a punt. I have stayed away from this market completely simply because I am inexpert on French politics (and French psephology).
  • Options
    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584
    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673


    Will he be expelled for that?

  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,128

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673


    Will he be expelled for that?

    It might not do the LibDems much good in nearby Eastbourne and Lewes.
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Floater said:

    It's very interesting that the YouGov Brexit right/wrong poll is level pegging despite the massive approvals for May and signs of a landslide on the way.

    It emphasises that the Brexit vote was driven as much by discontent with the style of domestic politics than by anyone's views of the EU.

    The utter rejection of Corbyn's brand of post-imperial cringe politics will be another step on the road to us coming to terms with the reality of being a normal, mainstream European country that belongs in the political structures of normal, mainstream Europe.

    Yep, just not in the EU :-)
    We willbe back in, but not for a while.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,787
    bobajobPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    en, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    Lets see how they do!
    What's the inside view from the May household on M. Macron?
    I wouldn't know - but he's the only candidate she's met in Downing St......
  • Options
    AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited April 2017
    bobajobPB said:

    Can someone tell me what I have done to deserve this, ce soir? Sean calls me a 'supposed rightwinger' You call for me to me slung into an asylum. Carlotta picks me up on opposing a change to the tax and benefits system... five years ago. Les autres??

    Standard "piling on" from those who stood behind the bully at school waiting to get a crafty kick in for the thrill of it.
  • Options
    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    Well done. I hope Labour should also follow suit. Labour should support LDs in Twickenham and Richmond.
    Why do they all bother to continue to exist as separate parties? Just form a new "Progressive" party, and get on with it...
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,010
    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    I'm really not a fan of these types of arrangements if they are not formal pacts agreed well in advance, and even then I'd prefer not to see it. I am sure most people considering voting LD in Brighton would prefer Lucas to risking a Tory MP, or even a Lab MP, but maybe some of them really wanted to vote for their first preference even if it meant someone not of their party lost their seat.

    It's giving up on an area and submitting to another party, not bothering to see if maybe you can surprise, and you might as well be in the same party, with broader factions, if you are going to do that, if defeating party X is the only thing that matters rather than advancing your own parties specific ideology. What about when Lucas goes? Is it ok to stand then? Why? The next Green will start from a higher position than any other progressive, and the lack of LD challenge might be even more significant.
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    SeanT said:

    Le Pen is winning Lot et Garonne (so far)

    I thought the Lot was wildly leftwing, like most of the southwest?

    The geography of French politics is very odd, and very intriguing. Why is the West left and the east right? Religion? Revolution? Race?

    Le Pen is winning plenty of places that voted for Hollande in 2012.

    There's no way she is as low as the exit poll suggested. No way.
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    HYUFD said:

    AndyJS said:

    The one thing we need is a website with actual vote totals counted so far for the whole of France and by department. Of course that's the one thing that doesn't seem to exist. The same thing happens at UK general elections: there's never a page with running vote totals.

    You have a website with results coming in by departement here
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/
    Thanks.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152

    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    So far Le Pen is basically sweeping the departements Sarkozy won in 2012 bar Mayenne for Fillon and Macron is winning most of those won by Hollande but Le Pen is leading in the Somme and Charente-Maritime which Hollande won and Melenchon in the Dordogne which Hollande won
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    She's polling about 4% higher than in 2012 almost everywhere, which is why the forecasts for her to get about 22% sound pretty much exactly right.
    She is still winning more departements than Macron though, it could be close for winner of the first round
    Macron 24.0

    Le Pen 21.7

    Is latest forecast here www.thelocal.fr/20170423/interactive-map-of-the-2017-french-presidential-election
    Le Pen now ahead in 26 departements, Macron in 14, Fillon in 3 and Melenchon in 2. There are 96 departements so almost half now coming in
  • Options
    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    edited April 2017
    .
  • Options
    TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,388
    IS there a live count of actual votes, a la Interior Ministry, anywhere?
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    bobajobPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    en, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    Lets see how they do!
    What's the inside view from the May household on M. Macron?
    I wouldn't know - but he's the only candidate she's met in Downing St......
    He speaks English well and is pro capitalist. Good for France and good for Britain.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152

    IS there a live count of actual votes, a la Interior Ministry, anywhere?

    The departements votes are being updated here

    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    A bit strange that 25% have voted for Le Pen in French Guiana. As far as I know most of the population there isn't white.
  • Options
    trawltrawl Posts: 142
    Off topic

    GE 2017. Notice Ladbrokes currently offering 1/4 on UKIP vote share under 10%. Not 5 - 10%, simply under 10%. Given weekend polling plus Nuttall conceding they won't be fielding so many candidates it is difficult to make a case for 10% or higher. Barring something v unexpected.

    DYOR obviously.
  • Options
    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    HYUFD said:

    IS there a live count of actual votes, a la Interior Ministry, anywhere?

    The departements votes are being updated here

    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/
    Does that give the grand totals? I can't see them.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,950
    alex. said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    Well done. I hope Labour should also follow suit. Labour should support LDs in Twickenham and Richmond.
    Why do they all bother to continue to exist as separate parties? Just form a new "Progressive" party, and get on with it...
    Their combined vote share would be less than as separate parties.
  • Options
    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    Macron price crashing
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    kle4 said:

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    I'm really not a fan of these types of arrangements if they are not formal pacts agreed well in advance, and even then I'd prefer not to see it. I am sure most people considering voting LD in Brighton would prefer Lucas to risking a Tory MP, or even a Lab MP, but maybe some of them really wanted to vote for their first preference even if it meant someone not of their party lost their seat.

    It's giving up on an area and submitting to another party, not bothering to see if maybe you can surprise, and you might as well be in the same party, with broader factions, if you are going to do that, if defeating party X is the only thing that matters rather than advancing your own parties specific ideology. What about when Lucas goes? Is it ok to stand then? Why? The next Green will start from a higher position than any other progressive, and the lack of LD challenge might be even more significant.
    It is why we need AV, or better still French style 2 round elections.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,017
    dr_spyn said:

    Greens won't stand against Labour in Ealing Central and Acton.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/green-party-pulls-out-crucial-10281739#ICID=sharebar_twitter

    Worth watching - very marginal Lab seat majority 274 over Con. Haq backed Corbyn. UKIP polled above Greens by 85 votes. Will LDs want to back her or not?

    Christ no! Jon Ball declared his LD candidacy as soon as the election was called. Huq has no chance.
  • Options
    TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,388
    alex. said:

    Macron price crashing

    Now the same to be president as win the first round.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,993
    trawl said:

    Off topic

    GE 2017. Notice Ladbrokes currently offering 1/4 on UKIP vote share under 10%. Not 5 - 10%, simply under 10%. Given weekend polling plus Nuttall conceding they won't be fielding so many candidates it is difficult to make a case for 10% or higher. Barring something v unexpected.

    DYOR obviously.

    A great bet, I have 300 on this at 1-3 for Coral, others have been far more bold.
  • Options
    glwglw Posts: 9,554
    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    It tells you a lot about Cable's politics that he will endorse crackpots like the Greens.
  • Options
    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    Sean_F said:

    alex. said:

    surbiton said:

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    Well done. I hope Labour should also follow suit. Labour should support LDs in Twickenham and Richmond.
    Why do they all bother to continue to exist as separate parties? Just form a new "Progressive" party, and get on with it...
    Their combined vote share would be less than as separate parties.
    I was being a bit facetious.
  • Options
    RogerRoger Posts: 18,895
    SeanT said:

    Le Pen is winning Lot et Garonne (so far)

    I thought the Lot was wildly leftwing, like most of the southwest?

    The geography of French politics is very odd, and very intriguing. Why is the West left and the east right? Religion? Revolution? Race?

    Money. The east is rich the west is poor
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    It's very interesting that the YouGov Brexit right/wrong poll is level pegging despite the massive approvals for May and signs of a landslide on the way.

    It emphasises that the Brexit vote was driven as much by discontent with the style of domestic politics than by anyone's views of the EU.

    The utter rejection of Corbyn's brand of post-imperial cringe politics will be another step on the road to us coming to terms with the reality of being a normal, mainstream European country that belongs in the political structures of normal, mainstream Europe.

    Yep, just not in the EU :-)
    We willbe back in, but not for a while.
    I very much doubt we will ever rejoin the EU (especially as it is very likely to Federalise with us out, and to make the euro work)

    But cheer up, there is a pretty good chance we will rejoin the Single Market and EEA/EFTA, and probably quite soon (for reasons I explain downthread). A future centre left party will put it in their manifesto, and they will, eventually, win.
    I expect a move into the EEA as a gateway to rejoining, but not for a while. We will have to wait for the Tory Europhiles to be ascendant again.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,010
    edited April 2017

    kle4 said:

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    I'm really not a fan of these types of arrangements if they are not formal pacts agreed well in advance, and even then I'd prefer not to see it. I am sure most people considering voting LD in Brighton would prefer Lucas to risking a Tory MP, or even a Lab MP, but maybe some of them really wanted to vote for their first preference even if it meant someone not of their party lost their seat.

    It's giving up on an area and submitting to another party, not bothering to see if maybe you can surprise, and you might as well be in the same party, with broader factions, if you are going to do that, if defeating party X is the only thing that matters rather than advancing your own parties specific ideology. What about when Lucas goes? Is it ok to stand then? Why? The next Green will start from a higher position than any other progressive, and the lack of LD challenge might be even more significant.
    It is why we need AV, or better still French style 2 round elections.
    Sadly not on the agenda I would guess.

    But really, the Greens? I would think for people who claim to be pretty centrist the Greens would be further away ideologically than most Tories (not all, admittedly).
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    edited April 2017
    chestnut said:

    SeanT said:

    Le Pen is winning Lot et Garonne (so far)

    I thought the Lot was wildly leftwing, like most of the southwest?

    The geography of French politics is very odd, and very intriguing. Why is the West left and the east right? Religion? Revolution? Race?

    Le Pen is winning plenty of places that voted for Hollande in 2012.

    There's no way she is as low as the exit poll suggested. No way.
    Le Pen has won every departement which voted for Sarkozy in 2012 so far except Mayenne and Lozere which went for Fillon. She is also winning Somme, Haute-Saone, Territorie-de-Belfort, Allier, Tarn, Audre, Lot, Charente-Maritime and Nievre and La Reunion which went for Hollande and held Gard which she won last time
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,787

    bobajobPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    en, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    Lets see how they do!
    What's the inside view from the May household on M. Macron?
    I wouldn't know - but he's the only candidate she's met in Downing St......
    He speaks English well and is pro capitalist. Good for France and good for Britain.
    While I fear he will struggle I suspect he was the least worst of a pretty poor bunch - and, as with all French Presidents will defend French national interest robustly, but at least we'll be spared the horror show of a Le Pen Presidency - imagine if Farrage/Nuttal had got that close in the UK?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    Macron now about to speak
    http://www.lci.fr/direct/
  • Options
    4 regions now declared - 2 Le Pen, 1 Macron, 1 Melanchon
  • Options

    bobajobPB said:

    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    dodrade said:

    Can someone explain Macron's apppeal? Seems bizarre France would now suddenly go for a Blair type figure given how discredited centrist politicans are elsewhere in the world.

    Er, he got maybe a quarter of the vote at most, and edged out a hard right candidate by about 1 point (maybe). He might even be second behind Le Pen (we don't know yet)

    In truth, the French haven't gone for ANYONE. They've voted all over the place in a kind of flailing despair, from communist to anarchist.
    The polls have been pretty accurate in France so far, and they predict a 2:1 win for Macron in round two. That may change, but tonight is a great night for Macron, and an OK night for Le Pen. Remember, just two weeks ago there wasn't a single poll that didn't have Le Pen in front.
    Macron will slaughter Le Pen in the second round.

    He is less radical than Fillon in his planned economic reforms, but is inclined in the right direction, and much more likely to bring a majority of tbe country with him.

    The assembly is likely to be pro reform, with quite a Republican and centrist majority.
    en, Macron may comfortably beat Marine Le Pen but he will not slaughter her
    She
    The significant fact is that including minor candidates, nearly half the vote went to far right or far left candidates. We were only a few per cent away from a Le Pen/Melenchon run off. Next time, we may get it.
    Next time the tide of populism will have receded. Macron will be a hugely significant President.
    Him and his political party, of course.......
    En Mrche now has 250 000 members and plans candidates planned for all Assembly seats.

    A lot of political novices and defectors, but formidable in one year.
    Lets see how they do!
    What's the inside view from the May household on M. Macron?
    I wouldn't know - but he's the only candidate she's met in Downing St......
    He speaks English well and is pro capitalist. Good for France and good for Britain.
    I agree and think that Theresa May, subject to a good majority, will cut a good deal with the EU that will include a two to three year transition
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    Macron saying he is ahead in round 1, wrong so far
  • Options
    TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,388

    4 regions now declared - 2 Le Pen, 1 Macron, 1 Melanchon

    Departments, Regions will come later (to be pedantic)
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    Macron thanking Fillon, Hamon and Melenchon
  • Options
    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    dr_spyn said:

    St Vince of Cable wants Lib Dems in Brighton to vote for Lucas.

    https://twitter.com/vincecable/status/856234593598492673

    I'm really not a fan of these types of arrangements if they are not formal pacts agreed well in advance, and even then I'd prefer not to see it. I am sure most people considering voting LD in Brighton would prefer Lucas to risking a Tory MP, or even a Lab MP, but maybe some of them really wanted to vote for their first preference even if it meant someone not of their party lost their seat.

    It's giving up on an area and submitting to another party, not bothering to see if maybe you can surprise, and you might as well be in the same party, with broader factions, if you are going to do that, if defeating party X is the only thing that matters rather than advancing your own parties specific ideology. What about when Lucas goes? Is it ok to stand then? Why? The next Green will start from a higher position than any other progressive, and the lack of LD challenge might be even more significant.
    It is why we need AV, or better still French style 2 round elections.
    Sadly not on the agenda I would guess.

    But really, the Greens? I would think for people who claim to be pretty centrist the Greens would be further away ideologically than most Tories.

    I have voted Green in the past at GE (2005 in Leicester South), I didn't expect them to win, but wanted the government to take Green issues seriously. Just as UKIP have influenced the agenda while flopping at FPTP.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    It's very interesting that the YouGov Brexit right/wrong poll is level pegging despite the massive approvals for May and signs of a landslide on the way.

    It emphasises that the Brexit vote was driven as much by discontent with the style of domestic politics than by anyone's views of the EU.

    The utter rejection of Corbyn's brand of post-imperial cringe politics will be another step on the road to us coming to terms with the reality of being a normal, mainstream European country that belongs in the political structures of normal, mainstream Europe.

    Yep, just not in the EU :-)
    We willbe back in, but not for a while.
    I very much doubt we will ever rejoin the EU (especially as it is very likely to Federalise with us out, and to make the euro work)

    But cheer up, there is a pretty good chance we will rejoin the Single Market and EEA/EFTA, and probably quite soon (for reasons I explain downthread). A future centre left party will put it in their manifesto, and they will, eventually, win.
    I expect a move into the EEA as a gateway to rejoining, but not for a while. We will have to wait for the Tory Europhiles to be ascendant again.
    I can't see us ever rejoin the EU which will now focus on the Eurozone if Macron wins
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,010
    I'd love it if Macron slips up and thanks the people for making him President already.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,152
    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    IS there a live count of actual votes, a la Interior Ministry, anywhere?

    The departements votes are being updated here

    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/
    Does that give the grand totals? I can't see them.
    You can count them fairly easily
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,895
    bobajobPB said:

    MTimT said:

    So I google 'Macron gay sub relationship rumours' and got only articles dated either 7 or 8 February 2017. Was this a 24-hour story? If so, I presume it has no validity and hence holds no dangers for Macron.


    Given that the French (rightly) largely consider sex a private matter – who gives a fuck?
    They don't give a shit. Really. They haven't had a leader not involved in sonme sexual imbroglio as long as anyone can remember and they are completely indifferent. Another reason why I love the French however rude and arrogant they might appear.
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    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    HYUFD said:

    chestnut said:

    SeanT said:

    Le Pen is winning Lot et Garonne (so far)

    I thought the Lot was wildly leftwing, like most of the southwest?

    The geography of French politics is very odd, and very intriguing. Why is the West left and the east right? Religion? Revolution? Race?

    Le Pen is winning plenty of places that voted for Hollande in 2012.

    There's no way she is as low as the exit poll suggested. No way.
    Le Pen has won every departement which voted for Sarkozy in 2012 so far except Mayenne and Lozere which went for Fillon. She is also winning Somme, Haute-Saone, Territorie-de-Belfort, Allier, Tarn, Audre, Lot, Charente-Maritime and Nievre and La Reunion which went for Hollande and held Gard which she won last time
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare
    They must be able to see something that really isn't apparent at all in the results so far.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited April 2017
    Jesus, look at that map. Le Pen sweeping the eastern side of the country:

    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/
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    brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    ZZZZZZzzzzzzz....
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    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,895

    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    So far Le Pen is basically sweeping the departements Sarkozy won in 2012 bar Mayenne for Fillon and Macron is winning most of those won by Hollande but Le Pen is leading in the Somme and Charente-Maritime which Hollande won and Melenchon in the Dordogne which Hollande won
    http://presidentielle.lepoint.fr/?p=compare

    She's polling about 4% higher than in 2012 almost everywhere, which is why the forecasts for her to get about 22% sound pretty much exactly right.
    She is still winning more departements than Macron though, it could be close for winner of the first round
    Macron 24.0

    Le Pen 21.7

    Is latest forecast here www.thelocal.fr/20170423/interactive-map-of-the-2017-french-presidential-election
    Macron 23.4

    Le Pen 21.8

    Moved but now based on 93%
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    alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    Floater said:

    It's very interesting that the YouGov Brexit right/wrong poll is level pegging despite the massive approvals for May and signs of a landslide on the way.

    It emphasises that the Brexit vote was driven as much by discontent with the style of domestic politics than by anyone's views of the EU.

    The utter rejection of Corbyn's brand of post-imperial cringe politics will be another step on the road to us coming to terms with the reality of being a normal, mainstream European country that belongs in the political structures of normal, mainstream Europe.

    Yep, just not in the EU :-)
    We willbe back in, but not for a while.
    I very much doubt we will ever rejoin the EU (especially as it is very likely to Federalise with us out, and to make the euro work)

    But cheer up, there is a pretty good chance we will rejoin the Single Market and EEA/EFTA, and probably quite soon (for reasons I explain downthread). A future centre left party will put it in their manifesto, and they will, eventually, win.
    I expect a move into the EEA as a gateway to rejoining, but not for a while. We will have to wait for the Tory Europhiles to be ascendant again.
    Tories won't govern for ever. Politics will realign. Labour (or a successor) will win in 2022 or 2027. And I bet they put Single Market membership in their manifesto.
    Single Market membership isn't in a UK party's gift. It would be in the Conservative Party manifesto if it wasn't for the free movement corollary. So unless the EU moves on that no prospective government will put that forward.
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