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It appears you've come second Avery. Maybe one to tell and impress Mrs Pole.
The Tories are only exposed on the economy to attacks from the right. Labour try this line occasionally (your own claims that Osborne is borrowing more than Brown are an example) but it doesn't work because no one believes that Labour would implement let alone want more austerity than George is already inflicting.
The Alanbrooke/another richard pincer movement on London from Warwickshire and the East Midlands is always more promising.
The trouble is that the kippers, being "a bunch of fruitcakes, loons and closet racists" are not credible on the economy. Populism and austerity don't mix and the kippers will always give precedent to Brexit over competent economic management.
Labour had a chance to get in on the economy by painting Osborne as incompetent but this target is receding as fast as the economy is recovering. The hard facts speak for themselves.
Still there is an achilles heel. It is just located on the wrong side of your enemy.
Closing the Department of International development.
Ending all green energy subsidies.
Making not having TV license a civil law, rather than criminal law, offence.
Brexit!
I must confess he has convinced me that huge mistakes have been made and opportunities missed by both the current and preceding Governments. In particular, the folly of QE and bank bailouts has been laid bare as well as the truth that the real disaster of the public finances was as much the collapse in revenue as much as the excess of expenditure.
To date Cameron and Osborne have been singularly unimpressive in putting any oomph or credibility in the numerous voters outside the South. And yet to even have a chance of largest party in a HP he needs to convince all us Midland marginals he's got something worth saying. Cameron had a prime chance to do this at the beginning of this Parlt when putting something heavyweight in to the Midlands and North would have paid dividends now. Instead he fluffed it spending his political capital instead on press battles, fighting his own party and other non bread and butter stuff.
So while the economy is the Tories big hope, when you break it down into the regions ( where ultimately the election will be won or lost ) Cameron and Osborne are still only promising jam tomorrow to a surly and sceptical audience. Not a slam dunk.
So of course some austerity measures can be populist (as you point out) but it is the overall picture which counts.
If the needs of economic recovery argued for delaying action on Brexit by a decade would you support a revision to UKIP policy?
2. No.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-24395790
Mail's position unravelling. Makes a change the anti Semitic story line this morning and Mail wanting an apology.
Osborne had to get the macro-economic fundamentals right first (interest rates, monetary policy (QE), tax increases, expenditure cuts) and achieve the right balance between growth and fiscal consolidation. It looks, three years into the parliament, that, either by design or good fortune, he has achieved that.
The secondary goals of rebalancing the economy (from public to private sector, from services dependence to a greater role for manufacturing, from North Sea to Balcombe, from consumption to exports, from the SE to the regions) had to wait their turn in the queue.
But you should take notice and heart from Mark Carney's statements this week about the importance of reviving the economy in the regions. It won't be long before you are top of the queue.
Just sit quietly and hold on to that ticket, Mr. Brooke.
I would be wary of putting too much reliance on Allister Heath. He can be lazy in his research (French housebuilding stats are a recent example) and be too absolutist in identifying problems and promoting his preferred solutions. One always feels he is and always will be a polemicist and critic by choice. I can't see him ever wanting to be given the tiller.
The Hunt for Ed October
"Comrades! This is your captain! It is an honour to speak to you today! And I'm honoured to be sailing with you on the maiden voyage of our Motherland's most recent achievement. And once more, we play our dangerous game. A game of chess... against our old adversary... the Conservative Party! For a hundred years, your fathers before you and your older brothers played this game... and played it well. But today, the game is different. WE have the advantage! It reminds me of the heady days of 1945 and Clement Atlee, when the world trembled at the sound of our nationalisations. Now they will tremble again - at the sound of our populism. The order is: engage the Energy Price Freeze!
"Comrades! Our own activists don't know our full potential! They will do everything possible to test us, but they will only test their own embarrassment. We will leave our activists behind! We will pass through the Conservative patrols, past their sonar nets, and lay off their largest parliamentary constituency, and listen to their braying and tittering... while we conduct anti-Austerity debates! And when we are finished, the only sound they will hear is our laughter, while we sail to Brighton, where the sun is warm, and so is the... comradeship.
"A great day, comrades! We sail into history!"
Your creepy obsession with every post is not healthy
The solution is to move the whole sector into a position where it can operate viably as a free market. And that will require a hard and dispassionate analysis of its current real costs.
And the solution is one for times of public sector surpluses and reduced concerns about government borrowing. It will cost in both investment and current expense. A lot.
But properly worked it is probably doing: or even more, it needs doing if the UK is to realise its potential for above average long term growth.
I lost any interest in Y2 when instead of tackling reform Osborne dicked about and Cameron spent his politicsal capital on gay marriage, pasties, fruitcakes in fact just about everything the rest of the country had not very much interest in. The masses up here wanted bread and butter instead we got the offer of tickets to a Gilbert and George exhibition.
Osborne has flunked a Parliament's worth of reform. As I argued back a few years ago he took the easy way out by not tackling hard to do things and instead crossed his fingers that the economy would get him out of trouble. The all too predictable Euro crisis stopped that and ever since he has been on catch up.
But out here in the sticks the things that matter still haven't been addressed and instead of goodwill there's simply an ungrateful indifference. Midland marginals had manufacturing, economic rebalancing , banking reform as our primary goals. We swing the parliament so why should we wait ?
My patience is coming to an end.
Bloody hell mike,you nearly gave tim a heart attack,giving hints that you might give the site up ;-) what would the lad do.
Well done, Daily Mail !
I don't see how that's much different to what you do at the end of the day.
Ed's latest gambit is to spend other people's money by getting them to pick up the tab for his latest bribe - living wage, energy freeze - it's just economic pick pocketing .
As I pointed out before the Coalition will bribe the electorate with their own money and Labour will seek to bribe them with someone else's money while still keeping the voters cash.
Labour to date remain clueless and Osborne looks better by comparison..
Evidence?? Or just wishful thinking.
The success of this site has been the in-depth nonpartisan analysis, emphasis on odds and predictive modelling, and trying to understand the composition of the electorate. Qualities that are more apparent above the line than below
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17549388
And so I come back to the long running argument between the PB righties which roughly splits South v the rest. It's pointless Cameron piling up loads of votes in safe southern seats, he needs Midland and Northern seats and Scotish ones too. And he isn't going to get back in to government with policies which do very little for the regions.
How about scrapping any pay rise whatsoever for our politicians? That would surely be a vote-winner!
If you had controlled your desire for another 30s you wouldn't have looked like a tit all day.
Seek help. Really.
'Well Ed had the Muslim vote. Now some of the "lost" Jewish vote is also coming back.
Well done, Daily Mail !'
I'm sure they have already forgotten & forgiven Ed for Labour's choice of London mayoral candidate last year.
Edit - just realised it was a joke about the dad having a vasectomy. Phew...
The beancounters at DMGT will have been painting quite a stark picture of just how successful the celeb gossip heavy Mail online is in numerical terms. They will have been pointing at Mail online and asking Rothermere, 'why don't we go down this road for print?'
A question that Geordie Greig has asked himself too it would seem.
It's not quite that simple of course but after this week it's going to be very tempting for Rothermere to try to cut down on Dacre's notoriously unsubtle political posturing. This was Dacre very clearly trying to make certain the Mail remained in the forefront of politics despite ongoing pressure for a more celeb gossip style positioning. And he blew it in fine style.
I'd keep an eye out for the MoS getting some big celebrity scoops as I suspect that's going to be where this battle goes next.
Barclays has just recapitalised through a 96% take up of its 5.8 bn rights issue. Lloyds has just recreated TSB and the government has sold its first tranche of its shares with a plan of complete disposal by the GE. RBoS is negotiating for the sale of the 'Co-op' branches to a Church of England led syndicate and the report on the bank's restructuring needs is due this month. The Bank of England is beginning to report increases in bank lending to SMEs (if not large corporates) for the first time in years.
It is all happening, Mr. Brooke, maybe slower than you would like but real progress has been made.
Similarly the shift to manufacturing is taking place (car industry most notable example but other key industries have been targetted by the government). And there has been a gradualist rebalancing of the economy.
Would the prospects of the Midlands be better off under a Labour government?
It's definately a step in the right direction that he's likely to take Dacre's job very soon.
Dacre is rumoured not to even use a computer screen to view articles and fixes them with a fountain pen, so wedded is he to print.
ta.
"lol. I just had drinks in W8, with a bunch of Mail journalists"
I'm very friendly with the wife of one and Dacre isn't at all popular from what I understand
LOL
But there is a world of difference between Greig's social upbringing and that of Dacre's.
Greig is about as establishment as you can get without being Royal.
Dacre is an Enfield son of an aspirant newspaper man.
Greig is the odd man out in the industry.
And Roger's social comments are sans-pareil on PB. Much may they continue!
You really are a sh*t. Perhaps you should get over your ever-present cowardice and let us know what your parents / grandparents, uncles and extended family did in the war.
(More seriously, I'd say that Westminster, Eton, St. Paul's & Winchester are the top division, then Radley, Harrow, Rubgy, Ampleforth, etc. Then the rest. I've probably missed a couple in the second division - by no means a comprehensive (boom tish) list.
Been rather unpleasant on here today.
It's not included in the two best of NTNON news DVDs (or wasn't when I bought them).
Eton has always been top.
Harrow considers it is Eton's equal.
Winchester doesn't care: it is cleverer than both.
Westminster and St Pauls are too metropolitan.
Rugby, Radley, Marlborough, Charterhouse etc are all premier league but not in the top four or five.
Fettes and Glenalmond are Scotland's Eton and Harrow.
Ampleforth (Benedictine) is the Catholic Eton. Stonyhurst (Jesuit) and Downside (Benedictine is Harrow to Ampleforth's Eton).
And then you have school's associated with certain backgrounds, e.g. Wellington College with the Army.
"Said the Millfield lad... ;-)"
Last year the Old Millfield Society asked members if they could send in photos of their year. I sent in an outstanding one of a very popular captain of the rugby team-a friend of mine-being lifted up after winning an important school rugby match.
It was notably better than any other photos taken of my year and better than most others on the site but they wouldn't use it. He'd been found murdered in an apartment with a seventeen year old girl in the Phillipines a year earlier so the editorial staff found it to be in bad taste.
So even my fee paying comprehensive had standards.....
Grimesbottom Bog standard Comprehensive.
I am sure that we are above Millfield on goal difference. Or would be if they played proper footy rather than Rugger Buggery!
There were plenty of good people who did not 'fight in the war', but still did worthwhile jobs that helped us win the war. Your infantile statements marks such people as second-class.
But as usual, you don't care about people. You just care about scoring political points.
Millfield was founded by a man equally driven by sport as he was by levitation.
Gordonstoun on cold showers, deprivation and highland yomping.
Bedales all liberal and girly.
"Is there a league table of public schools somewhere, not in exam results, obviously that counts for sod all, I'm talking how they see each other."
Without joking Millfield used to judge public schools by the standard of their sports team particularly rugby. Because Millfield used to offer scholarships to all the best players from the Welsh grammar schools (JPR Williams John Williams Garath Edwards all played for them) Millfield regularly beat all the public schools by ridiculous scores.
Only the Welsh Grammar schools could give them a game. Eton wouldn't play them at all. It was always announced at the beginning of the winter term that Eton had "FIXTURE PROBLEMS" which we were all required to laugh at. Infact because we weren't members of the Public Schools association they wouldn't play us. No one believed it. Marlborough took their punishment though
I don't think it's particularly limited to just today though, either.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/exclusive-revealed--how-ministry-of-defence-pennypinching-led-to-camp-bastion-disaster-8859897.html
1) David Cameron's gains did not really come from Mail readers.
2) Labour's losses in 2010 were not among Mail readers.
Seek help.