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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Esther McVey’s betting problem is why I’m taking the 20/1 on h

SystemSystem Posts: 12,256
edited May 2018 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Esther McVey’s betting problem is why I’m taking the 20/1 on her as next out of the cabinet

With news of Esther McVey's betting problem you might want to take the 20/1 @LadPolitics are offering on McVey as next out of the cabinet. https://t.co/Dzuo01GnLQ pic.twitter.com/8aXBnOqpC7

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Comments

  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,812
    Esther McVey should be investigated for spot fixing.
  • brendan16brendan16 Posts: 2,315
    edited May 2018
    The thought that a Cabinet member can be bought with a £270 trip to Cheltenham? Surely she isn't that cheap?

    Perhaps she used it as a chance to meet her constituents - as its big amongst those of Irish origin of which there are large numbers in Merseyside.

    Compared to the donations the Tory party has reputedly got in the past from companies who have since benefitted massively from the help to buy scheme to the tune of tens of millions on the other hand...

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2035836/Tory-party-given-3-3-million-donations-property-developers.html
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135
    If William Hill *didn't* take advantage of the opportunity to lobby her then they should certainly sack their management!
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    Second favourite to be first out of the Cabinet is Theresa May.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    On-topic, everyone knows McVey's partner is MP for the satchel-swingers and it is hard to see this as more than a technical offence to be fixed with an apology.

    Unless, of course, the Prime Minister has been looking for an excuse to get shot of McVey but its not as if she poses any threat in the leadership stakes.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 120,320
    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    https://twitter.com/GerardBattenMEP/status/1000722509518528512
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,592
    As well as Esther McVey being under potential investigation for breach of the ministerial code so Jeremy Hunt is also currently under investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards with that report due not too far in the distant future

    https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/politics/2018/apr/13/jeremy-hunt-referred-to-parliamentary-standards-over-luxury-flats-error
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,617

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    https://twitter.com/GerardBattenMEP/status/1000722509518528512

    Probably because Gauke is a complete no mark in all honesty.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,617
    On the thread: I don't think it'll happen but I've put a fiver on given Eagles' recent sterling form in this sort of market.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    HYUFD said:

    As well as Esther McVey being under potential investigation for breach of the ministerial code so Jeremy Hunt is also currently under investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards with that report due not too far in the distant future

    https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/politics/2018/apr/13/jeremy-hunt-referred-to-parliamentary-standards-over-luxury-flats-error

    Well remembered. And May did want to shift Hunt, so he could be the more vulnerable of the two -- depending what is found.

    What is more pertinent is that Labour, despite what some of the critics say, is doing what Oppositions are supposed to do in referring these cases, or at least Jon Trickett is. I'd have been interested in his price to succeed Corbyn but he is old enough to have campaigned for No in the 1975 referendum on Europe.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    McVey cut to 16/1 by Ladbrokes.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,592

    HYUFD said:

    As well as Esther McVey being under potential investigation for breach of the ministerial code so Jeremy Hunt is also currently under investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards with that report due not too far in the distant future

    https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/politics/2018/apr/13/jeremy-hunt-referred-to-parliamentary-standards-over-luxury-flats-error

    Well remembered. And May did want to shift Hunt, so he could be the more vulnerable of the two -- depending what is found.

    What is more pertinent is that Labour, despite what some of the critics say, is doing what Oppositions are supposed to do in referring these cases, or at least Jon Trickett is. I'd have been interested in his price to succeed Corbyn but he is old enough to have campaigned for No in the 1975 referendum on Europe.
    Yes, I expect the Hunt report to arrive before the McVey report and it would give May the chance to sack Hunt after he refused to move last time if he is found in breach

    Trickery could be a long term bet yes
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,812
    edited May 2018

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    Does anyone seriously think this rabble will ever be a real electoral threat again (other than HYUFD)?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507
    No safety car. Ker-ching!!

    I think @Morris_Dancer is going to want to kill me!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,592

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    Does anyone seriously think this rabble will ever be a real electoral threat again (other than HYUFD)?
    I don't really, that was only if May kept us fully in the single market and customs union and with freedom of movement
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,314
    Would love to see Riccardo in the second seat at Mercedes. Bottas is a waste of that competitive seat.
  • Indigo1Indigo1 Posts: 47

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    Does anyone seriously think this rabble will ever be a real electoral threat again (other than HYUFD)?
    If there is an electoral space, someone will fill it. If there is a BINO, as seems likely, the Tories will be too bad an odor to play for the kipper inclined vote for several years until there has been a thorough purge at the top.

    To that 15% plus however many centre-right Tories can't stand the current party after this shambles is going to be too tempting for someone not to make a serious play for, and most of those voters are going to be too angry to sit on their hands at home.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454
    Hmmm posters on PB accusing a Cabinet minister of having a "betting problem" ad on that basis, er, betting on it....
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Good afternoon, everyone.

    *unsheathes sword*

    Where is Mr. Sandpit?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    Does anyone seriously think this rabble will ever be a real electoral threat again (other than HYUFD)?
    *ever* is rather loaded. UKIP were a bunch of malcontents with various grievances, who congregated around the issue of the EU and placed much of their hatred of the modern world onto the EU (wrongly IMO).

    Hence why we saw such stupidity as people decrying breastfeeding in public on here.

    The problem with people with grievances is that they develop a taste for complaining. Give them a year or two and they'll slither out of the woodwork and congeal around another grievance - whether it's Brexit isn't Brexit enough, or women are acting a little uppity nowadays.

    The real sh*ts are those who cynically used the stupid to win a vote on the EU, funding them and supporting them, and who now decry all UKIP's other policies.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135
    edited May 2018

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    twitter.com/GerardBattenMEP/status/1000722509518528512

    Possibly because he hasn't been arrested for contempt of court, which would be a Justice matter, but breach of the peace, which would be a police decision and therefore Home Office?

    Seems rather dumb however to suggest that the Home Secretary personally is responsible for it.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    On a more serious note, congratulations to Mr. Sandpit, even though my own misjudgement is somewhat irksome. The bet I made has yet to be settled so I'm waiting to see which way it goes.

    Quite an odd race.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    Good afternoon, everyone.

    *unsheathes sword*

    Where is Mr. Sandpit?

    I congratulate anyone who had taken the bet that Verstappen would finish the race - don't know what they were but they must have been astronomical!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    Anyone know why Gerard Batten and his fellow Kippers are focussing on Sajid Javid and not say David Gauke who is responsible for the justice and prison system?

    Does anyone seriously think this rabble will ever be a real electoral threat again (other than HYUFD)?
    *ever* is rather loaded. UKIP were a bunch of malcontents with various grievances, who congregated around the issue of the EU and placed much of their hatred of the modern world onto the EU (wrongly IMO).

    Hence why we saw such stupidity as people decrying breastfeeding in public on here.

    The problem with people with grievances is that they develop a taste for complaining. Give them a year or two and they'll slither out of the woodwork and congeal around another grievance - whether it's Brexit isn't Brexit enough, or women are acting a little uppity nowadays.

    The real sh*ts are those who cynically used the stupid to win a vote on the EU, funding them and supporting them, and who now decry all UKIP's other policies.
    They were the party of populist protest and anti-EU.

    Now Brexit is happening and Corbyn has emerged, the markets in both have collapsed.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507

    Good afternoon, everyone.

    *unsheathes sword*

    Where is Mr. Sandpit?

    (waves)

    (sprays champagne)

    3,500 miles away!
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,314
    Sandpit said:

    Good afternoon, everyone.

    *unsheathes sword*

    Where is Mr. Sandpit?

    (waves)

    (sprays champagne)

    3,500 miles away!
    *Rosewater
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Sandpit, I'm curious: what do you suppose the range of a cannon capable of launching men (or a fine pink mist that was formerly men) into space is?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507

    On a more serious note, congratulations to Mr. Sandpit, even though my own misjudgement is somewhat irksome. The bet I made has yet to be settled so I'm waiting to see which way it goes.

    Quite an odd race.

    As I did say a couple of days ago, I was sure there would be one (there’s been one at every event this year, and every Monaco GP this decade) but couldn’t bear to be on the other side of the bet the day it did come off.

    I honestly thought Charles Leclerc’s broken brakes were going to be this year’s Jenson Button, but thankfully the VSC was enough to clear the mess away.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Sandpit, yeah. My own fault, but given how much bad luck I've had this year... anyway, glad it worked out. Leclerc showed quick thinking to try and minimise the damage.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,733
    I think this is really serious for McVey. If she really LED the cabinet revolt against gambling reforms and didn't declare that she had been a guest of William Hill for a day at Cheltenham, then she is in trouble - or should be.

    It doesn't matter that the amount was relatively small compared with the sums spent on lobbying (£270 each declared). For her personally, it was no doubt a big treat and William Hill will not have wasted the opportunity of personally lobbying her. She will also have felt a little indebted to them.

    If she had declared it, then it would have been transparent and her leadership of the cabinet revolt would have been seen in that context and she wouldn't be in trouble.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904

    Mr. Sandpit, yeah. My own fault, but given how much bad luck I've had this year... anyway, glad it worked out. Leclerc showed quick thinking to try and minimise the damage.

    Yes, skilful driving by Leclerc in an unavoidable crash. Shame for Hartley, though.

    That was a really boring F1 race. I'm spitting feathers that I'll miss watching better races live whilst sitting through the Monaco drudgery.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Jessop, aye. Even worse is when people wibble about the heritage. Aye, great. But I'm here for a race. A race track which is slow and almost impossible to pass on is, by definition, rubbish.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135
    edited May 2018
    Barnesian said:

    I think this is really serious for McVey. If she really LED the cabinet revolt against gambling reforms and didn't declare that she had been a guest of William Hill for a day at Cheltenham, then she is in trouble - or should be.

    It doesn't matter that the amount was relatively small compared with the sums spent on lobbying (£270 each declared). For her personally, it was no doubt a big treat and William Hill will not have wasted the opportunity of personally lobbying her. She will also have felt a little indebted to them.

    If she had declared it, then it would have been transparent and her leadership of the cabinet revolt would have been seen in that context and she wouldn't be in trouble.

    Theresa May has lost three four cabinet ministers to scandal and one to resignation in the last six (and a bit) months.

    I doubt if she will lose another unless she's forced to, particularly given McVey really gets up the nose of the Labour Party and is in particular a constant running sore for Macdonnell, who infamously called for her to be murdered.

    That's not to say she should stay, merely that if this is the extent of the scandal I think she probably will.

    Edited because I had forgotten about Damian Green.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    F1: the bet I tipped, which had the top three places as winning when I made it (Raikkonen being third), later reduced to two, has not paid out as it should've.

    ......
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507

    F1: the bet I tipped, which had the top three places as winning when I made it (Raikkonen being third), later reduced to two, has not paid out as it should've.

    ......

    I read the three places as meaning a podium finish, rather than three places behind the winner down to 4th. Good luck with your complaint though.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Sandpit, the market was Winner Without Ricciardo.
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787

    A race track which is slow and almost impossible to pass on is, by definition, rubbish.

    I think you need to have a word with Max Verstappen about that.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. rpjs, his car was miles faster than most of those he passed and he barely got into the points.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507
    edited May 2018

    Mr. Sandpit, yeah. My own fault, but given how much bad luck I've had this year... anyway, glad it worked out. Leclerc showed quick thinking to try and minimise the damage.

    Yes, skilful driving by Leclerc in an unavoidable crash. Shame for Hartley, though.

    That was a really boring F1 race. I'm spitting feathers that I'll miss watching better races live whilst sitting through the Monaco drudgery.
    It was indeed a boring race, made better only by a big winning bet. Somewhat counterintuitively, if Ricciardo hadn’t has his MGU-K problem the faster pace could have necessitated a two-stop strategy, which would have played into Bottas’ hands.

    Leclerc and Hartley were very lucky, that accident could have been a whole lot worse. It must be seriously scary to have the brake pedal go straight to the floor in an F1 car, the young Monagesque did well to use the barrier as a brake before the inevitable impact with the back of the Toro Rosso.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    Mr. rpjs, his car was miles faster than most of those he passed and he barely got into the points.

    But it still had all four wheels on it. Result!
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 63,487
    Local activist in Pidcock's seat, after CLP chief vote went against Momentum:

    “It’s the classic Corbynite mix of authoritarianism and incompetence. God help up if these people actually got into power, it’d be like the Stasi staffed by Mrs Brown’s Boys”

    https://www.theredroar.com/2018/05/pidcock-up-corbyn-ally-fails-to-fix-local-party-election/
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,062

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Roger, as a rule, F1 tickets seem horrendously over-priced.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    Local activist in Pidcock's seat, after CLP chief vote went against Momentum:

    “It’s the classic Corbynite mix of authoritarianism and incompetence. God help up if these people actually got into power, it’d be like the Stasi staffed by Mrs Brown’s Boys”

    https://www.theredroar.com/2018/05/pidcock-up-corbyn-ally-fails-to-fix-local-party-election/

    It's fair to say I'm not Pidcock's greatest fan but I think calling her a 'carpetbagger' is more than a bit unfair. She's fairly solidly rooted in the area even if she's a rotten parliamentary representative.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 63,487
    ydoethur said:

    Local activist in Pidcock's seat, after CLP chief vote went against Momentum:

    “It’s the classic Corbynite mix of authoritarianism and incompetence. God help up if these people actually got into power, it’d be like the Stasi staffed by Mrs Brown’s Boys”

    https://www.theredroar.com/2018/05/pidcock-up-corbyn-ally-fails-to-fix-local-party-election/

    It's fair to say I'm not Pidcock's greatest fan but I think calling her a 'carpetbagger' is more than a bit unfair. She's fairly solidly rooted in the area even if she's a rotten parliamentary representative.
    Yes, I did wonder about that.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,248

    A race track which is slow and almost impossible to pass on is, by definition, rubbish.

    Oh, but the glamour, Mr. Dancer - think of the glamour.....

    If F1 wre starting from scratch today, Monaco wouldn't get within the top 100 candidates.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904
    Sandpit said:

    Mr. Sandpit, yeah. My own fault, but given how much bad luck I've had this year... anyway, glad it worked out. Leclerc showed quick thinking to try and minimise the damage.

    Yes, skilful driving by Leclerc in an unavoidable crash. Shame for Hartley, though.

    That was a really boring F1 race. I'm spitting feathers that I'll miss watching better races live whilst sitting through the Monaco drudgery.
    It was indeed a boring race, made better only by a big winning bet. Somewhat counterintuitively, if Ricciardo hadn’t has his MGU-K problem the faster pace could have necessitated a two-stop strategy, which would have played into Bottas’ hands.

    Leclerc and Hartley were very lucky, that accident could have been a whole lot worse. It must be seriously scary to have the brake pedal go straight to the floor in an F1 car, the young Monagesque did well to use the barrier as a brake before the inevitable impact with the back of the Toro Rosso.
    The problems of an out-of-control crash there was seen seven years ago:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOM5SzxEFGU

    Perez's crash still makes me shudder.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,717
    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    ydoethur said:

    Local activist in Pidcock's seat, after CLP chief vote went against Momentum:

    “It’s the classic Corbynite mix of authoritarianism and incompetence. God help up if these people actually got into power, it’d be like the Stasi staffed by Mrs Brown’s Boys”

    https://www.theredroar.com/2018/05/pidcock-up-corbyn-ally-fails-to-fix-local-party-election/

    It's fair to say I'm not Pidcock's greatest fan but I think calling her a 'carpetbagger' is more than a bit unfair. She's fairly solidly rooted in the area even if she's a rotten parliamentary representative.
    Yes, I did wonder about that.
    There are lots of politicians you could quite legitimately call carpetbaggers in every party. In a very small area, you have Mary Creagh, Yvette Cooper and Ed Miliband. For the Tories, we could mention Boris, Fox, Rees-Mogg perhaps (who travelled the country like a royal messenger before settling near his second home).

    But I wouldn't say Pidcock should be on that list.
  • RoyalBlueRoyalBlue Posts: 3,223
    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    It’s expensive. For some people that’s enough.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904
    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    It’s expensive. For some people that’s enough.
    Contacts. If you're the sort of pond scum person who likes to be surrounded by the great and the good, who likes to go to the same parties as them and to grease palms, it's the perfect place to go. At least if you can afford it...
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. F, quite.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,592
    edited May 2018
    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    The Monaco Grand Prix is a bit like Ascot or centre court at Wimbledon, it used to be only filled with royalty, aristocracy and old money with a few film stars added to the mix, now anyone with the cash can turn up. More meritocratic certainly but don't expect the same chic or dress code.


    The MCC and maybe St Andrews or the Augusta National are some of the last sporting bastions holding out admission to only 'a certain class of people' left
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135
    edited May 2018
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507

    Sandpit said:

    Mr. Sandpit, yeah. My own fault, but given how much bad luck I've had this year... anyway, glad it worked out. Leclerc showed quick thinking to try and minimise the damage.

    Yes, skilful driving by Leclerc in an unavoidable crash. Shame for Hartley, though.

    That was a really boring F1 race. I'm spitting feathers that I'll miss watching better races live whilst sitting through the Monaco drudgery.
    It was indeed a boring race, made better only by a big winning bet. Somewhat counterintuitively, if Ricciardo hadn’t has his MGU-K problem the faster pace could have necessitated a two-stop strategy, which would have played into Bottas’ hands.

    Leclerc and Hartley were very lucky, that accident could have been a whole lot worse. It must be seriously scary to have the brake pedal go straight to the floor in an F1 car, the young Monagesque did well to use the barrier as a brake before the inevitable impact with the back of the Toro Rosso.
    The problems of an out-of-control crash there was seen seven years ago:
    ttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOM5SzxEFGU

    Perez's crash still makes me shudder.
    There’s been a few there over the years, Perez was very lucky, as was Jenson Button a few years ago before they upgraded the barriers to the softer plastic ones in use now.

    ttps://youtube.com/watch?v=gNElKRoY3pc

    Thankfully the design of F1 cars, barriers and medical facilities are fantastic, drivers now walk away from accidents that would have been fatal a few decades ago.

    When watching F1 cars up close, the most astonishing thing that really sticks in the mind is the way they brake, they pull 5g (49m/s^2) as they can slow from 320km/h to 100km/h in less than 100m.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    It’s expensive. For some people that’s enough.
    Contacts. If you're the sort of pond scum person who likes to be surrounded by the great and the good, who likes to go to the same parties as them and to grease palms, it's the perfect place to go. At least if you can afford it...
    The "great and the good" don't go anywhere near Monaco

    As Somerset Maughan noted, it's "a sunny place for shady people"

  • hamiltonacehamiltonace Posts: 666
    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Ace, it's certainly a masterclass in creating a secular martyr.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507
    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    A concrete jungle with no income tax, hence its popularity with touring sportsmen who can base themselves anywhere.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 26,897
    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I thought that Monaco was the centre of the European culture you were praising earlier ?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 124,592
    edited May 2018

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    I think ex UKIP leadership candidate Anne Marie Waters 'For Britain' Party now really represents the Tommy Robinson point of view and he has backed it and its platform of "reducing Muslim immigration to the UK to near zero, and to "bring the entire EU project down".

    I believe Morrissey has also endorsed the party. It fielded 15 candidates in the local elections in May but none were elected.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/For_Britain


  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904
    Charles said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    It’s expensive. For some people that’s enough.
    Contacts. If you're the sort of pond scum person who likes to be surrounded by the great and the good, who likes to go to the same parties as them and to grease palms, it's the perfect place to go. At least if you can afford it...
    The "great and the good" don't go anywhere near Monaco

    As Somerset Maughan noted, it's "a sunny place for shady people"
    I forget you speak for all the 'great and the good'. ;)
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 52,812

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    UKIP’s reason to exist being to support racist provocateurs going round collapsing trials? Laughable.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Genuine question;

    If 300,000 people petitioned to have the trial in question stopped, on the basis that this has made it impossible for it to be fair, would you support that as well? Bearing in mind that is already what the defence have tried (unsuccessfully) to argue.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Why would the government want to get him out of prison? He was in contempt of court, while serving a suspended sentence for a similar offence, and his actions could yet let serious sexual offenders walk free.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,406

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Exactly what Theresa May should not do.
    As an aside, from the footage it looks like the police have behaved extremely well in the face of lots of provocation from protesters...
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    F1: sent a query to Ladbrokes. We shall see how it goes.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    The government probably had nothing to do with it - it was probably the criminal justice system working.

    TM should ensure the due process of law was followed and, if it was, stick to her guns against the rabble. If it was not, then he should be released and there should be an explanation from the Chief Constable of the relevant force and any judges involved, if any.

    And if UKIP use Robinson as a basis for their revival, they'll just be confirming Cameron's adage about them. Not that it needed much confirmation.

    Someone once said something on here that, IMO, is very wise: reporting of events relating to the law is very poor. Cases that might seem slam-dunk miscarriages or mistakes in the media might look very different if you were in court. This is more complex because of potential reporting restrictions, but consider that what is being spread on t'Internet is only one side of the story.
  • brendan16brendan16 Posts: 2,315
    edited May 2018
    ydoethur said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Genuine question;

    If 300,000 people petitioned to have the trial in question stopped, on the basis that this has made it impossible for it to be fair, would you support that as well? Bearing in mind that is already what the defence have tried (unsuccessfully) to argue.
    On that logic any media outlet that broadcasts any rape trial and pictures or videos the accused could be accused of making a trial impossible to be fair.

    Frankly in order for the West Yorkshire police to be bothered to arrest them based on their previous lack of activity the evidence must be pretty strong anyway!

    Either way should one person be locked up for a year solely on the grounds that he might by filming accused child rapists have prejudiced their trial when local papers have already covered the case and named them anyway?

    Of course the real victims here are the young children and teenagers who got abused and raped - allegedly of course!

    Still government and the authorities locks up man to protect the rights of men charged with raping kids probably isn't a good look.
  • hamiltonacehamiltonace Posts: 666
    Sandpit said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Why would the government want to get him out of prison? He was in contempt of court, while serving a suspended sentence for a similar offence, and his actions could yet let serious sexual offenders walk free.
    A simple discussion by the police to ask him to make sure that he does nothing to jeopardise the trial would have been appropriate. Putting him in prison is nuts. Maybe you are happy living in a racist country but I am not.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904
    brendan16 said:

    ydoethur said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Genuine question;

    If 300,000 people petitioned to have the trial in question stopped, on the basis that this has made it impossible for it to be fair, would you support that as well? Bearing in mind that is already what the defence have tried (unsuccessfully) to argue.
    On that logic any media outlet that broadcasts any rape trial and pictures or videos the accused could be accused of making a trial impossible to be fair.

    Frankly in order for the West Yorkshire police to be bothered to arrest them based on their previous lack of activity the evidence must be pretty strong anyway!

    Either way should one person be locked for a year solely on the grounds that he might by filming accused child rapists or having put that trial at risk. Of course the real victims here are the young children and teenagers who got abused and raped - allegedly of course!
    So we are all singing from the same hymnbook, what do you think the 'facts' in this case are?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. Jessop, on your latter points, this is where lack of public faith in institutions such as the police, politicians and the media really bites.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135
    brendan16 said:

    ydoethur said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Genuine question;

    If 300,000 people petitioned to have the trial in question stopped, on the basis that this has made it impossible for it to be fair, would you support that as well? Bearing in mind that is already what the defence have tried (unsuccessfully) to argue.
    On that logic any media outlet that broadcasts any rape trial and pictures or videos the accused could be accused of making a trial impossible to be fair.

    Frankly in order for the West Yorkshire police to be bothered to arrest them based on their previous lack of activity the evidence must be pretty strong anyway!

    Either way should one person be locked up for a year solely on the grounds that he might by filming accused child rapists have prejudiced their trial when local papers have already covered the case and named them anyway?

    Of course the real victims here are the young children and teenagers who got abused and raped - allegedly of course!
    Assuming that is what he was doing. It's what he claims he was doing but he's also a well known liar and fantasist.

    Moreover, in this case there is no 'alleged' about his criminality - he has been convicted of the crimes and was given a suspended sentence. I think I am right in saying that if he commits any offence he can therefore be sent straight to prison instead of being bailed (that came in useful some years ago when a violent Muslim protestor over the Mohammed cartoons turned out to be a drug peddler out on licence).
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,406

    Sandpit said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Why would the government want to get him out of prison? He was in contempt of court, while serving a suspended sentence for a similar offence, and his actions could yet let serious sexual offenders walk free.
    A simple discussion by the police to ask him to make sure that he does nothing to jeopardise the trial would have been appropriate. Putting him in prison is nuts. Maybe you are happy living in a racist country but I am not.
    He was already on suspended sentence!
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Are you seriously suggesting decisions of the court should be overruled by politicians?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904

    Mr. Jessop, on your latter points, this is where lack of public faith in institutions such as the police, politicians and the media really bites.

    And it doesn't help when people automagically assume that there is something sinister going on right to the top of government.

    Robinson is a nasty piece of work, bit he deserves the same due process from the law that an angel would. Sadly, it seems some on here and elsewhere are assuming he is an angel just because they hate the people he is campaigning against more.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,406
    Charles said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Are you seriously suggesting decisions of the court should be overruled by politicians?
    And - on the basis of attempting to gain/maintain an electoral advantage!
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904
    "Chris Froome wins Giro d'Italia to claim historic Grand Tour treble"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cycling/44272406
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,367
    On topic: If Esther falls by the wayside and with the Moggster saying that he doesn't want the leadership, can anyone suggest any other swivel-eyed loon for me to pretend to support?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 57,855

    Sandpit said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Why would the government want to get him out of prison? He was in contempt of court, while serving a suspended sentence for a similar offence, and his actions could yet let serious sexual offenders walk free.
    A simple discussion by the police to ask him to make sure that he does nothing to jeopardise the trial would have been appropriate. Putting him in prison is nuts. Maybe you are happy living in a racist country but I am not.
    The problem is that none of us were there.

    Was he filming and asked to stop by the judge?
    Did the judge warn him that failure to stop would result in him being found in contempt of court?

    The facts are muddy. But let us not forget that the reason he went to jail was because he was on a suspended sentence.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507

    Sandpit said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Why would the government want to get him out of prison? He was in contempt of court, while serving a suspended sentence for a similar offence, and his actions could yet let serious sexual offenders walk free.
    A simple discussion by the police to ask him to make sure that he does nothing to jeopardise the trial would have been appropriate. Putting him in prison is nuts. Maybe you are happy living in a racist country but I am not.
    He was warned by a judge about jeopardising trials when he was convicted and sentenced for previous offences. Putting him in prison is completely right if he’s in contempt of court, for some reason judges take a dim view of those who ignore direct instructions.

    Note that it wasn’t that he was filming, it’s that he was broadcasting the film that’s the offence - because there were reporting restrictions on the trial taking place.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Charles said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    It’s expensive. For some people that’s enough.
    Contacts. If you're the sort of pond scum person who likes to be surrounded by the great and the good, who likes to go to the same parties as them and to grease palms, it's the perfect place to go. At least if you can afford it...
    The "great and the good" don't go anywhere near Monaco

    As Somerset Maughan noted, it's "a sunny place for shady people"
    I forget you speak for all the 'great and the good'. ;)
    I don’t. But I know where to find them

    (Umbria or in the mountains between Nice and St Paul de Vence)
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,406

    On topic: If Esther falls by the wayside and with the Moggster saying that he doesn't want the leadership, can anyone suggest any other swivel-eyed loon for me to pretend to support?

    I could imagine Priti Patel imagining she could do a much better job.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    On topic: If Esther falls by the wayside and with the Moggster saying that he doesn't want the leadership, can anyone suggest any other swivel-eyed loon for me to pretend to support?

    Corbyn?
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,367
    ydoethur said:

    On topic: If Esther falls by the wayside and with the Moggster saying that he doesn't want the leadership, can anyone suggest any other swivel-eyed loon for me to pretend to support?

    Corbyn?
    Naughty!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135
    Sandpit said:

    Note that it wasn’t that he was filming, it’s that he was broadcasting the film that’s the offence - because there were reporting restrictions on the trial taking place.

    What does slightly puzzle me is the reason given for the arrest. Contempt of court for breaching reporting restrictions makes absolute sense. Breach of the peace implies there was something else going on. If the latter case is true, Robinson might be facing further legal action.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,135

    ydoethur said:

    On topic: If Esther falls by the wayside and with the Moggster saying that he doesn't want the leadership, can anyone suggest any other swivel-eyed loon for me to pretend to support?

    Corbyn?
    Naughty!
    Absolutely :tongue:
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,406

    Mr. Jessop, on your latter points, this is where lack of public faith in institutions such as the police, politicians and the media really bites.

    I can't find updated figures since 2015 - but this research shows strong levels of trust in the civil service, judges, BBC/ITV journalists and the police.

    Perhaps unsurprisingly politicians fare poorly.

    https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/blog/public-trust-public-servants-–-six-graphs

    Personally I don't think there is a lack of public faith generally, but there is among specific communities/sections of society.

    (as an aside - I think the difference between TV newsreaders and journalists generally is fascinating)
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,069
    Mr. rkrkrk, indeed. It's mildly amusing that the monarchy, the least directly accountable institution of them all, is so popular.

    Anyway, I'm off. Play nicely, everyone.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 55,507
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    Note that it wasn’t that he was filming, it’s that he was broadcasting the film that’s the offence - because there were reporting restrictions on the trial taking place.

    What does slightly puzzle me is the reason given for the arrest. Contempt of court for breaching reporting restrictions makes absolute sense. Breach of the peace implies there was something else going on. If the latter case is true, Robinson might be facing further legal action.
    It could be that the breach of the peace was to disobey a policeman who told him to stop filming or something similar, then it was later noted that he was on licence for the previous offences. I guess we’ll find out after the trial he was protesting has concluded, and the reporting restrictions are all lifted.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 43,904
    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    Sean_F said:

    Roger said:

    F1: post-race ramble up here (almost entirely written before fate shoved a half-starved weasel down my codpiece, so it's surprisingly light on moaning):
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2018/05/monaco-post-race-analysis-2018.html

    They say that the Monaco Grand Prix is glamorous but in reality it's just as full of fat people with tattoos as you see at most English football matches. In fact it's Monaco at its least glamorous despite many of the people having paid 1200 euros for their seats.
    I don't understand the appeal of Monaco. It's a concrete jungle.
    It’s expensive. For some people that’s enough.
    Contacts. If you're the sort of pond scum person who likes to be surrounded by the great and the good, who likes to go to the same parties as them and to grease palms, it's the perfect place to go. At least if you can afford it...
    The "great and the good" don't go anywhere near Monaco

    As Somerset Maughan noted, it's "a sunny place for shady people"
    I forget you speak for all the 'great and the good'. ;)
    I don’t. But I know where to find them

    (Umbria or in the mountains between Nice and St Paul de Vence)
    I fear your definition of 'great and good' is very different from mine ...
  • David_EvershedDavid_Evershed Posts: 6,506
    ydoethur said:
    Liverpool FC are a Catholic Club whilst Everton are a protestant club.

    Man U are catholic and Man City protestant.

    Celtic catholic, Rangers protestant

    Any others?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,537

    Hmmm posters on PB accusing a Cabinet minister of having a "betting problem" ad on that basis, er, betting on it....

    One can only hope that Hills open a market...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,537
    edited May 2018

    On topic: If Esther falls by the wayside and with the Moggster saying that he doesn't want the leadership, can anyone suggest any other swivel-eyed loon for me to pretend to support?

    Williamson has got General Jack D Ripper tendencies:

    https://twitter.com/britain_decides/status/999938118064263168?s=19

    https://youtu.be/N1KvgtEnABY
  • PurplePurple Posts: 150
    edited May 2018
    On the specific issue, Esther McVey may say that when her partner takes her to an event she doesn't ask where he got the tickets. And he declared them. There may be more here - much more. If she didn't have influential friends her losing a Commons seat would have been much more of a setback and she wouldn't have been parachuted into a safe one at that stage in her career.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 50,286
    Isn't Davies one of the Tories' moronic filibusterers?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 49,537
    Charles said:

    The free tommy Robinson petition is now up to 255,000. The target of 300,000 will be exceeded tonight easily. This appears to be a monumental self inflicted mess by the Government. This is also a story that has the potential to get out of hand. TM has no option but to quickly find a way to get him out of prison or risk giving UKIP a reason to exist again.

    Are you seriously suggesting decisions of the court should be overruled by politicians?
    On the basis of a Twitter petition, no less.

  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Purple said:

    On the specific issue, Esther McVey may say that when her partner takes her to an event she doesn't ask where he got the tickets. And he declared them. There may be more here - much more. If she didn't have influential friends her losing a Commons seat would have been much more of a setback and she wouldn't have been parachuted into a safe one at that stage in her career.

    Well indeed if he's declared 2 then the tickets have been declared. Unless 3+ people went what is there for her to declare?

    Maybe the guidance on who declares what in a couple needs to be clarified but this seems much ado about nothing.
This discussion has been closed.