The above chart is from some new polling issued by YouGov this morning which tries to find out how voters view each party’s stance on brexit. Apart from Farage’s Brexit party some of the answers are quite extraordinary and suggest that the parties are not getting over their positions as strongly as they might be.
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Who is actually in charge of the Labour Party? Answers on a postcode....
The main reason it won't be viewed as a second referendum is because the 'wrong' side is in danger of winning for a second time.
If the CUKs were on 30-35% and ahead of the rest, it'd be a strong sign of public support to revoke Article 50 and stay in the EU.
Also, if the parties are successful in defining their Brexit stance more clearly that could lead to some large swings in support.
Or just NCUK-TNIG to keep it nice and simple.
Hard Brexit (EFDD/ENF) , May's softish Tory Brexit (EPP), Corbyn's even softer Customs Union Brexit (S & D), Remain UK with CUK, Lib Dems (ALDE) and the Greens (GREENS) and "Leave UK-stay EU" Sinn Fein/SNP/Plaid.
There is also the impact and influence the result will generate within the EU parliament and as a signal to the EU Council.
The result will be read in conjunction with others from across the EU.
And if CHUK are polling at 10% and only 38% know what their position on Brexit is, that gives them plenty of upside yet, especially if the Remain-supporting public decides that they are the vehicle of choice for this election.
https://twitter.com/BBCPolitics/status/1122837292211527680?s=19
https://twitter.com/leaveeuofficial/status/1123176936665243648?s=21
He's more or less tied with the two Ferraris. Leclerc's had misfortune and Mercedes have done well but everything else is on course. Verstappen is de facto number one at Red Bull, who typically develop very well (the last couple of years have seen them competitive for wins in the latter half of the year, when it's too late for the top spot). And he's a lot closer at this stage this year than he was the previous season.
Still odds against. But if I do bet on this it'll be before Spain, when the circuit may well favour him, as it did in 2016. Passing is very tricky.
A view that has much to commend it.
FWIW, I think that part of the problem the LDs and ChUK have is not going all-out Revoke. Arguing for a second referendum is an ambiguous position if the public don't know where you're starting from and doesn't take it - as much of the political class does - as a synonym for Remain. It's also a process rather than a policy.
Of course, the big parties in the middle have their own problems, mainly stemming from their internal divisions and mixed messages / actions on actually delivering on Brexit.
However, the big parties have a lot of institutional inertia that works to their benefit. If ChUK don't make a breakthrough at the EP elections, I don't really see where they go other than either a merger with the Lib Dems (which might always have been their endgame but now will have to be completed from a position of weakness), or to fade away into nothingness.
Farage can point to current polling to demand his share of airtime (and, more debateably, that his outfit is the more legitimate successor to UKIP-2014 than UKIP-2019 is). What do ChUK have going for them? Polls that point to at best 1 or 2 MEPs, deposit-losing shares for Westminster and no relevant electoral history. They will simply be cut out of the debate.
I assume this is the rosette on a donkey vote?
But I don't think it'll happen.
LEAVE 48%
REMAIN 52%
Here's Vince in Nov 2007 "Tomorrow the Liberal Democrats will table an amendment to the Government’s parliamentary motion proposing the Queen’s Speech. Our amendment calls for a referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union." https://www.libdemvoice.org/vince-cable-on-european-referendum-1609.html
In Sep 2016 "Vince Cable has condemned Tim Farron's plans to demand a second referendum on Britain’s membership of the European Union.
The former business secretary said the party’s position to hold another vote on the Brexit deal secured by Theresa May “raises a lot of fundamental problems” and was not a “panacea to anything”.
Speaking at a fringe event at the Lib Dem conference in Brighton, Sir Vince said it is “disrespectful” to voters and “politically counter-productive” to call for a second vote." https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/political-parties/liberal-democrats/vince-cable/news/79094/vince-cable-hits-out-tim-farrons
They're not exactly consistent.
https://twitter.com/b_judah/status/1123165342593892352?s=19
I disagree by the way on Remain tactical voting.
https://twitter.com/JoeOttenX/status/1123216780590223360?s=19
In constituency like the North East (3 MEPs), Remain voters should back a single party, otherwise they get no MEPs; in somewhere like Yorkshire (6 MEPs), they should split their votes to ensure that with 10%, they get one for each; in the South East (10 MEPs), they'd probably be better unifying again, which would give them a to pick up a fourth MEP.
I can tell if I kissed EU I may not ...
(I will collect my scarf and bobble hat).
D'Hondt stand so close to me.
TBH, I don't think there's any prospect of a continuity Remain party winning a seat in the North East. It does have to be Labour, there, if you oppose Brexit.
If Watson & co do jump ship, it'd make far more sense to set up their own vehicle properly and then invite the Change MPs to join or ally.
https://twitter.com/Dobablo/status/1123231591201955840?s=19
And Con could come sixth.
What is the Tory position if it isn't May's Deal?
However, it's doubtful whether they could even reach that modest total - LD+Grn did so in 2009 (22.4%), but slumped to 11.1% in 2014.
(*) Con voters deserting over Brexit would be an obvious exception.
Gunshots were heard at a rally led by Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó outside a Caracas air base, witnesses said, after Guaidó said earlier that troops had joined him to oust President Nicolás Maduro.
The Reuters witnesses said men in military uniform, who were accompanying Guaidó at the scene, were exchanging fire with soldiers acting in support of Maduro. The witnesses said the shots appeared to be live rounds.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2019/apr/30/venezuela-opposition-leader-juan-guaido-claims-coup-underway-live-news
https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/d3np4y/hackers-steal-ransom-citycomp-airbus-volkswagen-oracle-valuable-companies
Europe’s biggest phone company identified hidden backdoors in the software that could have given Huawei unauthorized access to the carrier’s fixed-line network in Italy, a system that provides internet service to millions of homes and businesses, according to Vodafone’s security briefing documents from 2009 and 2011 seen by Bloomberg, as well as people involved in the situation.
Vodafone asked Huawei to remove backdoors in home internet routers in 2011 and received assurances from the supplier that the issues were fixed, but further testing revealed that the security vulnerabilities remained, the documents show. Vodafone also identified backdoors in parts of its fixed-access network known as optical service nodes, which are responsible for transporting internet traffic over optical fibers, and other parts called broadband network gateways, which handle subscriber authentication and access to the internet, the people said.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-04-30/vodafone-found-hidden-backdoors-in-huawei-equipment?srnd=premium-asia
And yet still the government are going to let them provide infrastructure.
eg (and very "back of a fag packet"), Lab would be on the verge of a third seat if they were 28.499 and Green or LibDem were 9.501.
So we are willing to go with a company that may well be comprised and even if they aren't, the software side of their products is shit...
But that's not really news... so i will content myself with laughing at Soubry and Umunna. Poor lambs
Supposed 5G will usher in a new generation of IoT / mobile services.
Whatever they are... if anyone in the middle is to succeed, they need to peel away some votes from the 40+% totals of Lab and Con at GE2017. I just think CHUK's formation may speed up the restoration of the centre-ground "none of the above" vote from 2015/2017. And if it then disappears, a new LD leader may be well-placed to sweep up.
Conservatives:
Pro-Brexit: 56 (23)
Anti-Brexit: 11 (40)
Neither: 18 (21)
Don't know: 15 (16)
Labour:
Pro-Brexit: 18 (7)
Anti-Brexit: 28 (61)
Neither: 30 (14)
Don't know: 24 (18)
The key ratios are L/B to determine the 8th seat (B wins on the rounded numbers as it is less than 3/2)
L/LD, L/G and B/LD and B/G.
If the former two ratios are over 3 then L gets its third seat before LD or G gets its first. Similarly the latter two ratios would give B its second seat before LD and G gets one if it exceeds 2.
Lots of variations of the result on small changes of the % votes.