politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » LAB would struggle to win a snap election with 50% of GE2017 LAB voters not rating him as “best PM”
While all the focus this week has been on TMay’s chances of survival the PM and her party can take comfort in the latest “Best PM” ratings from YouGov in which those polled are given just two options – her and Corbyn.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
I just couldn't answer the question. If neither had been PM it would be easy. I just can't envisage Corbyn as PM. I just can't. Whereas if May hadn't become PM she would look like she could make a reasonable fist of it. But she hasn't.
I just couldn't answer the question. If neither had been PM it would be easy. I just can't envisage Corbyn as PM. I just can't. Whereas if May hadn't become PM she would look like she could make a reasonable fist of it. But she hasn't.
Did you watch her in Parliament yesterday? I thought her knowledge of the brief and her ability to answer questions was exceptional. I know I would be hopeless at it. I know she is not everyone's cup of tea and her style and methods can be a bit odd but I think she deserves enormous credit for her ability to battle on despite being in an impossible postion where she can please no one. I think the public are beginning to recognise her qualities. I also thought the dancing queen moment was inspired.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
It's a contradiction in terms.
Of course it is.
What we need is an indefinite time limited backstop. Couldn't be simpler.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
It's a contradiction in terms.
Of course it is.
What we need is an indefinite time limited backstop. Couldn't be simpler.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
It's a contradiction in terms.
Of course it is.
What we need is an indefinite time limited backstop. Couldn't be simpler.
In the CU or out of it...
In it for now. That's both May's and Corbyn's plan.
I very much like Peter Dowd's response to the Maybot's claim that the Brexit deal is "95% done" that the Titanic was "95% succesful" too.A little dry humour hits the spot far better than abuse.
Unfortunately dry humour is no match for the pointless pedantry which pervades Internet discourse these days. Some people are arguing over whether it was 700,000, 100,000 or just 70 people marching last Saturday.
Who cares ? As those deep meaning philosophers Bewitched once advised "Get A Life".
The fact that people are still talking about it and trying to minimise the numbers tells its own story.
+1
The fact that the initial number was clearly a deliberate overestimation (aka a lie, in less Parliamentary terms) also tells its own story.
But 'twas ever thus with marches, regardless of their political persuasion. Maybe we need a MarchCheck website which provides independent estimates for all of them...
Was it? I would expect the organisers to spin the numbers, but there hasn't really been any unbiased contradiction in the media. Obviously CR thinks there were only 5 people on the march. If there was a significant exaggeration they have done a good job in getting away with it.
The estimates that I have seen came from police
Got a link? All I've read from the Met was they "couldn't estimate the size".
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
It's a contradiction in terms.
Of course it is.
What we need is an indefinite time limited backstop. Couldn't be simpler.
In the CU or out of it...
In on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays and out for the rest of the week. Both in and out on Bank Holidays. There has to be technological solution.
I just couldn't answer the question. If neither had been PM it would be easy. I just can't envisage Corbyn as PM. I just can't. Whereas if May hadn't become PM she would look like she could make a reasonable fist of it. But she hasn't.
Did you watch her in Parliament yesterday? I thought her knowledge of the brief and her ability to answer questions was exceptional. I know I would be hopeless at it. I know she is not everyone's cup of tea and her style and methods can be a bit odd but I think she deserves enormous credit for her ability to battle on despite being in an impossible postion where she can please no one. I think the public are beginning to recognise her qualities. I also thought the dancing queen moment was inspired.
For someone under the pressure she is it is quite remarkable how she comes out fighting and with a knowledge of her subject far more detailed than those opposing her. The weekend abuse she suffered has unquestionably damaged ERG and sustained her and for all her faults and inability to communicate the public respect her dedication to her role and if she was forced out, I believe the party would see a voter backlash against the party. Dancing queen was inspired
Mr. NorthWales, Pyrrhus and Sun Tzu both suggested leaving a way to retreat, as those with their back to the wall and no other way out fight all the harder.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
Has he actually said that? I thought the Labour position was that they wanted a say/to be consulted when the EU does its trade deals.
There are a number of different explanations for Labour's surprisingly strong performance at the last GE.
One is that anti-Brexit voters rallied to Labour as the only available means to deny Theresa May a landslide majority to implement her vision of Brexit, which was explicitly hostile to Remain voters. Following that interpretation it's not surprising that many of these voters do not rate Corbyn, because that's not why they voted Labour.
The implication is that as soon as Brexit is done and dusted Labour poll support will fall off a cliff - but any GE before then could well see Remain voters reluctantly rally yet again to support a leader who is at best reluctant about their cause. Any port in a storm.
Mr. Me, I think it's pretty simple. Corbyn campaigned well and was given an easy time by the media. The Conservatives launched the worst campaign since Bactria and Sogdiana decided rebelling against Alexander the Great would be a clever move.
Sky news campaign for a leaders debate commission which they have been promoting at every opportunity over the last month or so and received 46,000 votes has hit the buffers as the cabinet office has told Sky there are no plans for this at present
Of course this was Sky and Adam Boulton trying to look after their own interests and you have to ask, with all that is going on now, what made them think the government would be remotely interested
Sky news campaign for a leaders debate commission which they have been promoting at every opportunity over the last month or so and received 46,000 votes has hit the buffers as the cabinet office has told Sky there are no plans for this at present
Of course this was Sky and Adam Boulton trying to look after their own interests and you have to ask, with all that is going on now, what made them think the government would be remotely interested
Sky news campaign for a leaders debate commission which they have been promoting at every opportunity over the last month or so and received 46,000 votes has hit the buffers as the cabinet office has told Sky there are no plans for this at present
Of course this was Sky and Adam Boulton trying to look after their own interests and you have to ask, with all that is going on now, what made them think the government would be remotely interested
At that density you couldn't fit many more than 60,000 in Parliament Square.
How many Parliament Squares full were there?
According to the Beeb,
"It was a good natured and friendly march through some of London's most famous streets before the hundreds of thousands of people arrived at Parliament Square. By that stage the march was so large that not everyone could fit in the square and demonstrators spilled out onto nearby streets."
At that density you couldn't fit many more than 60,000 in Parliament Square.
How many Parliament Squares full were there?
According to the Beeb,
"It was a good natured and friendly march through some of London's most famous streets before the hundreds of thousands of people arrived at Parliament Square. By that stage the march was so large that not everyone could fit in the square and demonstrators spilled out onto nearby streets."
The only definitive measure of crowds is Donald Trump. He is always right about the attendance figures of enthusiastic and adoring crowds. Bigly right, I am told.
Sounds like a good way to count, although I think a crowd may ignore the safe limit of 5 per sqm by 2 or 3 people.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
If we were part of "a" Customs Union, like Turkey, then we would not be signatories to the EU's own trade deals. If we were part of "the" Customs Union, like um now, then we would be signatories to trade agreements, and therefore would be unable to make our own deals.
There is no real argument in favour of the former arrangement. The argument in favour of the second is that it would take us a long time time to replicate the EU's existing assessments, and there simply aren't that many plausible free trade deal countries the EU is not currently talking to. (Unless you include the US, which is I suspect optimistic.)
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
If we were part of "a" Customs Union, like Turkey, then we would not be signatories to the EU's own trade deals. If we were part of "the" Customs Union, like um now, then we would be signatories to trade agreements, and therefore would be unable to make our own deals.
There is no real argument in favour of the former arrangement. The argument in favour of the second is that it would take us a long time time to replicate the EU's existing assessments, and there simply aren't that many plausible free trade deal countries the EU is not currently talking to. (Unless you include the US, which is I suspect optimistic.)
Can we be inside THE customs union and outside the single market ? The Andorra solution 'reverse Norway' I think..
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
If we were part of "a" Customs Union, like Turkey, then we would not be signatories to the EU's own trade deals. If we were part of "the" Customs Union, like um now, then we would be signatories to trade agreements, and therefore would be unable to make our own deals.
There is no real argument in favour of the former arrangement. The argument in favour of the second is that it would take us a long time time to replicate the EU's existing assessments, and there simply aren't that many plausible free trade deal countries the EU is not currently talking to. (Unless you include the US, which is I suspect optimistic.)
I don't think that's quite right. If we're in "a" customs union then we apply the same common external tariff as the EU by definition, so we have to give third countries who sign trade deals with the EU exactly the same tariff terms on imports to us. What we don't necessarily get is the same preferential treatment for exports to those third countries. Where there might be scope for divergence is if the customs union is incomplete and doesn't cover all sectors.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I quite like Corbyn's brexit position actually - well the one he stated to the house yesterday.
I think that the idea of being part of a Customs Union which allows us to negotiate our own trade deals is brilliant. The only trouble is the EU will never agree it.
If we were part of "a" Customs Union, like Turkey, then we would not be signatories to the EU's own trade deals. If we were part of "the" Customs Union, like um now, then we would be signatories to trade agreements, and therefore would be unable to make our own deals.
There is no real argument in favour of the former arrangement. The argument in favour of the second is that it would take us a long time time to replicate the EU's existing assessments, and there simply aren't that many plausible free trade deal countries the EU is not currently talking to. (Unless you include the US, which is I suspect optimistic.)
I don't think that's quite right. If we're in "a" customs union then we apply the same common external tariff as the EU by definition, so we have to give third countries who sign trade deals with the EU exactly the same tariff terms on imports to us. What we don't necessarily get is the same preferential treatment for exports to those third countries. Where there might be scope for divergence is if the customs union is incomplete and doesn't cover all sectors.
The Customs Partnership was effectively a version of "a" Customs Union where the CET and internal barriers were split into two issues, rather than one issue as usually.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I thought it was a declining fraction?
It is still an Alot monster amount.
And I suspect alot of that will continue after Britain leaves the EU
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I thought it was a declining fraction?
No, I'm pretty sure we're still 100% inside the EU.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
We have spent 40 years integrating our economy into the EU. The Brexiteers think that we can leave in less than two years with no plan thought-out in advance and zero preparation
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
I thought it was a declining fraction?
No, I'm pretty sure we're still 100% inside the EU.
100% is definitely not tied up with the EU, unless their influence spreads a lot further than I imagined.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
We have spent 40 years integrating our economy into the EU. The Brexiteers think that we can leave in less than two years with no plan thought-out in advance and zero preparation
Can you honestly not see where the problem is?
Better out now rather than after a further 20 years of integration without democratic consent.
At that density you couldn't fit many more than 60,000 in Parliament Square.
How many Parliament Squares full were there?
According to the Beeb,
"It was a good natured and friendly march through some of London's most famous streets before the hundreds of thousands of people arrived at Parliament Square. By that stage the march was so large that not everyone could fit in the square and demonstrators spilled out onto nearby streets."
I was in the middle of Piccadily when the word came back that Parliament Square was already full. The crowd was packed tight as far as I could see either way. Piccadily is pretty wide and there were still crowds of people in Hyde Park at this point. 10 more Parliament Squares would not be a wild estimate.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
We have spent 40 years integrating our economy into the EU. The Brexiteers think that we can leave in less than two years with no plan thought-out in advance and zero preparation
Can you honestly not see where the problem is?
Yes, May or Corbyn (They're identical for the next few years..) compromise is a good next step.
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
We have spent 40 years integrating our economy into the EU. The Brexiteers think that we can leave in less than two years with no plan thought-out in advance and zero preparation
Can you honestly not see where the problem is?
Better out now rather than after a further 20 years of integration without democratic consent.
At that density you couldn't fit many more than 60,000 in Parliament Square.
How many Parliament Squares full were there?
According to the Beeb,
"It was a good natured and friendly march through some of London's most famous streets before the hundreds of thousands of people arrived at Parliament Square. By that stage the march was so large that not everyone could fit in the square and demonstrators spilled out onto nearby streets."
I think we have to Brexit. Self-immolation seems to be the only way forward on the UK's determined journey to irrelevance. Until Brexit proves to be a lemon it will always be on the agenda.
You do have to wonder how any country can manage to survive outside of the EU.
Isn't the issue that our economy is completely tied up currently within the EU ?
We have spent 40 years integrating our economy into the EU. The Brexiteers think that we can leave in less than two years with no plan thought-out in advance and zero preparation
Can you honestly not see where the problem is?
I think Boris and David Davis proved they hadn't a clue when they were in the cabinet.
The problem as far as I can see is that none in the ERG can do detail or provide laser thinking to separate us.
To be fair, listening to TM she really does know the subject and runs rings around the ultras
I just couldn't answer the question. If neither had been PM it would be easy. I just can't envisage Corbyn as PM. I just can't. Whereas if May hadn't become PM she would look like she could make a reasonable fist of it. But she hasn't.
Did you watch her in Parliament yesterday? I thought her knowledge of the brief and her ability to answer questions was exceptional. I know I would be hopeless at it. I know she is not everyone's cup of tea and her style and methods can be a bit odd but I think she deserves enormous credit for her ability to battle on despite being in an impossible postion where she can please no one. I think the public are beginning to recognise her qualities. I also thought the dancing queen moment was inspired.
No I didn't and of course she has been given a hospital pass, but still there have been some really awful moments. And no I couldn't do it either, but then neither of us are putting ourselves up for the job (well I'm guessing from your comment you're not)
I think Boris and David Davis proved they hadn't a clue when they were in the cabinet.
The problem as far as I can see is that none in the ERG can do detail or provide laser thinking to separate us.
To be fair, listening to TM she really does know the subject and runs rings around the ultras
To be fair, Theresa May has a formidable support network of advisers and senior civil servants so, like every recent PM, she sounds on top of her brief.
As I've said on here before, she is entirely dedicated and works very hard but then so have a lot of other Prime Ministers (but not all).
I'm no supporter - she was all the charisma of the salad in yesterday's sandwich and none of the empathy. I'm sure she's wonderful in private but she seems awkward in public and for all your gushing praise about "dancing queen", it just looked embarrassing and feeble.
There's no one else better in your Party and the alternative is Corbyn/McDonnell and they are the two key factors in her survival to which you can add the other factor all politicians need and that is luck.
For now, she has the luck and it keeps her in office though whether she's actually in power is perhaps another question.
I think Boris and David Davis proved they hadn't a clue when they were in the cabinet.
The problem as far as I can see is that none in the ERG can do detail or provide laser thinking to separate us.
To be fair, listening to TM she really does know the subject and runs rings around the ultras
To be fair, Theresa May has a formidable support network of advisers and senior civil servants so, like every recent PM, she sounds on top of her brief.
As I've said on here before, she is entirely dedicated and works very hard but then so have a lot of other Prime Ministers (but not all).
I'm no supporter - she was all the charisma of the salad in yesterday's sandwich and none of the empathy. I'm sure she's wonderful in private but she seems awkward in public and for all your gushing praise about "dancing queen", it just looked embarrassing and feeble.
There's no one else better in your Party and the alternative is Corbyn/McDonnell and they are the two key factors in her survival to which you can add the other factor all politicians need and that is luck.
For now, she has the luck and it keeps her in office though whether she's actually in power is perhaps another question.
Not sure I think she has the luck to carry this poisoned chalice but I agree that nobody in the party would be able to see increasing personal ratings and poll leads. I think you would find outside the bubble her dancing queen was quite well received
I was in the middle of Piccadily when the word came back that Parliament Square was already full. The crowd was packed tight as far as I could see either way. Piccadily is pretty wide and there were still crowds of people in Hyde Park at this point. 10 more Parliament Squares would not be a wild estimate.
No. There were many, many people. So many, in fact, that the Brexiteers are anxiously trying to find ways of rubbishing the numbers.
I just couldn't answer the question. If neither had been PM it would be easy. I just can't envisage Corbyn as PM. I just can't. Whereas if May hadn't become PM she would look like she could make a reasonable fist of it. But she hasn't.
Did you watch her in Parliament yesterday? I thought her knowledge of the brief and her ability to answer questions was exceptional. I know I would be hopeless at it. I know she is not everyone's cup of tea and her style and methods can be a bit odd but I think she deserves enormous credit for her ability to battle on despite being in an impossible postion where she can please no one. I think the public are beginning to recognise her qualities. I also thought the dancing queen moment was inspired.
For someone under the pressure she is it is quite remarkable how she comes out fighting and with a knowledge of her subject far more detailed than those opposing her. The weekend abuse she suffered has unquestionably damaged ERG and sustained her and for all her faults and inability to communicate the public respect her dedication to her role and if she was forced out, I believe the party would see a voter backlash against the party. Dancing queen was inspired
Yes despite the mauling she has had in the media and comedy shows, I think that the dancing in Africa (being polite and joining in) and dancing queen at conference (self deprecation) have actually improved her in my opinion.
Why is thought the police under estimate numbers? I can't see why they would be biased or are they just awful at it?
Why did they not give an estimate this time? Have they stopped doing so or was it just too big to give a sensible number?
Did they provide a number for the Iraq and Countryside march?
I imagine the police have to justify their overtime bill on most marches, and also build their experience for how many to have on hand for the next one. They are used to handling non-political crowds as well so I would imagine that they have a pretty good idea.
The one last Saturday must have foxed them because way more people turned up than anyone expected - there were nowhere near as many stewards as you'd expect and things like stickers and leaflets ran out really early. Had there been any trouble the boys in blue might have struggled because there really weren't many of them either compared to protesters. There were also large groups roaming around away from the advertised route.
I think the police simply gave up trying to count because it was so big.
I've asked this before and no one has ever answered, but why are people still fussing about a hard border in NI. It's always been fluid.
Who wants a hard border? The UK doesn't and Ireland don't. If the EU want a hard border, tell them to build it. Varadkar daren't build one - he'd be out of his ear. Fine Gael may be tribal but there are limits. So will the EU (who?) send in an army to build it?
Why doesn't May just call their bluff? It's nothing to do with us what the EU want anymore, we're leaving.
Why is thought the police under estimate numbers? I can't see why they would be biased or are they just awful at it?
Why did they not give an estimate this time? Have they stopped doing so or was it just too big to give a sensible number?
Did they provide a number for the Iraq and Countryside march?
I imagine the police have to justify their overtime bill on most marches, and also build their experience for how many to have on hand for the next one. They are used to handling non-political crowds as well so I would imagine that they have a pretty good idea.
The one last Saturday must have foxed them because way more people turned up than anyone expected - there were nowhere near as many stewards as you'd expect and things like stickers and leaflets ran out really early. Had there been any trouble the boys in blue might have struggled because there really weren't many of them either compared to protesters. There were also large groups roaming around away from the advertised route.
I think the police simply gave up trying to count because it was so big.
Wouldn't that mean they would over estimate rather than under estimate normally then or is it a myth that they under estimate?
I was in the middle of Piccadily when the word came back that Parliament Square was already full. The crowd was packed tight as far as I could see either way. Piccadily is pretty wide and there were still crowds of people in Hyde Park at this point. 10 more Parliament Squares would not be a wild estimate.
No. There were many, many people. So many, in fact, that the Brexiteers are anxiously trying to find ways of rubbishing the numbers.
Not really. Outside of pbc, I've not seen any discussion of the numbers since the weekend. The event is over and as was entirely predictable, has made absolutely no difference. In terms of relative weight, a handful of Tory MPs count for more at the moment than several hundred thousand Remainers marching through London. As Jim Hacker said, the MPs can get rid of the PM this week; it'll be years before the electorate get the same chance.
Not sure I think she has the luck to carry this poisoned chalice but I agree that nobody in the party would be able to see increasing personal ratings and poll leads. I think you would find outside the bubble her dancing queen was quite well received
My first observation is she, or rather her sense of duty, decided to take on the chalice in July 2016. She could have walked away but didn't and due to the ineptitude of her opponents (and that was perhaps a real sign of things to come) she found herself alone on the battlefield.
We all have our "bubbles" - in yours, the "dancing queen" was a well received sign of humanity whereas in mine, it was a cringing embarrassment up there with William Hague at Notting Hill Carnival.
I've asked this before and no one has ever answered, but why are people still fussing about a hard border in NI. It's always been fluid.
Who wants a hard border? The UK doesn't and Ireland don't. If the EU want a hard border, tell them to build it. Varadkar daren't build one - he'd be out of his ear. Fine Gael may be tribal but there are limits. So will the EU (who?) send in an army to build it?
Why doesn't May just call their bluff? It's nothing to do with us what the EU want anymore, we're leaving.
PB Groundhog Day wouldn't be complete without this argument getting trotted out...
Why is thought the police under estimate numbers? I can't see why they would be biased or are they just awful at it?
Why did they not give an estimate this time? Have they stopped doing so or was it just too big to give a sensible number?
Did they provide a number for the Iraq and Countryside march?
I imagine the police have to justify their overtime bill on most marches, and also build their experience for how many to have on hand for the next one. They are used to handling non-political crowds as well so I would imagine that they have a pretty good idea.
The one last Saturday must have foxed them because way more people turned up than anyone expected - there were nowhere near as many stewards as you'd expect and things like stickers and leaflets ran out really early. Had there been any trouble the boys in blue might have struggled because there really weren't many of them either compared to protesters. There were also large groups roaming around away from the advertised route.
I think the police simply gave up trying to count because it was so big.
Wouldn't that mean they would over estimate rather than under estimate normally then or is it a myth that they under estimate?
I would have thought accuracy would be the aim. Underestimate and you don't have enough manpower next time. Overestimate and the public notice idle officers who should be elsewhere nabbing rogues.
Comments
It doesn't, but I think their prospects are more dependent upon the circumstances in which the next election might be called.
Good afternoon, everyone.
Another reading is that if Labour were led by someone who has never marched gleefully under Stalin banners they'd be miles ahead.
Mr. Glenn, aye. Just like the far left complaining we aren't spending enough and borrowing is too high.
the idea that there's one route that would not have any negatives is not worth any serious discussion.
corbyn allows labour to collect the votes and support of a wide range of moonbats, discontents and other varieties of fruitloop.
https://yougov.co.uk/news/2018/10/23/only-one-five-brits-think-second-out-eu-referendum/
What we need is an indefinite time limited backstop. Couldn't be simpler.
How do we leave? When do we leave? What happens when we leave?
A man consenting to be tied to the bedposts ought to actually trust the person doing it.
Have you a link to the police estimate of the numbers?
According to the Beeb, "The Metropolitan Police said it was not able to estimate the size of the crowd."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45925542
They won't, so we aren't.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/feb/26/jeremy-corbyn-customs-union-idea-just-might-fly-brexit
One is that anti-Brexit voters rallied to Labour as the only available means to deny Theresa May a landslide majority to implement her vision of Brexit, which was explicitly hostile to Remain voters. Following that interpretation it's not surprising that many of these voters do not rate Corbyn, because that's not why they voted Labour.
The implication is that as soon as Brexit is done and dusted Labour poll support will fall off a cliff - but any GE before then could well see Remain voters reluctantly rally yet again to support a leader who is at best reluctant about their cause. Any port in a storm.
Of course this was Sky and Adam Boulton trying to look after their own interests and you have to ask, with all that is going on now, what made them think the government would be remotely interested
It's vitally important for a thriving democracy for broadcasters to get guaranteed large audiences.
According to Prof Dr G Keith Still, the maximum number that will fit in a crowd safely is 5 per sqm, and it looks like this
http://www.gkstill.com/Support/crowd-density/CrowdDensity-1.html
At that density you couldn't fit many more than 60,000 in Parliament Square.
How many Parliament Squares full were there?
According to the Beeb,
The only definitive measure of crowds is Donald Trump. He is always right about the attendance figures of enthusiastic and adoring crowds. Bigly right, I am told.
Sounds like a good way to count, although I think a crowd may ignore the safe limit of 5 per sqm by 2 or 3 people.
There is no real argument in favour of the former arrangement. The argument in favour of the second is that it would take us a long time time to replicate the EU's existing assessments, and there simply aren't that many plausible free trade deal countries the EU is not currently talking to. (Unless you include the US, which is I suspect optimistic.)
The Andorra solution 'reverse Norway' I think..
EU rejects Italian budget and asks for it to be re submitted.
http://www.faz.net/aktuell/wirtschaft/eu-kommission-weist-italiens-haushaltsentwurf-zurueck-15852538.html
Italy tells EU no plan B as EU demands budget revisions
Can you honestly not see where the problem is?
I was in the middle of Piccadily when the word came back that Parliament Square was already full. The crowd was packed tight as far as I could see either way. Piccadily is pretty wide and there were still crowds of people in Hyde Park at this point. 10 more Parliament Squares would not be a wild estimate.
Surely Parliament Square was only the destination, there appear to be a huge number of people in this video.
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/live/2018/oct/20/peoples-vote-march-london-second-referendum-brexit-live
http://newsthump.com/2018/10/23/titanic-captain-asks-passengers-to-focus-on-95-of-crossing-safely-made-rather-than-massive-fcking-iceberg-ahead/?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=socialnetwork
The problem as far as I can see is that none in the ERG can do detail or provide laser thinking to separate us.
To be fair, listening to TM she really does know the subject and runs rings around the ultras
https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/news/tuam-babies-remains-of-hundreds-of-children-feared-buried-in-mass-grave-to-be-exhumed-37450152.html
this whole story is just appalling
Why is thought the police under estimate numbers? I can't see why they would be biased or are they just awful at it?
Why did they not give an estimate this time? Have they stopped doing so or was it just too big to give a sensible number?
Did they provide a number for the Iraq and Countryside march?
As I've said on here before, she is entirely dedicated and works very hard but then so have a lot of other Prime Ministers (but not all).
I'm no supporter - she was all the charisma of the salad in yesterday's sandwich and none of the empathy. I'm sure she's wonderful in private but she seems awkward in public and for all your gushing praise about "dancing queen", it just looked embarrassing and feeble.
There's no one else better in your Party and the alternative is Corbyn/McDonnell and they are the two key factors in her survival to which you can add the other factor all politicians need and that is luck.
For now, she has the luck and it keeps her in office though whether she's actually in power is perhaps another question.
The one last Saturday must have foxed them because way more people turned up than anyone expected - there were nowhere near as many stewards as you'd expect and things like stickers and leaflets ran out really early. Had there been any trouble the boys in blue might have struggled because there really weren't many of them either compared to protesters. There were also large groups roaming around away from the advertised route.
I think the police simply gave up trying to count because it was so big.
Who wants a hard border? The UK doesn't and Ireland don't. If the EU want a hard border, tell them to build it. Varadkar daren't build one - he'd be out of his ear. Fine Gael may be tribal but there are limits. So will the EU (who?) send in an army to build it?
Why doesn't May just call their bluff? It's nothing to do with us what the EU want anymore, we're leaving.
*"People's Vote" is just dishonest. And prefixing it with a hash tag makes me embarrassed for the hash tagger
Having said that Norn Iron cured me of religion in all its forms.
We all have our "bubbles" - in yours, the "dancing queen" was a well received sign of humanity whereas in mine, it was a cringing embarrassment up there with William Hague at Notting Hill Carnival.
https://twitter.com/cwjreynolds/status/1054752502913134593
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kc0FwoIsDMI
I understand they are back in the 'tunnel' and only when I hear the EU and TM release official statements on progress or otherwise will I take note