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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Trump is clearing the road to his own impeachment

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  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389

    Sean_F said:

    AnneJGP said:

    IanB2 said:

    kle4 said:

    Scott_P said:
    If Grieve wants to do things like this I really do not know why he does not just quit the whip already to bring down the government, I really don't. As true blue a conservative as he no doubt is, he clearly regards leaving the EU as something that must be stopped by any means necessary. Is hamfisted constitutional meddling which could have vast implications to do that really the best way to do so when he and a few others, which is all it would take, can sacrifice their Tory careers and just bring down the government?

    Arcane procedural measures have their place, but this seems like a major shift which they are not thinking about consequences beyond a single vote on a single issue. The man is incredibly reckless and gets away with fanaticism because people agree with him.
    The likelihood is that, imaginative (and arguably merited - given the lengths government has gone to to prevent parliament having a say) though this is, it probably would fail. He starts with only a narrow majority based on the anti-no-deal amendments. Whilst I guess he might pick up a few new supporters such as that disgruntled Scottish Tory, he could easily lose support from people worrying about precedent or for whom Grieve's plan is a step too far.
    I rather think I've seen enough and had enough.

    I'm a life-long 'duty' voter and have always voted for someone even when my preferred choice doesn't have an earthly chance of winning.

    What we now have is a Parliament full of people who voted to give the general population a choice; voted to implement what the population (narrowly) chose to do; and now are trying every wheeze they can come up with to make sure that the population's narrow choice was nugatory.

    I'd have accepted Mrs May's deal, although I think the way the government have handled this has been dreadful.

    If the HoP really do find a way to reverse the decision they voted to allow and to implement, I'm very close to a resolution never, ever, to waste my time voting again.

    Good afternoon, everyone.
    Sadly, they would be very happy if you and millions of others did so.
    Definitely. Civic participation is nice but voting is a powerful weapon, and these people wielding it isn't harmless. It actively reduces other people's freedom. If people who want to use the government to commit harm to other people stop doing that, it's a huge benefit.

    Sadly she's almost definitely bluffing.
    By definition, if there 's a vote on anything, the losing side will think they have been harmed.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,138

    I like the Bush-41 and Bush-43 nomenclature. Is that an existing convention or did David invent it?

    Existing nomenclature. They had caps made with the numbers on.

    https://c8.alamy.com/comp/EFK652/us-president-george-w-bush-sits-in-a-golf-cart-with-his-father-former-EFK652.jpg
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389
    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Chris said:

    Danny565 said:

    Danny565 said:

    Cyclefree said:

    A GE is a very bad idea. What will it resolve? Nothing.

    If the decision has to go to the people let’s have a second referendum: Leave on the terms negotiated or Remain. And get that Art 50 extension agreed pronto.

    Stop all this faffing about.

    But do you really think another referendum would go any differently to last time?

    In any case, given May's deal is dead, I would've thought if there was to be one then the choices would be Remain v No Deal -- even some of the "People's Vote" people like Chuka Umunna have admitted that.
    TMay's deal is dead because she can't get it through parliament. A quid pro quo with the parliamentary Remainiacs that gives them a second referendum in return gets it through parliament. So one way or another, it solves the problem.

    I think Remain would likely beat Deal (or No Deal for that matter) but it could go either way. But whichever way a Remain vs Deal referendum goes, it gets you out of the treacle.
    Well, OK - if May proposes a Deal v Remain referendum, I'dendum taking place).

    Somehow, I just don't see how "No Deal" is kept off the ballot in a new vote, though.
    I'm coming round to this idea too. I see no other way out.
    The trouble is, for any way out, there's a reason why it's impossible.

    Having a referendum with "No Deal" excluded would split the Tory party.
    A referendum requires an extension to Article 50 which requires the unanimous consent of the other EU states. They will have a say on what is on the ballot paper, like it or not.

    "Take Back Control" ..etc......
    With the greatest of respect the EU cannot decide the questions.

    That is a decision for the HOC and electoral commission

    Indeed I doubt they would attempt to interfere in something as controversial as this
    Indirectly, they have all the power.

    They decide whether to grant the extension needed to have the referendum. They will ask: why do you need it? Answer: a referendum. Question: what will be on the ballot?

    If they don't like the answer to that, no extension. No extension. No referendum.

    There is only one option where Parliament has total control without requiring the EU's consent: revocation of Article 50.
    I don't think the EU are terribly bothered about a No Deal Brexit (perhaps they ought to be) so I wouldn't see that as a sticking point.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471
    IanB2 said:

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
    Well if it isn't realistic or acceptable then it wouldn't win in a referendum would it? So no excuse for not putting it on the ballot.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    SunnyJim said:

    One of the aspects of the current impasse I find most disappointing is the craven cowardice of the majority of remainer mp's.

    They are looking for May to make the decision that will lead to the Brexit result being over-turned rather than forcing it themselves and having to take the consequences.

    Centuries of democratic convention are being subverted for a very short term political issue which diminishes parliament and makes us little better than a 3rd world tinpot country.

    Many remainers should be ashamed of themselves.

    Eh? May has control of the agenda, and has gone out of her way from the outset to try and prevent MPs from having a say. As we speak they are finalising a way to try and wrest some control back from her so that they can do what you say.
  • On Grieve's amendment the effect must be to change the whole way the government does business and of course would put Corbyn in a straight jacket. Are labour going to vote for it or am I wrong

  • Danny565 said:

    Danny565 said:

    Cyclefree said:

    A GE is a very bad idea. What will it resolve? Nothing.

    If the decision has to go to the people let’s have a second referendum: Leave on the terms negotiated or Remain. And get that Art 50 extension agreed pronto.

    Stop all this faffing about.

    But do you really think another referendum would go any differently to last time?

    In any case, given May's deal is dead, I would've thought if there was to be one then the choices would be Remain v No Deal -- even some of the "People's Vote" people like Chuka Umunna have admitted that.
    TMay's deal is dead because she can't get it through parliament. A quid pro quo with the parliamentary Remainiacs that gives them a second referendum in return gets it through parliament. So one way or another, it solves the problem.

    I think Remain would likely beat Deal (or No Deal for that matter) but it could go either way. But whichever way a Remain vs Deal referendum goes, it gets you out of the treacle.
    Well, OK - if May proposes a Deal v Remain referendum, I'd be happy with that since either option seems palatable to me personally (plus, from the selfish partisan point, May being the one to propose it reduces the chances of Leave voters blaming Labour exclusively for a referendum taking place).

    Somehow, I just don't see how "No Deal" is kept off the ballot in a new vote, though.
    I'm coming round to this idea too. I see no other way out.

    Parliament will otherwise find a way to unilaterally revoke Brexit, which will be terrible for our democracy, or we'll crash out, in which case we'll have nasty economic turbulence, the fall of the Government, full Corbyn socialism, and then re-joining in prompt order on full terms, including a commitment to join the euro.
    Remain cannot be on the ballot paper because it was rejected in the first referendum.
    No Deal cannot be on the ballot paper because it would cause economic chaos.
    Deal cannot be on the ballot paper because it is "dead" after a decisive rejection in the "meaningful vote".
    What was the question, again?
    Cameron’s deal was rejected. If he hadn’t gone through the renegotiation, a meaningful number of Conservatives would never have jumped ship to back Leave.
    You may have a point. Leave were very clever in stirring up rabid, bulging-eyed condemnation of Dave's Deal. As such, a huge part of the campaign became about humiliating the PM by giving him an E minus for his paltry efforts. Perhaps Dave was guilty of complicating matters. 'Just carry on as usual' may have had a far greater pull.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,138
    edited January 2019

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 78,220

    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

    Yes, contrary to others on here, Trump to get the nomination is a great bet in my opinion.

    I've put £50 more up to be laid by others if anyone wants it...
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    Xenon said:

    IanB2 said:

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
    Well if it isn't realistic or acceptable then it wouldn't win in a referendum would it? So no excuse for not putting it on the ballot.
    Er, no.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,505
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    In principle, it would be straightforward to have a No Deal referendum.

    The question would be along the lines "Do you wish Parliament to legislate for the UK to remain within the European Union.

    Yes/No."

    What do you think is the way out, Sean?
    I wish I knew.

    On reflection, I think I'd offer an indicative free vote on Leave with deal, leave without deal, EFTA/EEA, Remain to the Commons. If most decide on Remain, so be it. They can own it.

    Thanks.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389
    viewcode said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
    This is people betting with their hearts. The chance of No Deal must be better than 16.67%.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,505

    Sean_F said:

    AnneJGP said:

    IanB2 said:

    kle4 said:

    Scott_P said:
    If Grieve wants to do things like this I really do not know why he does not just quit the whip already to bring down the government, I really don't. As true blue a conservative as he no doubt is, he clearly regards leaving the EU as something that must be stopped by any means necessary. Is hamfisted constitutional meddling which could have vast implications to do that really the best way to do so when he and a few others, which is all it would take, can sacrifice their Tory careers and just bring down the government?

    Arcane procedural measures have their place, but this seems like a major shift which they are not thinking about consequences beyond a single vote on a single issue. The man is incredibly reckless and gets away with fanaticism because people agree with him.
    The likelihood is that, imaginative (and arguably merited - given the lengths government has gone to to prevent parliament having a say) though this is, it probably would fail. He starts with only a narrow majority based on the anti-no-deal amendments. Whilst I guess he might pick up a few new supporters such as that disgruntled Scottish Tory, he could easily lose support from people worrying about precedent or for whom Grieve's plan is a step too far.
    I rather think I've seen enough and had enough.

    I'm a life-long 'duty' voter and have always voted for someone even when my preferred choice doesn't have an earthly chance of winning.

    What we now have is a Parliament full of people who voted to give the general population a choice; voted to implement what the population (narrowly) chose to do; and now are trying every wheeze they can come up with to make sure that the population's narrow choice was nugatory.

    I'd have accepted Mrs May's deal, although I think the way the government have handled this has been dreadful.

    If the HoP really do find a way to reverse the decision they voted to allow and to implement, I'm very close to a resolution never, ever, to waste my time voting again.

    Good afternoon, everyone.
    Sadly, they would be very happy if you and millions of others did so.
    Definitely. Civic participation is nice but voting is a powerful weapon, and these people wielding it isn't harmless. It actively reduces other people's freedom. If people who want to use the government to commit harm to other people stop doing that, it's a huge benefit.

    Sadly she's almost definitely bluffing.
    And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how Western democracy ends.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,138
    Sean_F said:

    viewcode said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
    This is people betting with their hearts. The chance of No Deal must be better than 16.67%.
    I know.

    :)
  • DadgeDadge Posts: 2,052
    edited January 2019
    I still think all the talk of a 2nd referendum is an unhelpful distraction. Even if Corbyn changes his mind, May won't, and there aren't the numbers in parliament to push one through.

    If we come back to what May's going to do on Monday, there seem to be two possibilties. The most obvious is No Change, and tally ho! on to the re-vote on the Withdrawal Agreement on the following Monday. She knows this is a forlorn endeavour but I think she feels she has to give it one more go; the alternatives are almost too awful for her to contemplate.

    The second possibility is to give in to the inevitable and postpone A50. If she doesn't do this eventually her Remainer rebels will bring her government down. Only by postponing A50 is there any possibility of having enough time to recast the WA so that either her rebels or Labour will support it. In the end, I think that if her govt is to survive she will actually have to *revoke* A50 and wait until the backstop issue has been dealt with before invoking it again. if she doesn't, she (or the govt) won't last till the summer.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389

    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    In principle, it would be straightforward to have a No Deal referendum.

    The question would be along the lines "Do you wish Parliament to legislate for the UK to remain within the European Union.

    Yes/No."

    What do you think is the way out, Sean?
    I wish I knew.

    On reflection, I think I'd offer an indicative free vote on Leave with deal, leave without deal, EFTA/EEA, Remain to the Commons. If most decide on Remain, so be it. They can own it.

    Thanks.
    I'd make clear also, that despite being opposed to Remain, if that were the will of the Commons, I'd step down, so that a government could implement it.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871

    Danny565 said:

    Danny565 said:

    Cyclefree said:

    A GE is a very bad idea. What will it resolve? Nothing.

    If the decision has to go to the people let’s have a second referendum: Leave on the terms negotiated or Remain. And get that Art 50 extension agreed pronto.

    Stop all this faffing about.

    But do you really think another referendum would go any differently to last time?

    In any case, given May's deal is dead, I would've thought if there was to be one then the choices would be Remain v No Deal -- even some of the "People's Vote" people like Chuka Umunna have admitted that.
    TMay's deal is dead

    I think Remain would likely beat Deal (or No Deal for that matter) but it could go either way. But whichever way a Remain vs Deal referendum goes, it gets you out of the treacle.
    Well, OK - if May proposes a Deal v Remain referendum, I'd be happy with that since either option seems palatable to me personally (plus, from the selfish partisan point, May being the one to propose it reduces the chances of Leave voters blaming Labour exclusively for a referendum taking place).

    Somehow, I just don't see how "No Deal" is kept off the ballot in a new vote, though.
    I'm coming round to this idea too. I see no other way out.

    Parliament will otherwise find a way to unilaterally revoke Brexit, which will be terrible for our democracy, or we'll crash out, in which case we'll have nasty economic turbulence, the fall of the Government, full Corbyn socialism, and then re-joining in prompt order on full terms, including a commitment to join the euro.
    Remain cannot be on the ballot paper because it was rejected in the first referendum.
    No Deal cannot be on the ballot paper because it would cause economic chaos.
    Deal cannot be on the ballot paper because it is "dead" after a decisive rejection in the "meaningful vote".
    What was the question, again?
    Cameron’s deal was rejected. If he hadn’t gone through the renegotiation, a meaningful number of Conservatives would never have jumped ship to back Leave.
    You may have a point. Leave were very clever in stirring up rabid, bulging-eyed condemnation of Dave's Deal. As such, a huge part of the campaign became about humiliating the PM by giving him an E minus for his paltry efforts. Perhaps Dave was guilty of complicating matters. 'Just carry on as usual' may have had a far greater pull.
    Leading Leavers' core competence is trashing stuff. They have had a lifetime of practice.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389

    Sean_F said:

    AnneJGP said:

    IanB2 said:

    kle4 said:

    Scott_P said:
    If Grieve wants to do things like this I really do not know why he does not just quit the whip already to bring down the government, I really don't. As true blue a conservative as he no doubt is, he clearly regards leaving the EU as something that must be stopped by any means necessary. Is hamfisted constitutional meddling which could have vast implications to do that really the best way to do so when he and a few others, which is all it would take, can sacrifice their Tory careers and just bring is incredibly reckless and gets away with fanaticism because people agree with him.
    The likelihood is that, imaginative (and arguably merited - given the lengths government has gone to to prevent parliament having a say) though this is, it probably would fail. He starts with only a narrow majority based on the anti-no-deal amendments. Whilst I guess he might pick up a few new supporters such as that disgruntled Scottish Tory, he could easily lose support from people worrying about precedent or for whom Grieve's plan is a step too far.
    I rather think I've seen enough and had enough.

    I'm a life-long 'duty' voter and have always voted for some my preferred choice doesn't have an earthly chance of winning.

    What we now have is a Parliament full of people who voted to give the general population a choice; voted to implement what the population (narrowly) chose to do; and now are trying every wheeze they can come up with to make sure that the population's narrow choice was nugatory.

    I'd have accepted Mrs May's deal, although I think the way the government have handled this has been dreadful.

    If the HoP really do find a way to reverse the decision they voted to allow and to implement, I'm very close to a resolution never, ever, to waste my time voting again.

    Good afternoon, everyone.
    Sadly, they would be very happy if you and millions of others did so.
    Definitely. Civic participation is nice but voting is a powerful weapon, and these people wielding it isn't harmless. It actively reduces other people's freedom. If people who want to use the government to commit harm to other people stop doing that, it's a huge benefit.

    Sadly she's almost definitely bluffing.
    And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how Western democracy ends.
    There have always been excellent arguments against democracy. It just that the alternatives lead to worse outcomes.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,708
    Sean_F said:



    By definition, if there 's a vote on anything, the losing side will think they have been harmed.

    Well, they'll think *someone* has been harmed, or not helped.

    But I wonder whether we disagree in principle here, or just in the type and degree of harm. People often do the thought experiment about going back in time and killing Hitler. But what if you could go back to 1933 and confuse Nazi voters about the location of their nearest polling station? I think that would actually be preferable to killing Hitler.

    If I'm right, the question about whether we'd rather AnneJGP didn't vote is just a question about how harmful the British far right parties are. (Apologies of I've got her confused with someone else.)

    I know people sometimes say these people will do more harm if they use violence instead of voting, but if they can get the state to use violence that's far more terrifying than if they have to do it themselves - the state is far more organized and better armed.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,621
    edited January 2019
    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I agree at the FTSE level but the FTSE would head up for different reasons in those two scenarios so it is important which shares you choose.

    Sterling tanking helps international shares like GSK whose earnings are mainly in dollars but domestic shares would suffer. Remaining helps mainly domestic shares like Barratts housebuilders and GSK would suffer from strong sterling. So it's not simple.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,752
    viewcode said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
    Betfair was at about 14% probability of leaving on schedule earlier in the week. Now at 21%.
  • kle4 said:



    Democracy is going to take a back seat. It's a parliamentary fight, and parliament won't include no deal, end of, and will insist on remain, end of. They are no doubt rightly confident that as they will all have done it, no single party will be punished for it at a GE.

    Of course, that assumes present stumbling blocks to a referendum can be overcome, which is not certain, but wrangling over the question will see the above occur. If people don't like it they'll have to vote for someone other than every party in the commons.

    Neither of the main parties stood on a manifesto of blocking BREXIT, quite the opposite. Excluding a larger proportion of the winning vote but letting the losers on ballot would not be the end of it. Do you think our democracy would survive such a thing.

    Im a passive guy in his 40s but even I would be willing to take part in some kind of non violent civil disobedience even if it means a couple of years inside as a concequence. What other alternative do I have once my vote has been taken? I can guarantee you a lot of less passive people than me feel a lot stronger.
  • Caroline Flint's article in today's Guardian should be read to see just why a referendum will not happen

    Pity that Starmer is still clinging on to his hope to see one, but labour are not going to vote for it. It looks as if there are as many labour mps against as in favour and if you add that to the overwhelming conservative mps who are opposed, it just does not have the numbers

    On that reading of Caroline's article we can take a second referendum of the table

    The logic of that is deal - no deal - revoke
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    viewcode said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
    paddys are offering 7/2 we leave with no deal on 30/03. That's the online price but I suspect it will be available in their shops if you have one near.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,683
    edited January 2019
    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389

    Sean_F said:



    By definition, if there 's a vote on anything, the losing side will think they have been harmed.

    Well, they'll think *someone* has been harmed, or not helped.

    But I wonder whether we disagree in principle here, or just in the type and degree of harm. People often do the thought experiment about going back in time and killing Hitler. But what if you could go back to 1933 and confuse Nazi voters about the location of their nearest polling station? I think that would actually be preferable to killing Hitler.

    If I'm right, the question about whether we'd rather AnneJGP didn't vote is just a question about how harmful the British far right parties are. (Apologies of I've got her confused with someone else.)

    I know people sometimes say these people will do more harm if they use violence instead of voting, but if they can get the state to use violence that's far more terrifying than if they have to do it themselves - the state is far more organized and better armed.
    I could be wrong, but I don't think she is involved with any extreme party.

    Counter -factuals are always difficult, but the KPD or German nationalists might have been just as bad as the Nazis,
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,752
    SeanT said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    In principle, it would be straightforward to have a No Deal referendum.

    The question would be along the lines "Do you wish Parliament to legislate for the UK to remain within the European Union.

    Yes/No."

    What do you think is the way out, Sean?
    I wish I knew.

    On reflection, I think I'd offer an indicative free vote on Leave with deal, leave without deal, EFTA/EEA, Remain to the Commons. If most decide on Remain, so be it. They can own it.

    That’s what I was suggesting on PB months ago. It is the obvious choice. A free vote. Every MP will have to answer to his or her conscience, and his or her constituency. Let parliament decide, and if they decide to Remain they can deal with the backlash.
    It sounds one of the more sensible options. But if May adopted that approach and ended up with a decision supported mainly by the opposition parties and opposed by most of her own party, that could still be fatal for her and the party.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,621
    Sean_F said:

    viewcode said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
    This is people betting with their hearts. The chance of No Deal must be better than 16.67%.
    People will be betting on no deal as insurance rather than with their hearts. I'm tempted myself to hedge my UK equity position. That depresses the odds on No Deal so the implied 16.67% is probably an over estimate.
  • Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    Er, the value of sterling and the FTSE isn't a see-saw you know. It's quite possible for both to crash if circumstances are malign enough.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 37,389

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    The risks of No Deal Brexit have been so ramped up that they would probably say it was a fuss about nothing.

    I think there are many ways that a no deal Brexit would be a pain the arse, which Robert Smithson has detailed, but they'd take time to emerge.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    SeanT said:



    I think, with respect, this is nonsense. A lot of Europeans - not least the Irish - are genuinely horrified at the idea of No Deal. They think it could lead to a chain reaction of economic negatives, becoming deep recessions continent-wide. Plus it will reflect very badly on the Eurocrats themselves. Their agenda has always been to make Brexit so bad we will change our minds and Remain. It never occurred to them we might actually crash out.

    That was incredibly arrogant and silly of them then.

    I believe they think no deal is bad, but like many in our own parliament not as bad as they are saying they think it is. If they believed it to be all that bad they'd do something more to prevent it. Never occurring we might crash out was an excuse 2 years ago, not now. It is very possible (though I'd say not quite as likely as remain), the EU are not fools and they can surely see that. They have chosen to offer nothing more, and that's their prerogative, but the cannot pretend to not now know it might really happen.
  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    Caroline Flint's article in today's Guardian should be read to see just why a referendum will not happen

    Pity that Starmer is still clinging on to his hope to see one, but labour are not going to vote for it. It looks as if there are as many labour mps against as in favour and if you add that to the overwhelming conservative mps who are opposed, it just does not have the numbers

    On that reading of Caroline's article we can take a second referendum of the table

    The logic of that is deal - no deal - revoke

    I would prefer if both main party leaders , would let their MPs have a free vote on any proposals put forward.
    However can not see it happening as they both seem stuck in their current positions.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318
    edited January 2019
    Possibly because he apologised for it. Whereas Abbot didn't, though to be fair to her, she was ill at the time. And she does face a lot of racist abuse as well as justified criticism.

    Edited: Plus her mistake was in the context of an election campaign where she was the Shadow Home Secretary and was proposing a policy she was meant to be in charge or. Whereas RS is a lowly junior minister.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Chris said:

    SeanT said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    Sean_F said:

    Sean_F said:

    In principle, it would be straightforward to have a No Deal referendum.

    The question would be along the lines "Do you wish Parliament to legislate for the UK to remain within the European Union.

    Yes/No."

    What do you think is the way out, Sean?
    I wish I knew.

    On reflection, I think I'd offer an indicative free vote on Leave with deal, leave without deal, EFTA/EEA, Remain to the Commons. If most decide on Remain, so be it. They can own it.

    That’s what I was suggesting on PB months ago. It is the obvious choice. A free vote. Every MP will have to answer to his or her conscience, and his or her constituency. Let parliament decide, and if they decide to Remain they can deal with the backlash.
    It sounds one of the more sensible options. But if May adopted that approach and ended up with a decision supported mainly by the opposition parties and opposed by most of her own party, that could still be fatal for her and the party.
    If the 2/3 of Tories who do not want no deal want to prevent it, their time in government may be the price. That's rough on them, but they talk up a good game on national interest, well they have to play that game too.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,257
    Abbott has become a figure of fun. However I have no truck with those who claim that the contempt and vitriol that comes her way is because she is black or because she is a woman. That is nonsense. It is because she is both of those things at the same time.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    kle4 said:



    Democracy is going to take a back seat. It's a parliamentary fight, and parliament won't include no deal, end of, and will insist on remain, end of. They are no doubt rightly confident that as they will all have done it, no single party will be punished for it at a GE.

    Of course, that assumes present stumbling blocks to a referendum can be overcome, which is not certain, but wrangling over the question will see the above occur. If people don't like it they'll have to vote for someone other than every party in the commons.

    Neither of the main parties stood on a manifesto of blocking BREXIT, quite the opposite. Excluding a larger proportion of the winning vote but letting the losers on ballot would not be the end of it. Do you think our democracy would survive such a thing.

    Im a passive guy in his 40s but even I would be willing to take part in some kind of non violent civil disobedience even if it means a couple of years inside as a concequence. What other alternative do I have once my vote has been taken? I can guarantee you a lot of less passive people than me feel a lot stronger.
    I believe it. I just don't believe there'll be enough of that. There'll be plenty of even more passive people who thought parliament would find a way to block things, and were proven right, so what's the bloody point?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,138

    viewcode said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    I can't begin to describe my contempt for Grieve's plans. Nevertheless they'll work so I've shifted my pension more to UK rather than global.

    Blimey, risking pension investments on the Grieve amendment.

    Brave.
    Even if we leave without a deal, sterling tanking should mean the FTSE heads up. If we remain the FTSE heads up. It's barely gone anywhere in the last 5 years and I think there's value whatever happens quite honestly.
    I've bet on No Deal not so much as a political bet but as good value insurance. It's approaching 5/1 in places, which is insane.
    I looked at this on Thursday. SkyBet and BetVictor(?) were offering 4/1 on No Deal but unfortunately they're online-only accounts and I don't do online-only (see previous posts). But Ladbrokes/Coral (which are high-street shops) do offer odds, which unfortunately is more restricted - 5/2 on NoDeal AND leaving by April 1st. Still worth it on insurance grounds, IMHO.
    paddys are offering 7/2 we leave with no deal on 30/03. That's the online price but I suspect it will be available in their shops if you have one near.
    Thank you
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    The issue will be that the really pernicious effects - businesses folding, or relocating - will take months to work through to the published data - and therefore the judgement as to whether there has been damage or not will rest principally on the impact during the first few weeks. If our motorways are full of queuing lorries and the rest, it will quickly be seen as a disaster regardless of the medium term economic impact and, conversely, if the world appears to be carrying on normally into April people will decide it has been relatively benign even if beneath the radar our economy is slowly sinking beneath the waves.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    edited January 2019
    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she's also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonably and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit, which she does.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163

    On Grieve's amendment the effect must be to change the whole way the government does business and of course would put Corbyn in a straight jacket. Are labour going to vote for it or am I wrong

    It's a chance to defeat the government of course they'll vote for it.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    kinabalu said:

    Abbott has become a figure of fun. However I have no truck with those who claim that the contempt and vitriol that comes her way is because she is black or because she is a woman. That is nonsense. It is because she is both of those things at the same time.
    Surely it is because she is dramatically under-equipped for the senior position she now holds?
  • notme2notme2 Posts: 1,006
    Cyclefree said:

    Possibly because he apologised for it. Whereas Abbot didn't, though to be fair to her, she was ill at the time. And she does face a lot of racist abuse as well as justified criticism.

    Edited: Plus her mistake was in the context of an election campaign where she was the Shadow Home Secretary and was proposing a policy she was meant to be in charge or. Whereas RS is a lowly junior minister.
    There’s a clear attempt to conflate justified criticism and ridicule with the horrible stuff, and thus attempt to avoid criticism.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,752
    edited January 2019
    Sean_F said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    The risks of No Deal Brexit have been so ramped up that they would probably say it was a fuss about nothing.

    I think there are many ways that a no deal Brexit would be a pain the arse, which Robert Smithson has detailed, but they'd take time to emerge.
    We don't know whether the risks have been overestimated or underestimated.

    Given the chaos that can be caused to our infrastructure by quite a small amount of disruption, I find it quite believable that the risks are huge. If people really want No Deal, I think we have the right to expect at least that it will be planned for as well as is possible. I don't believe for a moment that that's been done.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    So, give the government a hand, or do what most of our supporters want? Hmm, such a decision.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,318

    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Chris said:

    Danny565 said:

    Danny565 said:

    Cyclefree said:


    With the greatest of respect the EU cannot decide the questions.

    That is a decision for the HOC and electoral commission

    Indeed I doubt they would attempt to interfere in something as controversial as this
    Indirectly, they have all the power.

    They decide whether to grant the extension needed to have the referendum. They will ask: why do you need it? Answer: a referendum. Question: what will be on the ballot?

    If they don't like the answer to that, no extension. No extension. No referendum.

    There is only one option where Parliament has total control without requiring the EU's consent: revocation of Article 50.
    I would suggest the question on the ballot will follow the approval from the EU

    The timetable produced by the government yesterday showed the legal process a referendum would go through extending over 12 months. Now that timescale seems too long but the decision and the questions and the wording are recommended by the electoral commission some weeks later

    Therefore when requesting an extension the wording would be unknown
    I may be wrong but the EU are not going to grant an extension for a referendum on some unknown question which does not resolve issues for them. Why should they? They will think of their own best interests. And they want certainty.

    We may not like it but we won't have control over this. Wishing it weren't so, saying this is not how things should be, this is not how things were last time is not going to change the brutal realities we face now. Apart from one choice, everything we do from now on it is dependant on others - and they will have their own interests and price. Time for Britain to face up to this fact instead of believing what it would like to be true.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,005
    Xenon said:

    IanB2 said:

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
    Well if it isn't realistic or acceptable then it wouldn't win in a referendum would it? So no excuse for not putting it on the ballot.
    Why would something that, if put into practice, would be neither realistic nor acceptable not gain popular support?
    Some might argue that the more unrealistic something is, the easier it is to get votes.
    "Something for nothing!"
    "There's always someone else who will pay!"
    "We'll give you all the positives with none of the negatives!"
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285

    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

    Not if he is successfully impeached - the penalty would be exclusion from office.

    The Mueller investigation statement on the Buzzfeed story is interesting. Rather than denying it outright, they called it inaccurate.
    They rarely comment on anything, and also it’s pretty certain that whatever leak lay behind it, it wasn’t from Mueller’s team, which simply doesn’t leak. Most likely source is the SDNY attorney’s office, which is reputedly leak prone.

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Chris said:

    Danny565 said:

    Danny565 said:

    Cyclefree said:


    With the greatest of respect the EU cannot decide the questions.

    That is a decision for the HOC and electoral commission

    Indeed I doubt they would attempt to interfere in something as controversial as this
    Indirectly, they have all the power.

    They decide whether to grant the extension needed to have the referendum. They will ask: why do you need it? Answer: a referendum. Question: what will be on the ballot?

    If they don't like the answer to that, no extension. No extension. No referendum.

    There is only one option where Parliament has total control without requiring the EU's consent: revocation of Article 50.
    I would suggest the question on the ballot will follow the approval from the EU

    The timetable produced by the government yesterday showed the legal process a referendum would go through extending over 12 months. Now that timescale seems too long but the decision and the questions and the wording are recommended by the electoral commission some weeks later

    Therefore when requesting an extension the wording would be unknown
    I may be wrong but the EU are not going to grant an extension for a referendum on some unknown question which does not resolve issues for them. Why should they?
    And yet people are suggesting they would grant an extension for a GE, which has even more unknowns.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    Cyclefree said:



    I may be wrong but the EU are not going to grant an extension for a referendum on some unknown question which does not resolve issues for them. Why should they? They will think of their own best interests. And they want certainty.

    We may not like it but we won't have control over this. Wishing it weren't so, saying this is not how things should be, this is not how things were last time is not going to change the brutal realities we face now. Apart from one choice, everything we do from now on it is dependant on others - and they will have their own interests and price. Time for Britain to face up to this fact instead of believing what it would like to be true.

    If the EU dictate the Referendum question, then I think the Referendum will only have one answer.
  • Sean_F said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    The risks of No Deal Brexit have been so ramped up that they would probably say it was a fuss about nothing.

    I think there are many ways that a no deal Brexit would be a pain the arse, which Robert Smithson has detailed, but they'd take time to emerge.
    No, it'll be horrific. My own employer already has a warehouse in the Netherlands ready and waiting and this will be true of thousands of exporters throughout the country. If anything, No Deal is being underplayed because today's politicians and media are only interested in Westminster shenanigans and aware of abstract theorizing. There's no hidden magic in No Deal to mitigate the coming storm. It will be bloody.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471

    Xenon said:

    IanB2 said:

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
    Well if it isn't realistic or acceptable then it wouldn't win in a referendum would it? So no excuse for not putting it on the ballot.
    Why would something that, if put into practice, would be neither realistic nor acceptable not gain popular support?
    Some might argue that the more unrealistic something is, the easier it is to get votes.
    "Something for nothing!"
    "There's always someone else who will pay!"
    "We'll give you all the positives with none of the negatives!"
    You're right, we should just do away with elections.

    Just let the establishment decide what is best for us.
  • notme2notme2 Posts: 1,006
  • DadgeDadge Posts: 2,052
    Chris said:

    Sean_F said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    The risks of No Deal Brexit have been so ramped up that they would probably say it was a fuss about nothing.

    I think there are many ways that a no deal Brexit would be a pain the arse, which Robert Smithson has detailed, but they'd take time to emerge.
    We don't know whether the risks have been overestimated or underestimated.

    Given the chaos that can be caused to our infrastructure by quite a small amount of disruption, I find it quite believable that the risks are huge. If people really want No Deal, I think we have the right to expect at least that it will be planned for as well as is possible. I don't believe for a moment that that's been done.
    Brexit is expensive enough without the government having to waste billions of our taxes on planning for a range of possibilities. May is acting irresponsibly by not postponing or revoking A50 until a withdrawal agreement is, um, agreed.
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

    Impeached, yes. Impeached and convicted by the Senate, no.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 42,257
    edited January 2019
    Barnesian said:

    I agree at the FTSE level but the FTSE would head up for different reasons in those two scenarios so it is important which shares you choose.

    Sterling tanking helps international shares like GSK whose earnings are mainly in dollars but domestic shares would suffer. Remaining helps mainly domestic shares like Barratts housebuilders and GSK would suffer from strong sterling. So it's not simple.

    There is also a less technical reason why a fall in sterling boosts the footsie.

    If the £ falls it makes UK shares cheaper - thus a more attractive buy - to international 'citizens of nowhere' investors.

    Similar to the London prime property market. A cheap £ makes that Knightsbridge stucco villa more affordable to a wealthy overseas buyer and therefore boosts its price - or mitigates the fall of it in a bear market.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    5) We should never have given away our independence against the wishes of the majority in the first place to the wretched organisation.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:



    I think, with respect, this is nonsense. A lot of Europeans - not least the Irish - are genuinely horrified at the idea of No Deal. They think it could lead to a chain reaction of economic negatives, becoming deep recessions continent-wide. Plus it will reflect very badly on the Eurocrats themselves. Their agenda has always been to make Brexit so bad we will change our minds and Remain. It never occurred to them we might actually crash out.

    That was incredibly arrogant and silly of them then.

    I believe they think no deal is bad, but like many in our own parliament not as bad as they are saying they think it is. If they believed it to be all that bad they'd do something more to prevent it. Never occurring we might crash out was an excuse 2 years ago, not now. It is very possible (though I'd say not quite as likely as remain), the EU are not fools and they can surely see that. They have chosen to offer nothing more, and that's their prerogative, but the cannot pretend to not now know it might really happen.
    This is reliably sourced, and apparently true


    https://twitter.com/moutet/status/1086365841157963778?s=21
    Yet the deal really isn't that hard - which is actually a credit to Mrs M's efforts in negotiating, if not in selling. The problem is that a significant proportion of her own party is pre-programmed to oppose anything that involves interacting with the our European neighbours.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Dadge said:

    Chris said:

    Sean_F said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    The risks of No Deal Brexit have been so ramped up that they would probably say it was a fuss about nothing.

    I think there are many ways that a no deal Brexit would be a pain the arse, which Robert Smithson has detailed, but they'd take time to emerge.
    We don't know whether the risks have been overestimated or underestimated.

    Given the chaos that can be caused to our infrastructure by quite a small amount of disruption, I find it quite believable that the risks are huge. If people really want No Deal, I think we have the right to expect at least that it will be planned for as well as is possible. I don't believe for a moment that that's been done.
    Brexit is expensive enough without the government having to waste billions of our taxes on planning for a range of possibilities. May is acting irresponsibly by not postponing or revoking A50 until a withdrawal agreement is, um, agreed.
    Revoking ends Brexit forever. It may be that becomes the best option, we shall see. Postponing just delays a decision on a deal or remaining, since MPs will simply use up whatever time they are given to faff about, they will never come to agreement.

    Therefore there is no need to postpone at all, other than the limited scenario of needing a referendum to confirm the final determination.

    A decision is needed, not time. There's been plenty of time. If no deal will be catastrophic simply because that is inevitable or because there has not been enough planning, then MPs must remove it as an option. Given they have stymied further efforts to prepare, giving them time to prepare would be pointless.
  • glwglw Posts: 9,914
    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

    Not if he is successfully impeached - the penalty would be exclusion from office.

    The Mueller investigation statement on the Buzzfeed story is interesting. Rather than denying it outright, they called it inaccurate.
    They rarely comment on anything, and also it’s pretty certain that whatever leak lay behind it, it wasn’t from Mueller’s team, which simply doesn’t leak. Most likely source is the SDNY attorney’s office, which is reputedly leak prone.

    The Special Counsel is likely to be concerned that the House committees might act prematurely, they don't want them crashing about all over the place when the investigation is still continuing. We will see a lot of this sort of thing over the next few months.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    Xenon said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    5) We should never have given away our independence against the wishes of the majority in the first place to the wretched organisation.
    We have a lot more freedom to act as one of the leading members of the EU than we ever will have isolated as a struggling economy beyond its periphery.
  • SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:



    I think, with respect, this is nonsense. A lot of Europeans - not least the Irish - are genuinely horrified at the idea of No Deal. They think it could lead to a chain reaction of economic negatives, becoming deep recessions continent-wide. Plus it will reflect very badly on the Eurocrats themselves. Their agenda has always been to make Brexit so bad we will change our minds and Remain. It never occurred to them we might actually crash out.

    That was incredibly arrogant and silly of them then.

    I believe they think no deal is bad, but like many in our own parliament not as bad as they are saying they think it is. If they believed it to be all that bad they'd do something more to prevent it. Never occurring we might crash out was an excuse 2 years ago, not now. It is very possible (though I'd say not quite as likely as remain), the EU are not fools and they can surely see that. They have chosen to offer nothing more, and that's their prerogative, but the cannot pretend to not now know it might really happen.
    This is reliably sourced, and apparently true


    https://twitter.com/moutet/status/1086365841157963778?s=21
    So why did our lot let him run rings around us and succeed in his aim? I thought your source 'high up in the Leave campaign' was confident that our guys were the dog's.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:



    I think, with respect, this is nonsense. A lot of Europeans - not least the Irish - are genuinely horrified at the idea of No Deal. They think it could lead to a chain reaction of economic negatives, becoming deep recessions continent-wide. Plus it will reflect very badly on the Eurocrats themselves. Their agenda has always been to make Brexit so bad we will change our minds and Remain. It never occurred to them we might actually crash out.

    That was incredibly arrogant and silly of them then.

    I believe they think no deal is bad, but like many in our own parliament not as bad as they are saying they think it is. If they believed it to be all that bad they'd do something more to prevent it. Never occurring we might crash out was an excuse 2 years ago, not now. It is very possible (though I'd say not quite as likely as remain), the EU are not fools and they can surely see that. They have chosen to offer nothing more, and that's their prerogative, but the cannot pretend to not now know it might really happen.
    This is reliably sourced, and apparently true


    https://twitter.com/moutet/status/1086365841157963778?s=21
    If not true it hardly matters since their stance now is to offer nothing less, in the apparent hope we remain, even if that means no deal.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285
    Dura_Ace said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    kudos to him for being able to come up with this.
    Grieve is turning into Doctor Manhatten.
    The image of a naked blue Dominic Grieve is more than a little disturbing...

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,871
    kinabalu said:

    Barnesian said:

    I agree at the FTSE level but the FTSE would head up for different reasons in those two scenarios so it is important which shares you choose.

    Sterling tanking helps international shares like GSK whose earnings are mainly in dollars but domestic shares would suffer. Remaining helps mainly domestic shares like Barratts housebuilders and GSK would suffer from strong sterling. So it's not simple.

    There is also a less technical reason why a fall in sterling boosts the footsie.

    If the £ falls it makes UK shares cheaper - thus a more attractive buy - to international 'citizens of nowhere' investors.

    Similar to the London prime property market. A cheap £ makes that Knightsbridge stucco villa more affordable to a wealthy overseas buyer and therefore boosts its price - or mitigates the fall of it in a bear market.
    Except that since the point when sterling turned south, the London property market has been in decline.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

    Not if he is successfully impeached - the penalty would be exclusion from office.

    The Mueller investigation statement on the Buzzfeed story is interesting. Rather than denying it outright, they called it inaccurate.
    They rarely comment on anything, and also it’s pretty certain that whatever leak lay behind it, it wasn’t from Mueller’s team, which simply doesn’t leak. Most likely source is the SDNY attorney’s office, which is reputedly leak prone.

    I think if you're backing the impeachment market you need to know whether it pays out on charges being brought or successfully concluded. I think it has to be the former. I think the Republican Senate might protect him in any case but not standing again might be the price for that support.

    I'm currently trying to establish whether the 9/1 Paddy's are offering the he has a US Navy ship named after him has to happen while he is president (it's listed under Trump Narcissism Specials). I don't think they name ships after presidents still in office but it might happen. Although there is still no USS Richard Nixon so I might be waiting a long time.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,951
    Xenon said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    5) We should never have given away our independence against the wishes of the majority in the first place to the wretched organisation.
    A reminder that this is the future if we end up remaining.

    https://twitter.com/EU_Commission/status/1085854998217469953

  • Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    Chris said:

    Danny565 said:

    Danny565 said:

    Cyclefree said:


    With the greatest of respect the EU cannot decide the questions.

    That is a decision for the HOC and electoral commission

    Indeed I doubt they would attempt to interfere in something as controversial as this
    Indirectly, they have all the power.

    They decide whether to grant the extension needed to have the referendum. They will ask: why do you need it? Answer: a referendum. Question: what will be on the ballot?

    If they don't like the answer to that, no extension. No extension. No referendum.

    There is only one option where Parliament has total control without requiring the EU's consent: revocation of Article 50.
    I would suggest the question on the ballot will follow the approval from the EU

    The timetable produced by the government yesterday showed the legal process a referendum would go through extending over 12 months. Now that timescale seems too long but the decision and the questions and the wording are recommended by the electoral commission some weeks later

    Therefore when requesting an extension the wording would be unknown
    I may be wrong but the EU are not going to grant an extension for a referendum on some unknown question which does not resolve issues for them. Why should they? They will think of their own best interests. And they want certainty.

    We may not like it but we won't have control over this. Wishing it weren't so, saying this is not how things should be, this is not how things were last time is not going to change the brutal realities we face now. Apart from one choice, everything we do from now on it is dependant on others - and they will have their own interests and price. Time for Britain to face up to this fact instead of believing what it would like to be true.
    I think I may just have to disagree with you which is not very often by the way
  • kle4 said:

    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she'll also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonable and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit.
    If people haven't forgotten about Rory's blooper, they certainly aren't keen on mentioning it on here among the endless paeans of praise and exhortations to Tessy to further advance his career. Personally if someone gets a ton of unearned racist & sexist shit, I'd be pretty fasdtidious about flinging more, earned or not.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285
    glw said:

    Nigelb said:

    Nigelb said:

    On topic, the better bet, if you are so inclined, is for Trump not to get the nomination. Similar odds to the other two, but covers more eventualities (and is arguably more likely).

    isnt it possible for him to be impeached but also win the nomination?

    Not if he is successfully impeached - the penalty would be exclusion from office.

    The Mueller investigation statement on the Buzzfeed story is interesting. Rather than denying it outright, they called it inaccurate.
    They rarely comment on anything, and also it’s pretty certain that whatever leak lay behind it, it wasn’t from Mueller’s team, which simply doesn’t leak. Most likely source is the SDNY attorney’s office, which is reputedly leak prone.

    The Special Counsel is likely to be concerned that the House committees might act prematurely, they don't want them crashing about all over the place when the investigation is still continuing. We will see a lot of this sort of thing over the next few months.
    Agreed.

  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    IanB2 said:

    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:



    I think, with respect, this is nonsense. A lot of Europeans - not least the Irish - are genuinely horrified at the idea of No Deal. They think it could lead to a chain reaction of economic negatives, becoming deep recessions continent-wide. Plus it will reflect very badly on the Eurocrats themselves. Their agenda has always been to make Brexit so bad we will change our minds and Remain. It never occurred to them we might actually crash out.

    That was incredibly arrogant and silly of them then.

    I believe they think no deal is bad, but like many in our own parliament not as bad as they are saying they think it is. If they believed it to be all that bad they'd do something more to prevent it. Never occurring we might crash out was an excuse 2 years ago, not now. It is very possible (though I'd say not quite as likely as remain), the EU are not fools and they can surely see that. They have chosen to offer nothing more, and that's their prerogative, but the cannot pretend to not now know it might really happen.
    This is reliably sourced, and apparently true


    https://twitter.com/moutet/status/1086365841157963778?s=21
    Yet the deal really isn't that hard - which is actually a credit to Mrs M's efforts in negotiating, if not in selling. The problem is that a significant proportion of her own party is pre-programmed to oppose anything that involves interacting with the our European neighbours.
    Hardly. They just want a trade deal. Remain ultras like Grieve, Soubry and Greening on the other hand think it’s acceptable to give a two fingered salute to 17.4m voters.
  • notme2notme2 Posts: 1,006

    Cyclefree said:



    I may be wrong but the EU are not going to grant an extension for a referendum on some unknown question which does not resolve issues for them. Why should they? They will think of their own best interests. And they want certainty.

    We may not like it but we won't have control over this. Wishing it weren't so, saying this is not how things should be, this is not how things were last time is not going to change the brutal realities we face now. Apart from one choice, everything we do from now on it is dependant on others - and they will have their own interests and price. Time for Britain to face up to this fact instead of believing what it would like to be true.

    If the EU dictate the Referendum question, then I think the Referendum will only have one answer.
    https://goo.gl/images/x49Qge
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,626
    SeanT, just in case you happen to be in Cornwall next weekend, thought I'd bring to your attention that Michael Wignall is doing a guest-chef 7 course tasting menu at the Idle Rocks in St. Mawes.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    Xenon said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    5) We should never have given away our independence against the wishes of the majority in the first place to the wretched organisation.

    Those who did it - Major, Blair, Brown are now the chief advocates for ignoring 17.4m voters. Tells you what they as politicians think of the electorate.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,005
    Xenon said:

    Xenon said:

    IanB2 said:

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
    Well if it isn't realistic or acceptable then it wouldn't win in a referendum would it? So no excuse for not putting it on the ballot.
    Why would something that, if put into practice, would be neither realistic nor acceptable not gain popular support?
    Some might argue that the more unrealistic something is, the easier it is to get votes.
    "Something for nothing!"
    "There's always someone else who will pay!"
    "We'll give you all the positives with none of the negatives!"
    You're right, we should just do away with elections.

    Just let the establishment decide what is best for us.
    Well, that's a complete strawman response.
    We don't vote in order to find out what's correct; reality isn't subject to popularity.
    We vote to give consent of the governed and avoid tyranny.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    When May comes back on Monday with a plan of 'I'll talk some more to the EU' I think I may scream. Have any of the sides made any progress? Every time there's a report of movement up pops the DUP to deny it, the ERG to hit the roof, the Cabinet remainers saying they'll resign, Labour stonewalling. Such a waste.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471
    IanB2 said:

    Xenon said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    5) We should never have given away our independence against the wishes of the majority in the first place to the wretched organisation.
    We have a lot more freedom to act as one of the leading members of the EU than we ever will have isolated as a struggling economy beyond its periphery.
    Nonsense. We can't even delay leaving to have another referendum unless the EU agrees to it.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    edited January 2019

    kle4 said:

    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she'll also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonable and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit.
    Personally if someone gets a ton of unearned racist & sexist shit, I'd be pretty fasdtidious about flinging more, earned or not.
    What a peculiar attitude. Essentially give someone a pass because they also face unearned crap? We should all welcome getting such crap on that basis, because then how dare people criticise us.

    It is very easy to criticise people without even getting close to racist and sexist about it. That's all people have to do. Not stop with the criticism because you don't want to be in the same company of racists and sexists.

    That's as silly as people liking something purely on the basis it upsets those they dislike.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285
    notme2 said:
    For those of us unaware, what was the statistic that Stewart apparently made up ?

    (FWIW, I think some of the difference in treatment between the two of them is probably down to most people having no idea who Rory the Tory is.)

  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 42,012
    edited January 2019
    notme2 said:
    After your persistent bleating about abuse handed out to the Right, often in response to the highlighting of some right wing wankery, I duly accept your expertise on the matter of whataboutery.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471

    Xenon said:

    Xenon said:

    IanB2 said:

    SunnyJim said:

    This is very good on why a Deal/Remain referendum is better than a Norway Plus stitch up.

    I didn't realise there was anybody left that didn't understand that Deal vs Remain was just Remain.

    There will be next to no support for Deal from any of the political class, and to be frank, after MP's collectively destroyed it I can't believe they would treat the public with such contempt as to offer it to them.

    There was next to no support for Leave from any of the political class, yet it still won.
    There are lots of the political class who do support Deal. They just don't want to be seen supporting it.
    And the point is that leaving without a deal isn't realistic or acceptable. Hence if we leave there needs to be a deal. If it isn't May's deal, someone needs to come up with an alternative.
    Well if it isn't realistic or acceptable then it wouldn't win in a referendum would it? So no excuse for not putting it on the ballot.
    Why would something that, if put into practice, would be neither realistic nor acceptable not gain popular support?
    Some might argue that the more unrealistic something is, the easier it is to get votes.
    "Something for nothing!"
    "There's always someone else who will pay!"
    "We'll give you all the positives with none of the negatives!"
    You're right, we should just do away with elections.

    Just let the establishment decide what is best for us.
    Well, that's a complete strawman response.
    We don't vote in order to find out what's correct; reality isn't subject to popularity.
    We vote to give consent of the governed and avoid tyranny.
    If you think democracy results in people voting for unrealistic and acceptable measures then you can't be a big fan of it.
  • kle4 said:

    When May comes back on Monday with a plan of 'I'll talk some more to the EU' I think I may scream. Have any of the sides made any progress? Every time there's a report of movement up pops the DUP to deny it, the ERG to hit the roof, the Cabinet remainers saying they'll resign, Labour stonewalling. Such a waste.

    The frustration is all consumimg but we have a date and decisions have to be made or out we go on the 29th March. It may go all the way down to the wire so another 9 weeks or so
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    SeanT said:



    I think, with respect, this is nonsense. A lot of Europeans - not least the Irish - are genuinely horrified at the idea of No Deal. They think it could lead to a chain reaction of economic negatives, becoming deep recessions continent-wide. Plus it will reflect very badly on the Eurocrats themselves. Their agenda has always been to make Brexit so bad we will change our minds and Remain. It never occurred to them we might actually crash out.

    That was incredibly arrogant and silly of them then.

    I believe they think no deal is bad, but like many in our own parliament not as bad as they are saying they think it is. If they believed it to be all that bad they'd do something more to prevent it. Never occurring we might crash out was an excuse 2 years ago, not now. It is very possible (though I'd say not quite as likely as remain), the EU are not fools and they can surely see that. They have chosen to offer nothing more, and that's their prerogative, but the cannot pretend to not now know it might really happen.
    This is reliably sourced, and apparently true


    https://twitter.com/moutet/status/1086365841157963778?s=21
    Tells you all you need to know about the EU mindset - and how poorly May has negotiated.
  • notme2notme2 Posts: 1,006
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she'll also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonable and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit.
    Personally if someone gets a ton of unearned racist & sexist shit, I'd be pretty fasdtidious about flinging more, earned or not.
    What a peculiar attitude. Essentially give someone a pass because they also face unearned crap? We should all welcome getting such crap on that basis, because then how dare people criticise us.

    It is very easy to criticise people without even getting close to racist and sexist about it. That's all people have to do. Not stop with the criticism because you don't want to be in the same company of racists and sexists.

    That's as silly as people liking something purely on the basis it upsets those they dislike.
    It’s not hard, is it?
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    SeanT, just in case you happen to be in Cornwall next weekend, thought I'd bring to your attention that Michael Wignall is doing a guest-chef 7 course tasting menu at the Idle Rocks in St. Mawes.

    I've been there, beautiful location.. V expensive...(well to my pocket anyway)
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she'll also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonable and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit.
    Personally if someone gets a ton of unearned racist & sexist shit, I'd be pretty fasdtidious about flinging more, earned or not.
    What a peculiar attitude. Essentially give someone a pass because they also face unearned crap? We should all welcome getting such crap on that basis, because then how dare people criticise us...
    That was not the point made. It was rather to make sure any such attacks are accurate, rather than trading on existing prejudices.
    (Do you not understand the meaning of fastidious ?)

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    Nigelb said:

    notme2 said:
    For those of us unaware, what was the statistic that Stewart apparently made up ?

    It was about how many people supported the PM's deal, some preposterously high percentage. The charitable explanation would be he was speaking metaphorically, but even if that was so ministers and shadow ministers mentioning a statistic is going to be assumed to be at least somewhat rooted in fact, which it wasn't.
  • XenonXenon Posts: 471
    kle4 said:

    When May comes back on Monday with a plan of 'I'll talk some more to the EU' I think I may scream. Have any of the sides made any progress? Every time there's a report of movement up pops the DUP to deny it, the ERG to hit the roof, the Cabinet remainers saying they'll resign, Labour stonewalling. Such a waste.

    First the first time I'm starting to think that she might be running down the clock so we leave without a deal.
  • AmpfieldAndyAmpfieldAndy Posts: 1,445
    kinabalu said:

    Barnesian said:

    I agree at the FTSE level but the FTSE would head up for different reasons in those two scenarios so it is important which shares you choose.

    Sterling tanking helps international shares like GSK whose earnings are mainly in dollars but domestic shares would suffer. Remaining helps mainly domestic shares like Barratts housebuilders and GSK would suffer from strong sterling. So it's not simple.

    There is also a less technical reason why a fall in sterling boosts the footsie.

    If the £ falls it makes UK shares cheaper - thus a more attractive buy - to international 'citizens of nowhere' investors.

    Similar to the London prime property market. A cheap £ makes that Knightsbridge stucco villa more affordable to a wealthy overseas buyer and therefore boosts its price - or mitigates the fall of it in a bear market.

    International funds are not going to invest in U.K. equities until Brexit is resolved. All their money has been pulled out and they have zero allocations to the U.K.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,626
    kyf_100 said:

    Xenon said:

    When No Deal happens and its catastrophic effects are present for all to see, how will the Ultras explain them? I predict four approaches to be used in parallel:

    They aren't happening. It's just the Elite and their media chums making stuff up.

    They are happening but would have happened anyway.

    They are happening and are the consequence of Remainers/the EU/not listening to DD.

    They are happening but this is precisely what people voted for and it will prove good for us in the long term.

    5) We should never have given away our independence against the wishes of the majority in the first place to the wretched organisation.
    A reminder that this is the future if we end up remaining.

    https://twitter.com/EU_Commission/status/1085854998217469953

    Having Brussels with any role in setting our tax rates will push good numbers of relucatant 2016 Remainers into less relucatant 2019 Leavers (if we were to have another vote). Much as Remainers might relish pointing out that Leave voters have died off, in the meantime the EU is pursuing an agenda that is even more distateful to many than was apparent in 2016.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    edited January 2019
    Nigelb said:

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she'll also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonable and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit.
    Personally if someone gets a ton of unearned racist & sexist shit, I'd be pretty fasdtidious about flinging more, earned or not.
    What a peculiar attitude. Essentially give someone a pass because they also face unearned crap? We should all welcome getting such crap on that basis, because then how dare people criticise us...
    That was not the point made. It was rather to make sure any such attacks are accurate, rather than trading on existing prejudices.
    (Do you not understand the meaning of fastidious ?)

    I do, but the addition of 'earned or not' at the end confused me, since if I have been fastidious and am thus confident the attack I wish to make is accurate, how could it not be earned? The implication seemed to me to be that whether the attack was accurate I should be careful in making it. How would you defined an accurate attack which is unearned? I don't see how it exists. If it is accurate, it is earned.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285
    kle4 said:

    Nigelb said:

    notme2 said:
    For those of us unaware, what was the statistic that Stewart apparently made up ?

    It was about how many people supported the PM's deal, some preposterously high percentage. The charitable explanation would be he was speaking metaphorically, but even if that was so ministers and shadow ministers mentioning a statistic is going to be assumed to be at least somewhat rooted in fact, which it wasn't.
    Ah, thanks.
    I suppose the answer to that might depend on what the alternative choice is, but nonetheless a foolish error in the circumstances.

  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,626
    edited January 2019

    SeanT, just in case you happen to be in Cornwall next weekend, thought I'd bring to your attention that Michael Wignall is doing a guest-chef 7 course tasting menu at the Idle Rocks in St. Mawes.

    I've been there, beautiful location.. V expensive...(well to my pocket anyway)
    Thanks. Great to hear (that it is beautiful!). It's for a celebration, so the boat is being pushed out!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,163
    edited January 2019
    Nigelb said:

    kle4 said:

    Nigelb said:

    notme2 said:
    For those of us unaware, what was the statistic that Stewart apparently made up ?

    It was about how many people supported the PM's deal, some preposterously high percentage. The charitable explanation would be he was speaking metaphorically, but even if that was so ministers and shadow ministers mentioning a statistic is going to be assumed to be at least somewhat rooted in fact, which it wasn't.
    Ah, thanks.
    I suppose the answer to that might depend on what the alternative choice is, but nonetheless a foolish error in the circumstances.

    Foolish error or foolish deliberately misleading, either or. Certainly not his finest hour. And it deserves being remembered even if one supports his general position on the deal.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,705
    edited January 2019

    On Grieve's amendment the effect must be to change the whole way the government does business and of course would put Corbyn in a straight jacket. Are labour going to vote for it or am I wrong

    Grieve's draft amendment appears to be limited to "a motion in connection with the UK's withdrawal from the EU", and it is also date limited to the date of the debate.

    It seems very contrived to me but I am confident that Grieve understands these things a hell of a lot better than I do.
  • Xenon said:

    kle4 said:

    When May comes back on Monday with a plan of 'I'll talk some more to the EU' I think I may scream. Have any of the sides made any progress? Every time there's a report of movement up pops the DUP to deny it, the ERG to hit the roof, the Cabinet remainers saying they'll resign, Labour stonewalling. Such a waste.

    First the first time I'm starting to think that she might be running down the clock so we leave without a deal.
    She knows her successor will be a Leaver. After all the grief she's got from that quarter, perhaps she wants one of those bastards in change when the No Deal havoc ensues and see how they manage (not very well being the obvious prediction). It would be only natural.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,285
    edited January 2019
    kle4 said:

    Nigelb said:

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Well, for one thing people haven't forgotten, for two its hardly the only time Abbot had such an incident, and she'll also a lot more aggressive and, quite reasonable and proudly, even more partisan than most MPs, so far less likely to get any charitable understanding when she would never, ever, in a million years, extend the same courtesy. It's quite possible that she takes a lot of unearned shit, which she does, while still earning plenty of shit.
    Personally if someone gets a ton of unearned racist & sexist shit, I'd be pretty fasdtidious about flinging more, earned or not.
    What a peculiar attitude. Essentially give someone a pass because they also face unearned crap? We should all welcome getting such crap on that basis, because then how dare people criticise us...
    That was not the point made. It was rather to make sure any such attacks are accurate, rather than trading on existing prejudices.
    (Do you not understand the meaning of fastidious ?)

    I do, but the addition of 'earned or not' at the end confused me, since if I have been fastidious and am thus confident the attack I wish to make is accurate, how could it not be earned? The implication seemed to me to be that whether the attack was accurate I should be careful in making it. How would you defined an accurate attack which is unearned? I don't see how it exists. If it is accurate, it is earned.
    In this case, though, we are discussing journalists with an obligation to avoid bias.
    Fastidiousness towards negative comments about someone in Abbott’s position is surely essential ?

This discussion has been closed.