politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The Buckingham constituency where there must be a high chance of a by-election within 18 months
One of the intriguing facets of the current speculation over the Speaker, John Bercow, is that there could be a by-election within the next year and a half in the Buckingham parliamentary constituency.
The UK government could withhold security clearance for companies working on Europe’s Galileo satellite navigation system, in the latest clash over Brussels’ ban on Britain’s involvement in secure elements of the programme after Brexit.
The UK Space Agency has written on behalf of UK business secretary Greg Clark to 13 British companies working on Galileo’s highly secure elements, to remind them they need the government’s security authorisation for any future work. The agency asked the companies to consult the government before agreeing to any new contracts. “I regret that these steps are a necessary consequence of the position taken by the European Commission,” the letter said...
Industry insiders speculated that blocking all technology transfers by refusing security authorisation could impose a delay of up to three years on a programme already significantly behind schedule.
Another bubble for the cartoon could be "I hope a Jewish supporter of the criminal Zionist entity doesn't answer the door" - but such an encounter could be avoided if the canvasser noticed the mezuzah on the door.
This is why it’s pointless working yourself up into a fluster on here regarding Brexit negotiations. Most people simply have no clue what’s going on behind the scenes and gleefully react to every single tweet and headline, designed for your consumption. Every single time.
So, a bit of circumspection, sceptical analysis and patience would be in order.
It's spin, but probably significant. The UK won't get top level access to Galileo without special agreement that isn't currently available to non EU countries. It's a question of whether you stress the default lack of access or the possibility of agreement..
The UK government's threat to companies to stop them participating in Galileo is an empty one. They just move their operations abroad. I also doubt the UK would do its own system in the foreseeable future. It has a funding gap of up to £40 billion on existing defence projects according to the National Audit Office. Adding a realistic £10 billion or so to it is a stretch.
We are exlcuded from the lucrative contracts to build it, but we can pay to use it.
That sounds like a BRILLIANT deal.
Brexit delivers, again...
Surely you mean "the EU's intransigence means that hard working British companies will not be used to the detriment of the project and tax payers."
Or are you acknowledging that these things are just a stitch up?
I do wonder how a contractual clause aimed solely at companies from one member state is legal under EU procurement rules. But I suspect they don’t care
We are exlcuded from the lucrative contracts to build it, but we can pay to use it.
That sounds like a BRILLIANT deal.
Brexit delivers, again...
Surely you mean "the EU's intransigence means that hard working British companies will not be used to the detriment of the project and tax payers."
Or are you acknowledging that these things are just a stitch up?
There is simply a negotiation going on.
This is what they look like.
Stuff like this doesn't worry me overmuch - as you say the sides are negotiating, saying you cannot have this or that, but clearly some things will change because that's how negotiation works - if we accepted all pronouncements at face value both sides would have stopped talking already, accepting they can gain nothing.
It's the lack of agreement internally on wider issues that's our problem.
We are exlcuded from the lucrative contracts to build it, but we can pay to use it.
That sounds like a BRILLIANT deal.
Brexit delivers, again...
As I've pointed out before, Switzerland participates in the construction contracts (they make the clocks...), so it's hardly a point of principle on the EU's part.
It seems as though they have just realised that the program is somewhat dependent on UK technology, which we've now threatened to withhold.
Barnier is being more than a tad disingenuous... most unlike him, of course.
Stuff like this doesn't worry me overmuch - as you say the sides are negotiating, saying you cannot have this or that, but clearly some things will change because that's how negotiation works - if we accepted all pronouncements at face value both sides would have stopped talking already, accepting they can gain nothing.
It's the lack of agreement internally on wider issues that's our problem.
Another bubble for the cartoon could be "I hope a Jewish supporter of the criminal Zionist entity doesn't answer the door" - but such an encounter could be avoided if the canvasser noticed the mezuzah on the door.
Between them, the gammons, coconuts, uncle toms, and zios must make up a high proportion of voters in some boroughs.
We are exlcuded from the lucrative contracts to build it, but we can pay to use it.
That sounds like a BRILLIANT deal.
Brexit delivers, again...
As I've pointed out before, Switzerland participates in the construction contracts (they make the clocks...), so it's hardly a point of principle on the EU's part.
It seems as though they have just realised that the program is somewhat dependent on UK technology, which we've now threatened to withhold.
Barnier is being more than a tad disingenuous... most unlike him, of course.
The EU's argument is that the UK and EU can't trust each other enough to share confidential security matters. Fine - then the EU does not get any of our intelligence. It should be a fairly simple negotiation position.
It's spin, but probably significant. The UK won't get top level access to Galileo without special agreement that isn't currently available to non EU countries. It's a question of whether you stress the default lack of access or the possibility of agreement..
The UK government's threat to companies to stop them participating in Galileo is an empty one. They just move their operations abroad. I also doubt the UK would do its own system in the foreseeable future. It has a funding gap of up to £40 billion on existing defence projects according to the National Audit Office. Adding a realistic £10 billion or so to it is a stretch.
There is tremendous positive effect on R&D from having a space program. NASA's work led to the US developing Silicon Valley. We should absolutely do it.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
You couldn’t blame him. Career expectancy at Chelsea is short but lucrative. Most of us, if offered the chance to take the money and run, would decide we needed the exercise.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
You couldn’t blame him. Career expectancy at Chelsea is short but lucrative. Most of us, if offered the chance to take the money and run, would decide we needed the exercise.
Spurs have an £850 million stadium to pay for and Levy's alway been parsimonious.
Plus with even Liverpool going to spend a reported £250 million this summer standing still isn't going to be an option for Spurs.
Weird move. From a CL club to one that is not. From a young and quite exciting squad to one needing a radical overhaul. Surely any such discussion is just a way of trying to get Levy to get the chequebook out.
Weird move. From a CL club to one that is not. From a young and quite exciting squad to one needing a radical overhaul. Surely any such discussion is just a way of trying to get Levy to get the chequebook out.
The story I read over the weekend is that Spurs had budgeted £500 million for the new stadium but it has cost £850 million.
It's Arsenal moving to The Emirates all over again.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
Would it? I thought that if the next Speaker is one of the Labour deputies, the Tories will supply another deputy speaker. Similarly, if it's a Labour MP from the back benches, one of the Labour deputies will be replaced with a Tory. Status quo ante.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
A lot depends on timing but I really don't see it. If the Speaker hangs on into next year the range of uncertainty increases somewhat depending on how you know what has worked out. It is the sort of place where the Tories will have a lot to lose and not much to gain at the locals next year. If the Lib Dems did better then they may improve their profile but the Libs have not held the seat since 1910.
You couldn’t blame him. Career expectancy at Chelsea is short but lucrative. Most of us, if offered the chance to take the money and run, would decide we needed the exercise.
Tbh I suspect Levy may look to take the money and run before too long. The transformation he's overseen at Spurs is seriously impressive, once they've got the new stadium built/started it's probably a great time to sell.
Interesting article which I missed when it appeared last year. Editorial summary: younger and better-educated people are not becoming more socialist, but they're more socially liberal, and find the Conservatives culturally out of tune - but there are issues for Labour too.
Weird move. From a CL club to one that is not. From a young and quite exciting squad to one needing a radical overhaul. Surely any such discussion is just a way of trying to get Levy to get the chequebook out.
The story I read over the weekend is that Spurs had budgeted £500 million for the new stadium but it has cost £850 million.
It's Arsenal moving to The Emirates all over again.
Interesting article which I missed when it appeared last year. Editorial summary: younger and better-educated people are not becoming more socialist, but they're more socially liberal, and find the Conservatives culturally out of tune - but there are issues for Labour too.
My general assumption is that younger people are socially very liberal but plenty of them are not economically so, therefore while labour dominance would remain expected, the tories should be doing better.
I am surprised in that piece that the young are least likely to support rail renationalisat ion ((while still a majority).
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
Would it? I thought that if the next Speaker is one of the Labour deputies, the Tories will supply another deputy speaker. Similarly, if it's a Labour MP from the back benches, one of the Labour deputies will be replaced with a Tory. Status quo ante.
Yes, I had forgotten that a new deputy will be appointed.
Interesting article which I missed when it appeared last year. Editorial summary: younger and better-educated people are not becoming more socialist, but they're more socially liberal, and find the Conservatives culturally out of tune - but there are issues for Labour too.
Bercow is an embedded and assiduous local MP - working the villages, turning up to school and village fairs etc albeit not seen him so much in the last few years in our part of the Republic.
Any unknown replacement would be hard pushed to get that level of glad-handing - as we saw high-level posing a la Farage doesn't go down as well.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
A lot depends on timing but I really don't see it. If the Speaker hangs on into next year the range of uncertainty increases somewhat depending on how you know what has worked out. It is the sort of place where the Tories will have a lot to lose and not much to gain at the locals next year. If the Lib Dems did better then they may improve their profile but the Libs have not held the seat since 1910.
It's probably too rural (and thus Conservative) to cause an upset, unless either the County or District council, or the government, do something to seriously alienate local Conservatives. At this stage, I'd expect a result more like Witney than Richmond Park.
Bercow is an embedded and assiduous local MP - working the villages, turning up to school and village fairs etc albeit not seen him so much in the last few years in our part of the Republic.
Any unknown replacement would be hard pushed to get that level of glad-handing - as we saw high-level posing a la Farage doesn't go down as well.
Presumably there will be some reasonably prominent councillors who would fancy the gig? Like the all councillor shortlist in Lewisham.
Interesting article which I missed when it appeared last year. Editorial summary: younger and better-educated people are not becoming more socialist, but they're more socially liberal, and find the Conservatives culturally out of tune - but there are issues for Labour too.
Mr. Meeks, slightly different, though, as Goldsmith's resignation was (whilst keeping a daft promise) utterly vacuous, and by itself transformed the by-election into a single issue matter in which the Conservatives were on the other side of opinion to the local electorate.
Bercow is an embedded and assiduous local MP - working the villages, turning up to school and village fairs etc albeit not seen him so much in the last few years in our part of the Republic.
Any unknown replacement would be hard pushed to get that level of glad-handing - as we saw high-level posing a la Farage doesn't go down as well.
Presumably there will be some reasonably prominent councillors who would fancy the gig? Like the all councillor shortlist in Lewisham.
I need a trigger warning before reading posts like that!
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
A lot depends on timing but I really don't see it. If the Speaker hangs on into next year the range of uncertainty increases somewhat depending on how you know what has worked out. It is the sort of place where the Tories will have a lot to lose and not much to gain at the locals next year. If the Lib Dems did better then they may improve their profile but the Libs have not held the seat since 1910.
It's probably too rural (and thus Conservative) to cause an upset, unless either the County or District council, or the government, do something to seriously alienate local Conservatives. At this stage, I'd expect a result more like Witney than Richmond Park.
The number of new builds proposed is causing some consternation ... parish plans all over the place to throw up 100s of non-starter homes on paddocks and fields around the edges might be an issue in many of the towns/villages.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
Mr. P, disagree at least partially with that assessment. The Lords and some MPs batting for the other side provide a ready explanation for discontent with the final result. The electorate voted to run free, the Lords are insisting we have a ball and chain manacled to our leg.
It's spin, but probably significant. The UK won't get top level access to Galileo without special agreement that isn't currently available to non EU countries. It's a question of whether you stress the default lack of access or the possibility of agreement..
The UK government's threat to companies to stop them participating in Galileo is an empty one. They just move their operations abroad. I also doubt the UK would do its own system in the foreseeable future. It has a funding gap of up to £40 billion on existing defence projects according to the National Audit Office. Adding a realistic £10 billion or so to it is a stretch.
There is tremendous positive effect on R&D from having a space program. NASA's work led to the US developing Silicon Valley....
That was rather more US aerospace defence spending, and DARPA.
But you are probably still right about the benefits.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
A lot depends on timing but I really don't see it. If the Speaker hangs on into next year the range of uncertainty increases somewhat depending on how you know what has worked out. It is the sort of place where the Tories will have a lot to lose and not much to gain at the locals next year. If the Lib Dems did better then they may improve their profile but the Libs have not held the seat since 1910.
It's probably too rural (and thus Conservative) to cause an upset, unless either the County or District council, or the government, do something to seriously alienate local Conservatives. At this stage, I'd expect a result more like Witney than Richmond Park.
The number of new builds proposed is causing some consternation ... parish plans all over the place to throw up 100s of non-starter homes on paddocks and fields around the edges might be an issue in many of the towns/villages.
Buckinghamshire is probably the most ultra safe Tory county in the country. In 1993 after a disastrous set of county council elections it was the only county where the Tories maintained overall control and Bercow had pretty healthy majorities in both 1997 and 2001 despite the Blair landslides.
I would expect a solid Tory hold in any by election even if the LDs made inroads
The news channels are wall to wall Israeli brutality. It'll be interesting if Corbyn for once is able to step up to the plate or whether he'll be intimidated by the shadow of Guido and the 'Friends of Israel' in his own party.
(NB Jeremy Bowen is one of the few journalists worth listening to because he has a real knowledge of the history of the region)
Another bubble for the cartoon could be "I hope a Jewish supporter of the criminal Zionist entity doesn't answer the door" - but such an encounter could be avoided if the canvasser noticed the mezuzah on the door.
Between them, the gammons, coconuts, uncle toms, and zios must make up a high proportion of voters in some boroughs.
But remember, verbally abusing someone based on their skin colour isn't racist.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
My take on that is that May thinks that the democratic wishes of the people of Northern Ireland should be ignored if they don't align with the position of the Conservative Party (and their chums in the DUP).
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
My take on that is that May thinks that the democratic wishes of the people of Northern Ireland should be ignored if they don't align with the position of the Conservative Party (and their chums in the DUP).
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
The LDs already held Richmond Park from 1997 to 2010 unlike Buckingham
Buckinghamshire is probably the most ultra safe Tory county in the country. In 1993 after a disastrous set of county council elections it was the only county where the Tories maintained overall control and Bercow had pretty healthy majorities in both 1997 and 2001 despite the Blair landslides.
I would expect a solid Tory hold in any by election even if the LDs made inroads
Depends on the Tory candidate, a head-banging Brexiteer would not go down well.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
My take on that is that May thinks that the democratic wishes of the people of Northern Ireland should be ignored if they don't align with the position of the Conservative Party (and their chums in the DUP).
Democracy is already a heavily moderated concept in Northern Ireland and for good reason. Northern Ireland needs to proceed by consensus, not a bare majority, whichever way that bare majority points at any given moment.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
First time I can remember May saying anything sensible for a long time.
Buckinghamshire CC has 41 out of 49 Conservative Councillors. If the government was on the ropes anything can happen at a bye election but at the moment they have a modest lead in the polls and the Lib Dems are nowhere. I really don't see this being any closer than Lewisham.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
The same was true for Richmond Park.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
The LDs already held Richmond Park from 1997 to 2010 unlike Buckingham
That does not appear to be the view of many of your fellow Conservatives.
I live in a reasonably sized village in the Buckinghamshire constituency so hopefully have some knowledge. Although considering the large size and odd shape of it, different parts have very different views.
Of the people that I know well (early 40s with kids under 10) in the area they are almost without exception pro-Remain. I was the panto villain who voted Leave and had (and still do sometimes) some interesting conversations on the topic.
A lot of the people who live here have moved out of London, the majority of which are soft left (a small number of Corbynistas and Tories). The older generation who have lived here for a while I am sure are Tories in the majority and pro-Leave but that is normal across the country.
Bercow has a lot of support locally as he has done a lot of work for good causes, schools etc. and has been very publicly visible. He will therefore I'm sure have some level of personal vote although that was the never the case from me as I've not liked him.
My gut feel is that this is still a safe Tory seat as the older generations will all vote Tory having experienced 70s style socialism before. For my generation I think a lot will just not vote as they will not know who to vote for. The Tories are taking us out of the EU which will prevent a lot voting for them. Corbyn and his policies also do not appeal to a large number of people here and in fact he is a running joke. Who is going to vote for Vince Cable? The Greens have always done quite well here but obviously nowhere near well enough to get elected.
The news channels are wall to wall Israeli brutality. It'll be interesting if Corbyn for once is able to step up to the plate or whether he'll be intimidated by the shadow of Guido and the 'Friends of Israel' in his own party.
(NB Jeremy Bowen is one of the few journalists worth listening to because he has a real knowledge of the history of the region)
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
My take on that is that May thinks that the democratic wishes of the people of Northern Ireland should be ignored if they don't align with the position of the Conservative Party (and their chums in the DUP).
A Border Poll almost certainly would be won by the pro-Union side, but would still be hugely divisive.
Interesting article which I missed when it appeared last year. Editorial summary: younger and better-educated people are not becoming more socialist, but they're more socially liberal, and find the Conservatives culturally out of tune - but there are issues for Labour too.
Yes it is interesting. I have always regarded the self actualisation of young people from the Sixties onwards as an essentially consumerist and right wing phenomenon, with more than a tint of selfishness.
It is also interesting to see how economically socialist the former kippers are. Hannanite and Foxite free trade is not what they are after. It is not just the Labour party trying to ride two horses at the same time. Tories holding onto those former kippers is not a done deal, and Corbynism is not the anathema that some opine.
I live in a reasonably sized village in the Buckinghamshire constituency so hopefully have some knowledge. Although considering the large size and odd shape of it, different parts have very different views.
Of the people that I know well (early 40s with kids under 10) in the area they are almost without exception pro-Remain. I was the panto villain who voted Leave and had (and still do sometimes) some interesting conversations on the topic.
A lot of the people who live here have moved out of London, the majority of which are soft left (a small number of Corbynistas and Tories). The older generation who have lived here for a while I am sure are Tories in the majority and pro-Leave but that is normal across the country.
Bercow has a lot of support locally as he has done a lot of work for good causes, schools etc. and has been very publicly visible. He will therefore I'm sure have some level of personal vote although that was the never the case from me as I've not liked him.
My gut feel is that this is still a safe Tory seat as the older generations will all vote Tory having experienced 70s style socialism before. For my generation I think a lot will just not vote as they will not know who to vote for. The Tories are taking us out of the EU which will prevent a lot voting for them. Corbyn and his policies also do not appeal to a large number of people here and in fact he is a running joke. Who is going to vote for Vince Cable? The Greens have always done quite well here but obviously nowhere near well enough to get elected.
Well said - although there are Lib Dem pockets around and a Brexiteer Tory would turn quite a few of us Tory Remainers to look at them potentially.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
My take on that is that May thinks that the democratic wishes of the people of Northern Ireland should be ignored if they don't align with the position of the Conservative Party (and their chums in the DUP).
A Border Poll almost certainly would be won by the pro-Union side, but would still be hugely divisive.
I'm with Theresa May - if we've learnt anything from the past few years it's surely to avoid overconfidence about which way referenda and elections will go. Plus the prospect of violence must be pretty high, especially if the people did vote for a united Ireland.
I live in a reasonably sized village in the Buckinghamshire constituency so hopefully have some knowledge. Although considering the large size and odd shape of it, different parts have very different views.
Of the people that I know well (early 40s with kids under 10) in the area they are almost without exception pro-Remain. I was the panto villain who voted Leave and had (and still do sometimes) some interesting conversations on the topic.
A lot of the people who live here have moved out of London, the majority of which are soft left (a small number of Corbynistas and Tories). The older generation who have lived here for a while I am sure are Tories in the majority and pro-Leave but that is normal across the country.
Bercow has a lot of support locally as he has done a lot of work for good causes, schools etc. and has been very publicly visible. He will therefore I'm sure have some level of personal vote although that was the never the case from me as I've not liked him.
My gut feel is that this is still a safe Tory seat as the older generations will all vote Tory having experienced 70s style socialism before. For my generation I think a lot will just not vote as they will not know who to vote for. The Tories are taking us out of the EU which will prevent a lot voting for them. Corbyn and his policies also do not appeal to a large number of people here and in fact he is a running joke. Who is going to vote for Vince Cable? The Greens have always done quite well here but obviously nowhere near well enough to get elected.
It is within the realms of possibility that Buckingham might stay with the Tories.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
The interesting demographic development in Northern Ireland is the small (15-20%) secular non-aligned group calling a plague on the two Northern Irish ideologies, who do identify themselves as Irish and who are breaking very strongly for Republican and Irish government positions on the border, customs arrangements etc. The DUP would almost certainly lose a vote in Northern Ireland on a hard border proposal and might lose it on a reunification poll if the practicalities of such an arrangement could be sorted out.
The other takeaway is that Theresa May is allergic to votes.
At just 0.3%, this is Germany’s weakest quarterly growth since the third quarter of 2016.
ING economist Carsten Brzeski says Germany had a ‘stumbling start’ into 2018, for a variety of reasons:
Trade and government consumption were a drag on growth. Also, don’t forget that a couple of one-off factors like the cold winter weather, early Easter vacation and strikes probably distorted first quarter data.
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg. 2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
The interesting demographic development in Northern Ireland is the small (15-20%) secular non-aligned group calling a plague on the two Northern Irish ideologies, who do identify themselves as Irish and who are breaking very strongly for Republican and Irish government positions on the border, customs arrangements etc. The DUP would almost certainly lose a vote in Northern Ireland on a hard border proposal and might lose it on a reunification poll if the practicalities of such an arrangement could be sorted out.
The other takeaway is that Theresa May is allergic to votes.
If Northern Ireland voted to join the republic, what is the problem? It would be in line with self-determination principles, remove the customs union issues, and provide spare cash for the NHS. Probably enough, along with a saved membership fee, to provide £350m a week.
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https://twitter.com/nick_gutteridge/status/996057347226243073?s=20
The UK government could withhold security clearance for companies working on Europe’s Galileo satellite navigation system, in the latest clash over Brussels’ ban on Britain’s involvement in secure elements of the programme after Brexit.
The UK Space Agency has written on behalf of UK business secretary Greg Clark to 13 British companies working on Galileo’s highly secure elements, to remind them they need the government’s security authorisation for any future work. The agency asked the companies to consult the government before agreeing to any new contracts. “I regret that these steps are a necessary consequence of the position taken by the European Commission,” the letter said...
Industry insiders speculated that blocking all technology transfers by refusing security authorisation could impose a delay of up to three years on a programme already significantly behind schedule.
https://www.ft.com/content/89bf0aca-579b-11e8-b8b2-d6ceb45fa9d0
That sounds like a BRILLIANT deal.
Brexit delivers, again...
Or are you acknowledging that these things are just a stitch up?
I wonder how many tourists pitch up in Buckingham looking for the palace?
Con 50%
LD 35%
Lab 10%
Others 5%
Nice safe seat for one of Tezzie's advisors to be parachuted into.
So, a bit of circumspection, sceptical analysis and patience would be in order.
Do I expect that?
No.
This is what they look like.
The UK government's threat to companies to stop them participating in Galileo is an empty one. They just move their operations abroad. I also doubt the UK would do its own system in the foreseeable future. It has a funding gap of up to £40 billion on existing defence projects according to the National Audit Office. Adding a realistic £10 billion or so to it is a stretch.
I thought Buckingham was Toryland Central?
At least it woukd likely be a closer by-election than most. There'd be a chance of the lds snatching it I think.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/may/14/east-coast-rail-franchise-to-be-scrapped-chris-grayling
It's the lack of agreement internally on wider issues that's our problem.
It seems as though they have just realised that the program is somewhat dependent on UK technology, which we've now threatened to withhold.
Barnier is being more than a tad disingenuous... most unlike him, of course.
1) A former MP for Buckingham was a Mossad spy
2) A billionaire
3) Stole the pensions of lots of hard working working class people
4) Jewish
5) Died in mysterious circumstances and was buried in Jerusalem
If Harold Wilson's Labour can win Buckingham then so should Jeremy Corbyn's Labour party.
So Poch is about to do one to Chelsea.
It would of course boost the government majority by 1. Unlikely to be decisive but welcome.
I wouldn’t expect a Lib Dem win but they might give the Conservatives quite a fright.
Plus with even Liverpool going to spend a reported £250 million this summer standing still isn't going to be an option for Spurs.
A thread on my Principality - the Bercow republic.... what a great way to start the day.
It's Arsenal moving to The Emirates all over again.
The transformation he's overseen at Spurs is seriously impressive, once they've got the new stadium built/started it's probably a great time to sell.
It’s not the 1990s any more. And the LoTO is not the slightly more benign Blair.
https://medium.com/@psurridge/whos-left-9a722cf4db50
Sorted.
I am surprised in that piece that the young are least likely to support rail renationalisat ion ((while still a majority).
Any unknown replacement would be hard pushed to get that level of glad-handing - as we saw high-level posing a la Farage doesn't go down as well.
Two points:
1) Theresa May seems to really dislike Jacob Rees-Mogg.
2) Reports of him being taken apart by the Prime Minister are not going to do his standing any good.
But you are probably still right about the benefits.
I would expect a solid Tory hold in any by election even if the LDs made inroads
(NB Jeremy Bowen is one of the few journalists worth listening to because he has a real knowledge of the history of the region)
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-5728623/amp/Tottenham-boss-Mauricio-Pochettino-demands-wages-doubled-100m-war-chest-summer.html
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/www.telegraph.co.uk/football/2018/05/14/mauricio-pochettino-wants-150m-tottenham-squad-overhaul-including/amp/
Of the people that I know well (early 40s with kids under 10) in the area they are almost without exception pro-Remain. I was the panto villain who voted Leave and had (and still do sometimes) some interesting conversations on the topic.
A lot of the people who live here have moved out of London, the majority of which are soft left (a small number of Corbynistas and Tories). The older generation who have lived here for a while I am sure are Tories in the majority and pro-Leave but that is normal across the country.
Bercow has a lot of support locally as he has done a lot of work for good causes, schools etc. and has been very publicly visible. He will therefore I'm sure have some level of personal vote although that was the never the case from me as I've not liked him.
My gut feel is that this is still a safe Tory seat as the older generations will all vote Tory having experienced 70s style socialism before. For my generation I think a lot will just not vote as they will not know who to vote for. The Tories are taking us out of the EU which will prevent a lot voting for them. Corbyn and his policies also do not appeal to a large number of people here and in fact he is a running joke. Who is going to vote for Vince Cable? The Greens have always done quite well here but obviously nowhere near well enough to get elected.
Martial, Sessegnon and Zaha.... wow. Replacing Sissoko and Llorente.... shame re Toby and Danny though.
It is also interesting to see how economically socialist the former kippers are. Hannanite and Foxite free trade is not what they are after. It is not just the Labour party trying to ride two horses at the same time. Tories holding onto those former kippers is not a done deal, and Corbynism is not the anathema that some opine.
The other takeaway is that Theresa May is allergic to votes.
ING: It's a black eye for Germany
At just 0.3%, this is Germany’s weakest quarterly growth since the third quarter of 2016.
ING economist Carsten Brzeski says Germany had a ‘stumbling start’ into 2018, for a variety of reasons:
Trade and government consumption were a drag on growth. Also, don’t forget that a couple of one-off factors like the cold winter weather, early Easter vacation and strikes probably distorted first quarter data.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/live/2018/may/15/german-growth-slows-trade-uk-unemployment-wage-growth-business-live
https://mobile.twitter.com/campbellclaret/status/996259583512412160