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  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
  • Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Wait till you see the Liberal Democrats in Russia.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,627
    ab195 said:

    Sandpit said:

    ab195 said:

    RobD said:

    I see the Labour Front Bench has called for HMG to take an equity stake in Thomas Cook. Interesting times.

    On yesterday's thread it was suggested that bailing out Thomas Cook was the cheap option at £200 million as it would cost two or three times that to bring everyone home. In Europe it is common for the state to part-own private companies. Put those two things together and it does not seem too outrageous.

    Perhaps we should wait for Dominic Cummings to wargame stranded holidaymakers voting for the wrong party.
    It’d cost half a billion to bring everyone home?
    The BBC says 150,000 Brits are on holiday with it, and also quotes the £600m figure. Does nobody question these things? £4000 per person to get them home from, by definition, easily reachable holiday destinations? We also know a large company that was leasing a lot of a/c is about to go out of business, leaving those serviceable a/c available and the leasing company desperate for cash.
    The £600m figure includes the cost of refunding the entire forward book of TC customers, which is mostly already insured via ATOL.

    The £200m figure is the cash they need to get them past the end of this month, to pay bills due and renew their ATOL bond (of £100m) - with no guarantee they wouldn’t implode shortly afterwards without another £1bn cash injection.

    The cost of repatriating c150k passengers is likely to be £80-£100m, most of which will be covered by ATOL and passengers’ own insurance policies. The airlift itself will be organised by the CAA and underwritten by government, who are likely to be on the hook for £10m or so that they can’t reclaim from elsewhere. It will work in the same way as the Monarch airlift that happened exactly two years ago on 2nd October 2017 - the dates are no coincidence.
    Thanks, that makes substantially more sense. Also does rather highlight the danger of drawing too many conclusions from figures out of context.
    Typical of mainstream journalism on anything related to aviation - they don’t know what they don’t know, to the point that they can’t even do basic maths and see that £600m divided by 150,000 means they’ll all be flying home by private bizjet!

    Long thread running in pilots’ forum at https://www.pprune.org/airlines-airports-routes/599819-thomas-cook-2-a-49.html - but bear in mind that a number of the posters on that forum are about to lose their jobs as TC collapses.

    After the speculation last night, it now could be tomorrow night the plug gets pulled - at a carefully chosen time when as many aircraft as possible are on the ground at home bases.
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,124
    TGOHF said:
    A50 requires the EU to negotiate a deal. How regularly do MEPs urge the Council / Commission to break its own treaty?
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,900
    Evening all :)

    The big polling news from Canada isn't the rolling Nanos and Mainstreet Research daily polls though both have shown a move to the Conservatives from the Liberals.

    We now have an Ontario regional poll - the significance of Ontario is it has 121 of the 338 ridings so rather more than a third of the total. The Liberal majority last time (and indeed on all other occasions) has been built on a strong performance in Ontario backed by a good result in Quebec.

    In 2015 Justin Trudeau's Liberals won 45% of the vote and 80 seats, the Conservatives polled 35% for 33 seats and the NDP got 8 seats with 17%.

    The overnight Campaign Research poll puts the Conservatives on 39% (+4) and the Liberals on 35% (-10) so a healthy 7% swing for Andrew Scheer. The NDP has 12% (-5) and the Greens 10% (+7). I reckon that swing will deliver 20-25 seats for Andrew Scheer and re-enforces my view that Trudeau is going to lose his majority but Scheer isn't yet in a position to win one for the Conservatives.

    As an example when Harper won in 2011 the Conservatives won 45% of the Ontario vote and 73 of the 106 seats with the NDP and Liberals on 25% each. Scheer doesn't yet have the vote share or the vote lead Harper enjoyed in Ontario when he won a 22 seat majority in the Canadian Parliament.

    It's been a disastrous start for Trudeau, no question, but I think he looks more likely to lose his majority than Scheer is to win a majority and it may be the nDP collapse will end up helping the Liberals stay in power but there's a way to go yet.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    edited September 2019
    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    No, he is making the sensible point that to change FPTP, you first must win under FPTP.

    And, if you are winning under FPTP, you tend to see its benefits (vide Blair as well as Trudeau).
  • surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469
    Scott_P said:
    Why are Opinium and YouGov so vastly different to other pollsters. This has to be about methodology. One group is badly wrong.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Wait till you see the Liberal Democrats in Russia.
    Slogan: "Freedom, Patriotism, Law"
    :D
  • Scott_P said:
    No doubt someone will be along in a minute to say under Flavible that means a Hung Parliament with Lib Dems as kingmakers with a record number of seats. 😂
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    Scott_P said:
    Why are Opinium and YouGov so vastly different to other pollsters. This has to be about methodology. One group is badly wrong.
    Not necessarily. Differential turnout models could explain a lot of it. And they aren't right or wrong because polls aren't predictions.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,060
    edited September 2019
    Scott_P said:
    Under Flavible that means a Hung Parliament with Lib Dems as kingmakers with a record number of seats

    :wink:
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    A good time to try and escape . Do you have any EU connections in terms of family ! At this point Bozo could decapitate Bambi on live tv whilst at the same time ordering a missile strike on a school and still the voters will flock to him !
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,900
    HYUFD said:



    Two words, tuition fees shows how LDs can dispense with promises when needed

    I do think, were the LDs to win a landslide majority, they would use the five years of the elected dictatorship to implement a truly radical programme of legislation - hopefully as radical as the Asquith Government of blessed memory.

    I admire and respect your cynicism but I'd like to think the introduction of STV for all local elections would be immediate and for Westminster in time. The impact of such a move would be to break the party system as it stands but new groupings of parties would emerge including a centre-left bloc and a centre-right bloc.
  • Oh dear, what a shame, no backward socialism for us! How ever will we cope?
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    blueblue said:

    Oh dear, what a shame, no backward socialism for us! How ever will we cope?
    Brexitism is socialism
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    For Labour it is ....
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152
    stodge said:

    Evening all :)

    The big polling news from Canada isn't the rolling Nanos and Mainstreet Research daily polls though both have shown a move to the Conservatives from the Liberals.

    We now have an Ontario regional poll - the significance of Ontario is it has 121 of the 338 ridings so rather more than a third of the total. The Liberal majority last time (and indeed on all other occasions) has been built on a strong performance in Ontario backed by a good result in Quebec.

    In 2015 Justin Trudeau's Liberals won 45% of the vote and 80 seats, the Conservatives polled 35% for 33 seats and the NDP got 8 seats with 17%.

    The overnight Campaign Research poll puts the Conservatives on 39% (+4) and the Liberals on 35% (-10) so a healthy 7% swing for Andrew Scheer. The NDP has 12% (-5) and the Greens 10% (+7). I reckon that swing will deliver 20-25 seats for Andrew Scheer and re-enforces my view that Trudeau is going to lose his majority but Scheer isn't yet in a position to win one for the Conservatives.

    As an example when Harper won in 2011 the Conservatives won 45% of the Ontario vote and 73 of the 106 seats with the NDP and Liberals on 25% each. Scheer doesn't yet have the vote share or the vote lead Harper enjoyed in Ontario when he won a 22 seat majority in the Canadian Parliament.

    It's been a disastrous start for Trudeau, no question, but I think he looks more likely to lose his majority than Scheer is to win a majority and it may be the nDP collapse will end up helping the Liberals stay in power but there's a way to go yet.

    Except the main movement since the blackface affair has been from the Liberals to the NDP.

    The latest Nanos poll today shows the NDP up along with the BQ with the Liberals down and the Conservatives also a little bit down compared to the previous Nanos poll.

    The Ontario poll reflects the swing to the Tories since 2015 and again tells us Trudeau is likely to lose his majority but Scheer is unlikely to win a majority but it does not tell us anything about the blackface impact unlike the rolling Nanos polling
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,060
    CatMan said:

    Scott_P said:
    Under Flavible that means a Hung Parliament with Lib Dems as kingmakers with a record number of seats

    :wink:
    Actually I think it means a Tory majority of around 60, but who the hell knows what would happen during an election campaign
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    You are unusually cynical this afternoon, Mr HY. It is the Conservatives who make promises when they are campaigning for votes, and then go back on those promises.
    LOL - A lib dem can post THAT with a straight face....

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152
    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Despite your continued brain dead attempts to get as many insults as possible into a post without saying a single thing of interest, my point was of course entirely relevant as before they won a majority in 2015 under FPTP Trudeau's Liberals were fully committed to PR.

    If as is likely they lose that majority they may go back to it but that does not change the point
  • stodge said:

    HYUFD said:



    Two words, tuition fees shows how LDs can dispense with promises when needed

    I do think, were the LDs to win a landslide majority, they would use the five years of the elected dictatorship to implement a truly radical programme of legislation - hopefully as radical as the Asquith Government of blessed memory.

    I admire and respect your cynicism but I'd like to think the introduction of STV for all local elections would be immediate and for Westminster in time. The impact of such a move would be to break the party system as it stands but new groupings of parties would emerge including a centre-left bloc and a centre-right bloc.
    You realise of course that were the Lib Dems to win a majority under FPTP and then introduce PR that would mean hundreds of newly elected MPs would suddenly find themselves unable to win next time around?

    Turkeys voting for Christmas.
  • CatMan said:

    CatMan said:

    Scott_P said:
    Under Flavible that means a Hung Parliament with Lib Dems as kingmakers with a record number of seats

    :wink:
    Actually I think it means a Tory majority of around 60, but who the hell knows what would happen during an election campaign
    60 for a 15 point lead? No chance, that model is borked if so.

    I strongly doubt it will remain a 15 point lead but I remain confident we will soon see a poll showing Tories on 40%+ like I've predicted will occur by end of October when Corbyn made the terrible mistake of refusing the election.

    An opposition leader should never reject an election. He'll rue the day.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    HYUFD said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Despite your continued brain dead attempts to get as many insults as possible into a post without saying a single thing of interest, my point was of course entirely relevant as before they won a majority in 2015 under FPTP Trudeau's Liberals were fully committed to PR.

    If as is likely they lose that majority they may go back to it but that does not change the point
    ...and are a different party in a different country. Gods, you don't half talk some nonsense.
  • nunuonenunuone Posts: 1,138

    Scott_P said:
    Why are Opinium and YouGov so vastly different to other pollsters. This has to be about methodology. One group is badly wrong.
    Must have something to do with online polling.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,900
    HYUFD said:


    Except the main movement since the blackface affair has been from the Liberals to the NDP.

    The latest Nanos poll today shows the NDP up along with the BQ with the Liberals down and the Conservatives also a little bit down compared to the previous Nanos poll.

    The Ontario poll reflects the swing to the Tories since 2015 and again tells us Trudeau is likely to lose his majority but Scheer is unlikely to win a majority but it does not tell us anything about the blackface impact unlike the rolling Nanos polling

    I'm wary of arguing polls with you but I'd make two points:

    1) Both Nanos and Mainstreet are running daily rolling polls which basically re-sample the same group by thirds on a daily basis so the comparison shouldn't be from day to day but every three days as the whole sample is re-measured. Nanos are sampling 1,200 by phone while Mainstreet's sample size is 2,087 by interview.

    2) The significance of Ontario can't be over-stated. With 121 ridings it is the place where Canadian elections are won or lost. It would be as if London and the South East had 250 constituencies in the UK. Neither Liberals nor Conservatives can build a majority without a strong performance in Ontario given the Conservatives will sweep the Prairies and the Liberals will win in the east.

    Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia will decide the election and I'd argue regional polls mean much more than national polls. The 7% swing from Liberal to Conservative would certainly deprive Trudeau of a majority but the collapse of the NDP probably means 300+ of the 338 seats will be won by the two main parties with the NDP reduced to a rump and BQ probably making a few gains.

    It's not inconceivable the two main parties might end up very close on seats at around 145-155 each.

  • Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Despite your continued brain dead attempts to get as many insults as possible into a post without saying a single thing of interest, my point was of course entirely relevant as before they won a majority in 2015 under FPTP Trudeau's Liberals were fully committed to PR.

    If as is likely they lose that majority they may go back to it but that does not change the point
    ...and are a different party in a different country. Gods, you don't half talk some nonsense.
    The point doesn't matter with regards to country or party. Tony Blair was all for voting reform until he saw himself win a landslide too.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152
    edited September 2019
    Well the LDs are much closer to Labour on votes and seats than Labour are to the Tories now if Opinium is correct
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    stodge said:

    HYUFD said:



    Two words, tuition fees shows how LDs can dispense with promises when needed

    I do think, were the LDs to win a landslide majority, they would use the five years of the elected dictatorship to implement a truly radical programme of legislation - hopefully as radical as the Asquith Government of blessed memory.

    I admire and respect your cynicism but I'd like to think the introduction of STV for all local elections would be immediate and for Westminster in time. The impact of such a move would be to break the party system as it stands but new groupings of parties would emerge including a centre-left bloc and a centre-right bloc.
    You realise of course that were the Lib Dems to win a majority under FPTP and then introduce PR that would mean hundreds of newly elected MPs would suddenly find themselves unable to win next time around?

    Turkeys voting for Christmas.
    A very good point. But since the Lib Dems sadly aren't averse to bumping folk up to the Lords, there would be a few soft landings.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,711

    Scott_P said:
    Why are Opinium and YouGov so vastly different to other pollsters. This has to be about methodology. One group is badly wrong.
    Kantar and Ipsos MORI also have big Con leads. Most recent:

    Opinium - Con +15
    Kantar - Con +14
    YouGov - Con +9
    Ipsos MORI - Con +9
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,900



    60 for a 15 point lead? No chance, that model is borked if so.

    I strongly doubt it will remain a 15 point lead but I remain confident we will soon see a poll showing Tories on 40%+ like I've predicted will occur by end of October when Corbyn made the terrible mistake of refusing the election.

    An opposition leader should never reject an election. He'll rue the day.

    Opinium has CON+BP at 49% and Lab/LD/Green at 43%
    IPSOS-MORI had CON+BP at 43% and Lab/LD/Green at 51%
    YouGov had CON+BP at 46% and Lab/LD/Green at 48%

    Something for everyone but please don't believe any of them.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152
    edited September 2019
    stodge said:

    HYUFD said:


    Except the main movement since the blackface affair has been from the Liberals to the NDP.

    The latest Nanos poll today shows the NDP up along with the BQ with the Liberals down and the Conservatives also a little bit down compared to the previous Nanos poll.

    The Ontario poll reflects the swing to the Tories since 2015 and again tells us Trudeau is likely to lose his majority but Scheer is unlikely to win a majority but it does not tell us anything about the blackface impact unlike the rolling Nanos polling

    I'm wary of arguing polls with you but I'd make two points:

    1) Both Nanos and Mainstreet are running daily rolling polls which basically re-sample the same group by thirds on a daily basis so the comparison shouldn't be from day to day but every three days as the whole sample is re-measured. Nanos are sampling 1,200 by phone while Mainstreet's sample size is 2,087 by interview.

    2) The significance of Ontario can't be over-stated. With 121 ridings it is the place where Canadian elections are won or lost. It would be as if London and the South East had 250 constituencies in the UK. Neither Liberals nor Conservatives can build a majority without a strong performance in Ontario given the Conservatives will sweep the Prairies and the Liberals will win in the east.

    Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia will decide the election and I'd argue regional polls mean much more than national polls. The 7% swing from Liberal to Conservative would certainly deprive Trudeau of a majority but the collapse of the NDP probably means 300+ of the 338 seats will be won by the two main parties with the NDP reduced to a rump and BQ probably making a few gains.

    It's not inconceivable the two main parties might end up very close on seats at around 145-155 each.

    I do agree both the Liberals and Tories could be neck and neck on seats (given the huge Conservative lead in Alberta bumps up their popular vote lead) with the NDP and BQ holding the balance of power and the blackface affair has not really changed that if Nanos today is correct

    The NDP collapse really came in 2015 when they fell from second and 30% in 2011 to third and just 19% as Trudeau's Liberals leapt from just 18% in 2011 to first place on 39%. They are currently still polling in the teens like 2015 even if the lower rather than higher teens
  • Scott_P said:
    Going so well for Labour under Jez and Len.
  • PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    Floater said:

    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    You are unusually cynical this afternoon, Mr HY. It is the Conservatives who make promises when they are campaigning for votes, and then go back on those promises.
    LOL - A lib dem can post THAT with a straight face....
    Most certainly. Every time the Lib Dems have got an overall majority in the last 100 years, they have never failed to keep their promises.

    You Tories cannot say as much, can you?
  • Chris said:

    Chris said:

    I can't help thinking that all this talk of a Lib Dem revival is just another unicorn. Or maybe something worse than a unicorn.

    In reality I can think of few things more conducive to Johnson getting an electoral mandate for No Deal (if that's what he wants) than a Lib Dem revival that would split the opposition vote.

    I'm afraid that most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal, and that - despite the self-serving rhetoric - there are only a relatively small number who really see avoiding it as their top priority.

    If "most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal" and by implication don't care then why are so many putting their careers at risk to stop it?
    You're also impying that Boris is somehow encouraging the LibDem revival - which, as a unicorn, wouldn't exist. Have you seen the results of the recent elections?
    Did you even read that post through before clicking 'Post Comment'?
    Another reminder of why it's a waste of time commenting here.

    But thanks anyway - obviously I still need reminding!
    Didn't think you would be able to justify your post
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    HYUFD said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Despite your continued brain dead attempts to get as many insults as possible into a post without saying a single thing of interest, my point was of course entirely relevant as before they won a majority in 2015 under FPTP Trudeau's Liberals were fully committed to PR.

    If as is likely they lose that majority they may go back to it but that does not change the point
    Your analogy with the Canadian Liberals is very good ... because before they found Trudeau, they had slipped into third place behind the Conservatives and the NDP.

    Third placed parties always love electoral reform.

    First placed parties never.

    If the LibDems ever win under FPTP, they will learn to stop worrying about it and love it. As Trudeau did.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    Scott_P said:
    CON + BXP = 49% despite the chaos. People should be careful about wishing for PR.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,131
    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Welcome to Breitbart World. All parties with "Liberal" in their name must behave like US Democrats and be lumped together. All parties with "Conservative" in their name must behave like US Republicans and be lumped together. Any factual contradictions to this stupidity must be ignored or abused using poor logic.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293
    edited September 2019
    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    Lib Dems have a way bigger ceiling than Labour now, so I wouldn't wish for that.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,131
    nunuone said:

    Scott_P said:
    Why are Opinium and YouGov so vastly different to other pollsters. This has to be about methodology. One group is badly wrong.
    Must have something to do with online polling.
    Last time I checked, most pollsters used online panel polling, with some occasional exceptions (do Survation still use telephone polling?)
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Scott_P said:
    Are Labour still in favour of a snap election?
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    PClipp said:

    Floater said:

    PClipp said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    You are unusually cynical this afternoon, Mr HY. It is the Conservatives who make promises when they are campaigning for votes, and then go back on those promises.
    LOL - A lib dem can post THAT with a straight face....
    Most certainly. Every time the Lib Dems have got an overall majority in the last 100 years, they have never failed to keep their promises.

    You Tories cannot say as much, can you?
    Important point, this. The flagellation of the Lib Dems over tuition fees is desperate stuff. It was relevant: I voted Lib Dem in 2010 and have not voted for them since. That was one of the reasons. But, christ, it was nearly a decade ago and they were a junior partner in the coalition.
    I'd find it plausible if people criticising the Lib Dems were advocating another party that had a better record, but 90%+ of the time they're Tories and Labour voters whose record on lies and broken promises is, well, more substantial.
    Like being lectured by a murderer over taking your library book back late. Hair-raising hypocrisy.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,060
    Need to wait until November, and see if the Brexit Party is at 20%+ levels.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    nico67 said:

    A good time to try and escape . Do you have any EU connections in terms of family ! At this point Bozo could decapitate Bambi on live tv whilst at the same time ordering a missile strike on a school and still the voters will flock to him !
    I am stuck here (medical conditions)! Besides short trips away from home are great but living somewhere else has never really appealed to me. I do have some French heritage, they were Huguenots who were of course persecuted and large number fled to the safety of this country. But I cannot speak French, it was the only subject I ever failed at school! :disappointed: Never mind when Bozo orders the extermination of people like me I will be first in the queue I have no doubt! :wink:
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    They say Tories have just two settings - complacency and panic.

    Wise words.
  • Gabs2 said:

    Lib Dems have a way bigger ceiling than Labour now, so I wouldn't wish for that.
    Its what I think would be best for the country.

    Tories won't be in office forever. Better when they go that they're replaced by the LDs than Labour.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    nico67 said:

    A good time to try and escape . Do you have any EU connections in terms of family ! At this point Bozo could decapitate Bambi on live tv whilst at the same time ordering a missile strike on a school and still the voters will flock to him !
    Blaming the voters is never a good political strategy. Had Labour embraced soft Brexit as the only game in town, we would have remained close to the EU, the Labour coalition would have held together and we would be remaining close enough to Brussels re-entry in a decade would have been viable.*

    *May also have required opposing racism against Jews.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152
    viewcode said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Welcome to Breitbart World. All parties with "Liberal" in their name must behave like US Democrats and be lumped together. All parties with "Conservative" in their name must behave like US Republicans and be lumped together. Any factual contradictions to this stupidity must be ignored or abused using poor logic.
    That was not what I was saying which was more an attitude to FPTP and PR depending on whether you have a majority or not.

    While Conservative Parties all over the world do tend to be conservstive, even if not as populist as the Republicans under Trump, Liberal parties can vary. While in the Liberal Party in Canada, the UK Liberal Democrats, the US Democrats, the liberal En Marche in France etc tend to centre left, the Japanese Liberal Democratic Party, the Australian Liberals, the Spanish liberal Citizens party, the German liberal FDP and liberal parties in the Netherlands and Scandinavia tend to be centre right
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,164
    Scott_P said:

    alex. said:

    It seems both Labour and Libdem policy is to have an election, but not to actually vote for one.

    Like the ERG, who want Brexit and voted against it 3 times...

    Yup - the ERG are on the same page as the LDs and Labour. Lol.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268

    Gabs2 said:

    Lib Dems have a way bigger ceiling than Labour now, so I wouldn't wish for that.
    Its what I think would be best for the country.

    Tories won't be in office forever. Better when they go that they're replaced by the LDs than Labour.
    Can't argue with that.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152

    HYUFD said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Despite your continued brain dead attempts to get as many insults as possible into a post without saying a single thing of interest, my point was of course entirely relevant as before they won a majority in 2015 under FPTP Trudeau's Liberals were fully committed to PR.

    If as is likely they lose that majority they may go back to it but that does not change the point
    Your analogy with the Canadian Liberals is very good ... because before they found Trudeau, they had slipped into third place behind the Conservatives and the NDP.

    Third placed parties always love electoral reform.

    First placed parties never.

    If the LibDems ever win under FPTP, they will learn to stop worrying about it and love it. As Trudeau did.
    Yes if the LDs win a majority their new MPs will be much less clear on FPTP as Philip Thompson correctly states
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    viewcode said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    Gabs2 said:

    nico67 said:

    TGOHF said:
    Big deal . The Lib Dems want to stop Brexit. So why would anyone be shocked that they’ve put that case .

    Is it any different to Tory MPs and Farage asking a country to veto an extension.

    I personally don’t support the revoke policy but I hope Leavers will spare Remainers the faux outrage when their poster boy Bozo is both a pathological liar and not negotiating in good faith .
    It is exactly the same as the Faragists' tactics, which is to say, reprehensible. Lobbying foreign leaders over the heads of Her Majesty's government to help out your own political faction should be off limits. All this does is further delegitimize a successful revoke push. Even if they get it, the Tories will take us out of the EU with no further referendum the next time they get a majority.
    You seem to be forgetting that in the unlikely event of a LibDem majority under FPTP they will:

    1. Revoke A50
    2. Introduce PR to make it extrememly unlikely that the Tories or any other party will win a majority in future.

    Think of it as their way of getting their own back on FPTP :smile:
    They may not introduce PR if they get a majority under FPTP, the Trudeau experience suggests Liberals are all for PR in opposition but as soon as they win a majority under FPTP they dump it rather than risk having to share power with parties to their left or right.
    Are you seriously projecting the actions of a party in one country to an unrelated party in another country because the names are similar? That's some pretty impressive dimwittery, even for a notorious thicko like you.
    Welcome to Breitbart World. All parties with "Liberal" in their name must behave like US Democrats and be lumped together. All parties with "Conservative" in their name must behave like US Republicans and be lumped together. Any factual contradictions to this stupidity must be ignored or abused using poor logic.
    Bang on. The torpidity of it all is fucking numbing.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    Gabs2 said:

    Lib Dems have a way bigger ceiling than Labour now, so I wouldn't wish for that.
    Its what I think would be best for the country.

    Tories won't be in office forever. Better when they go that they're replaced by the LDs than Labour.
    I will more than likely vote LD at the next election but I cannot see them doing better than 40 - 60 seats. I think talk of LD usurping Labour is for the birds! Even if it is for yellow parrots... :smile:
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 123,152

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,751
    edited September 2019

    Chris said:

    Chris said:

    I can't help thinking that all this talk of a Lib Dem revival is just another unicorn. Or maybe something worse than a unicorn.

    In reality I can think of few things more conducive to Johnson getting an electoral mandate for No Deal (if that's what he wants) than a Lib Dem revival that would split the opposition vote.

    I'm afraid that most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal, and that - despite the self-serving rhetoric - there are only a relatively small number who really see avoiding it as their top priority.

    If "most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal" and by implication don't care then why are so many putting their careers at risk to stop it?
    You're also impying that Boris is somehow encouraging the LibDem revival - which, as a unicorn, wouldn't exist. Have you seen the results of the recent elections?
    Did you even read that post through before clicking 'Post Comment'?
    Another reminder of why it's a waste of time commenting here.

    But thanks anyway - obviously I still need reminding!
    Didn't think you would be able to justify your post
    I wonder - is anyone of normal intelligence with even the vaguest interest in politics not aware that under our electoral system it's advantageous to the party of government that the opposition vote is split?

    But I think must be the Zeroth Law of Internet discussion that no view is so stupid or ignorant that some fool won't defend it, and no view is so self-evidently true that some fool won't deny it.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268

    Gabs2 said:

    Lib Dems have a way bigger ceiling than Labour now, so I wouldn't wish for that.
    Its what I think would be best for the country.

    Tories won't be in office forever. Better when they go that they're replaced by the LDs than Labour.
    I will more than likely vote LD at the next election but I cannot see them doing better than 40 - 60 seats. I think talk of LD usurping Labour is for the birds! Even if it is for yellow parrots... :smile:
    It might take two elections but it will happen. An anti-Semitic, autocrat-friendly far Left Labour Party is only going to lose support over time. And I can't see them reforming. Their most promising talent has already left.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
  • CatManCatMan Posts: 3,060
    OT: The cricket is very exciting
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    A meteor might hit the Earth.

    However, it remains unlikely.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293
    edited September 2019

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    edited September 2019
    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    The Guardian is indicating that Labour are now in the final, tertiary stage of their civil war, when the madness emerges into the light, glistening and horrible.

    Heh.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    Chris said:

    Chris said:

    Chris said:

    I can't help thinking that all this talk of a Lib Dem revival is just another unicorn. Or maybe something worse than a unicorn.

    In reality I can think of few things more conducive to Johnson getting an electoral mandate for No Deal (if that's what he wants) than a Lib Dem revival that would split the opposition vote.

    I'm afraid that most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal, and that - despite the self-serving rhetoric - there are only a relatively small number who really see avoiding it as their top priority.

    If "most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal" and by implication don't care then why are so many putting their careers at risk to stop it?
    You're also impying that Boris is somehow encouraging the LibDem revival - which, as a unicorn, wouldn't exist. Have you seen the results of the recent elections?
    Did you even read that post through before clicking 'Post Comment'?
    Another reminder of why it's a waste of time commenting here.

    But thanks anyway - obviously I still need reminding!
    Didn't think you would be able to justify your post
    I wonder - is anyone of normal intelligence with even the vaguest interest in politics not aware that under our electoral system it's advantageous to the party of government that the opposition vote is split?

    But I think must be the Zeroth Law of Internet discussion that no view is so stupid or ignorant that some fool won't defend it, and no view is so self-evidently true that some fool won't deny it.
    Given the Lib Dems are ahead of Labour with half the polling firns and have a way higher ceiling than Corbyn's Labour, there is a strong argument that it is Labour splitting the Lib Dem vote.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,176

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    A meteor might hit the Earth.

    However, it remains unlikely.
    That would make it a meteorite. :)
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,131
    edited September 2019

    Scott_P said:
    Why are Opinium and YouGov so vastly different to other pollsters. This has to be about methodology. One group is badly wrong.
    Differences between pollsters have to explain this. People have observed that:

    1) Pollsters who prompt for the Brexit party have different responses to those who do not
    2) Pollsters who correct by recalled previous party vote have different responses to those who do not or who correct by recorded PPV

    I also suspect turnout models will be different, tho' that's a bit of a cold read (when are they ever the same?)

    So. We have one group of pollsters showing massive Con leads. Another group showing smaller. I do not know which is correct.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511

    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    Lol. Not going to happen.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    A meteor might hit the Earth.

    However, it remains unlikely.
    It is actually impossible for a meteor to hit the Earth by definition.

    Unless you mean a meteorite, in which case it happens all the time.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    True, although it's not so obvious those parties would vote in favour of amending the FTPA, as opposed to simply voting in favour of an election under the current rule of needing two-thirds of MP to vote in favour of it.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    Gabs2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    A meteor might hit the Earth.

    However, it remains unlikely.
    It is actually impossible for a meteor to hit the Earth by definition.

    Unless you mean a meteorite, in which case it happens all the time.
    FFS. I have been entrapped by the PB Astro-pedants.
  • GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
    That's assuming that Brexiteers are too stupid to realise that Remainers in Parliament are the problem and that they need to give Boris a majority to get the job done.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    Lol. Not going to happen.
    No, theyll let the ruined and finished labour party call the shots. L to the o to the l
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511

    GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
    That's assuming that Brexiteers are too stupid to realise that Remainers in Parliament are the problem and that they need to give Boris a majority to get the job done.
    Er, there aren’t enough of them...
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511

    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    Lol. Not going to happen.
    No, theyll let the ruined and finished labour party call the shots. L to the o to the l

    Okay, noted. Let’s see who is right...
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,293

    GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
    That's assuming that Brexiteers are too stupid to realise that Remainers in Parliament are the problem and that they need to give Boris a majority to get the job done.
    Indeed. If we haven't leaft on 1st November Brexiteers will be very clear where the fauly lies.

    And it won't be with Boris...
  • GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
    That's assuming that Brexiteers are too stupid to realise that Remainers in Parliament are the problem and that they need to give Boris a majority to get the job done.
    Er, there aren’t enough of them...
    Er, we've just had a poll that forecasts a Tory landslide bigger than Blair's.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786

    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    Lol. Not going to happen.
    No, theyll let the ruined and finished labour party call the shots. L to the o to the l

    Okay, noted. Let’s see who is right...
    Neither of us I think as labour will fold like a deck chair and allow one. But we will see
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578
    edited September 2019
    Emily Thornberry had a neat solution to Brexit the other day.

    She said Labour MPs would vote for Bojo’s deal IF it was first put to a referendum, versus Remain.

    That’s clever. In a world of terrible options that might just be the best, and help the country to heal. So clearly we won’t do this.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    The last time Labour polled more than 30% with any pollster was on 22nd May with Survation.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Byronic said:

    Emily Thornberry had a neat solution to Brexit the other day.

    She said Labour MPs would vote for Bojo’s deal IF it was first put to a referendum, versus Remain.

    That’s clever. In a world of,terrible options that might just be the best, and help the country to heal. So clearly we won’t do this.

    Lib Dem gain Islington South and finsbury is on my bucket list
  • AndyJS said:

    The last time Labour polled more than 30% with any pollster was on 22nd May with Survation.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election

    When was the last time the Conservatives polled 40% plus? I think the next time could be very soon.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    Gabs2 said:

    Chris said:

    Chris said:

    Chris said:

    I can't help thinking that all this talk of a Lib Dem revival is just another unicorn. Or maybe something worse than a unicorn.

    In reality I can think of few things more conducive to Johnson getting an electoral mandate for No Deal (if that's what he wants) than a Lib Dem revival that would split the opposition vote.

    I'm afraid that most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal, and that - despite the self-serving rhetoric - there are only a relatively small number who really see avoiding it as their top priority.

    If "most politicians are quite privileged people who will be protected against the consequences of No Deal" and by implication don't care then why are so many putting their careers at risk to stop it?
    You're also impying that Boris is somehow encouraging the LibDem revival - which, as a unicorn, wouldn't exist. Have you seen the results of the recent elections?
    Did you even read that post through before clicking 'Post Comment'?
    Another reminder of why it's a waste of time commenting here.

    But thanks anyway - obviously I still need reminding!
    Didn't think you would be able to justify your post
    I wonder - is anyone of normal intelligence with even the vaguest interest in politics not aware that under our electoral system it's advantageous to the party of government that the opposition vote is split?

    But I think must be the Zeroth Law of Internet discussion that no view is so stupid or ignorant that some fool won't defend it, and no view is so self-evidently true that some fool won't deny it.
    Given the Lib Dems are ahead of Labour with half the polling firns and have a way higher ceiling than Corbyn's Labour, there is a strong argument that it is Labour splitting the Lib Dem vote.
    Not true - only Yougov sometimes put the LDs ahead of Labour.
  • ByronicByronic Posts: 3,578

    AndyJS said:

    The last time Labour polled more than 30% with any pollster was on 22nd May with Survation.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election

    When was the last time the Conservatives polled 40% plus? I think the next time could be very soon.
    More intriguingly, can Labour go below 20%, and stay there? I think yes, under Corbz
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Labour will at least be able to count on Eddie izzard and that Greek bloke. And Picard.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511

    GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
    That's assuming that Brexiteers are too stupid to realise that Remainers in Parliament are the problem and that they need to give Boris a majority to get the job done.
    Er, there aren’t enough of them...
    Er, we've just had a poll that forecasts a Tory landslide bigger than Blair's.
    No, I’m saying that there aren’t enough Brexiteers to trigger an election.

    You are getting too excited by a poll man!

    Calm down. Think straight.
  • dyedwooliedyedwoolie Posts: 7,786
    Byronic said:

    AndyJS said:

    The last time Labour polled more than 30% with any pollster was on 22nd May with Survation.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_next_United_Kingdom_general_election

    When was the last time the Conservatives polled 40% plus? I think the next time could be very soon.
    More intriguingly, can Labour go below 20%, and stay there? I think yes, under Corbz
    Can they outpoll Frank Fields curiously specific party in Birkenhead?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511
    This thread will be yet another hubristic PB Tory keeper when the sands shift at some point.
  • Did I really see someone upthread run Electoral Calculus on Opinium?

    Ye gods. You might as well run a ZX Spectrum random number generator and call it a forecast.
  • GIN1138 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Scott_P said:
    Con heading into landslide territory now.

    Jezza should have agreed to the election as [one or two of us] said at the time...
    Why?
    Because Jezza is nothing if he's not a campaigner. Campaigning is what he does. It's in his DNA or that's what everyone thought.

    Look what he did in 2017 when he was like "bring it on" - He was litterally a few thousand votes from being PM.

    By running and hiding from the electorate he has basically destroyed his rasion d'etre...
    The strategy was to boil Boris slowly by waiting until after his self-imposed deadline of 31 Oct.

    It’s 21 September.

    Have some patience man!!
    That's assuming that Brexiteers are too stupid to realise that Remainers in Parliament are the problem and that they need to give Boris a majority to get the job done.
    Er, there aren’t enough of them...
    Er, we've just had a poll that forecasts a Tory landslide bigger than Blair's.
    No, I’m saying that there aren’t enough Brexiteers to trigger an election.

    You are getting too excited by a poll man!

    Calm down. Think straight.
    It doesn't matter.

    The longer the opposition run scared of an election the more abject and humiliating they will be and the more they will suffer for it.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,511

    AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    Lol. Not going to happen.
    No, theyll let the ruined and finished labour party call the shots. L to the o to the l

    Okay, noted. Let’s see who is right...
    Neither of us I think as labour will fold like a deck chair and allow one. But we will see
    So they are either ‘frit’ or ‘folding like a deckchair’.

    Only from the PB Tories.

    Only on PB.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,131
    HYUFD said:

    That was not what I was saying which was more an attitude to FPTP and PR depending on whether you have a majority or not.

    Ah, I see, thank you.

  • AndyJS said:

    HYUFD said:

    There won’t be an election while ever Labour’s polling is in the doldrums. The FTPA doing its job I guess, removes power from the hands of the PM.

    There might be if the LDs, SNP and Tories vote for one, all would gain seats with Opinium unlike Labour
    Labour currently has 38% of MPs so they can block an election unless some of them go rogue.
    If LDs and SNP on board they can do it by amending the FTPA
    Lol. Not going to happen.
    No, theyll let the ruined and finished labour party call the shots. L to the o to the l

    Okay, noted. Let’s see who is right...
    Neither of us I think as labour will fold like a deck chair and allow one. But we will see
    So they are either ‘frit’ or ‘folding like a deckchair’.

    Only from the PB Tories.

    Only on PB.
    They're both, but reality will dawn and they will have to fold. Because if they don't they'll be polling in single digits before long.
This discussion has been closed.