politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » If the Tory MPs are really focussed on gaining northern LAB seats they won’t choose Lindsay Hoyle as Speaker
Today’s big election is the voting by MPs on which of them should be the next Speaker to succeed John Bercow. The strong odds-on betting favourite is the current deputy, Lindsay Hoyle MP for the Lancashire seat of Chorley.
A bit petty to vote on that basis. Which means given our current crop of politicians, they probably will.
Does it make any real difference to the size of the majority though? Doesn’t a labour speaker have 2 Tory deputies and 1 Labour deputy to even things out?
A bit petty to vote on that basis. Which means given our current crop of politicians, they probably will.
Does it make any real difference to the size of the majority though? Doesn’t a labour speaker have 2 Tory deputies and 1 Labour deputy to even things out?
Yes, but if the Tories think they will take Hoyle's seat, then having him as Speaker means that it would be 3 Tory seats and 1 Labour seat as Speaker and deputies.
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
The BXP are hurting Labour in the North as the Workington poll showed but the Tories against the LDs in the South
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
The BXP are hurting Labour in the North as the Workington poll showed but the Tories against the LDs in the South
For BXP to enable the LDs to take Tory seats reveals whole landscapes of stupidity that one could scarcely have imagined to exist...
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
We don't know for sure. Probably they are still taking some Labour votes in Portsmouth too, with the Lib Dems picking up some Tory voters.
That still makes it crucial that the Brexit Party stand for the Lib Dems, as it would seem to turn a two-way Con/Lab marginal into a three-way marginal.
Better to pick a solid Tory like Eleanor Laing, the Brexit Party would run against Hoyle as Speaker and in a 2 horse race might win it anyway
Nah. It is time to return to the Speaker being genuinely neutral and above any party politics. Hoyle has shown himself more than capable of this under some pretty difficult circumstances and it should be him.
If the BP are dumb enough to run against him it shouldn't be with the tacit support of the Tories.
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
The BXP are hurting Labour in the North as the Workington poll showed but the Tories against the LDs in the South
For BXP to enable the LDs to take Tory seats reveals whole landscapes of stupidity that one could scarcely have imagined to exist...
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
Interesting that Labour seem to be underperforming in some of these constituency polls. I wonder whether this poll is consistent with the Survation national polls? My model runs off the latter but gives the seat to Labour, albeit in a tight 3-way split with the three main parties all within 1.5pp of each other (ie any of them could win it). The Tory and Lib Dem shares are all within 2pp of my projection, but BXP and others are lower, with Labour the beneficiary.
The Brexit party is ensuring that Brexit doesn't happen.
Not in Labour Leave seats in the North
Which just goes to show that you can't just treat the BXP + Con total as the vote available to the Tories if the Brexit Party didn't stand. It's a more complex equation than that.
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
Surely if Farage wanted the balance of power, as he insists, he would target seats he can actually win. Look at the leverage the DUP had with just 10 MPs.
That moment when Tories who've been incessantly frotting themselves over Domski's wargaming skills revert to 'Nobody knows who he is, he represents NO-ONE!'
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
I suspect many BXP candidates will stand in name only. Perhaps some might not even turn up to Farages mass signing.
I find it hard to believe that BXP have been able to find 650 brexity randomers, all of whom think Boris's deal is a sell out, and none of whom would not wish for a tory government. It defies logic.
That moment when Tories who've been incessantly frotting themselves over Domski's wargaming skills revert to 'Nobody knows who he is, he represents NO-ONE!'
I suspect that will be played and played by those opposing the Tories through the campaign. Everyone should know who Cummings is, what he stands for. If they don't know now, they will in a few weeks. He will perhaps eventually be seen as yet another Bozo strategic error.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
Interesting that Labour seem to be underperforming in some of these constituency polls. I wonder whether this poll is consistent with the Survation national polls? My model runs off the latter but gives the seat to Labour, albeit in a tight 3-way split with the three main parties all within 1.5pp of each other (ie any of them could win it). The Tory and Lib Dem shares are all within 2pp of my projection, but BXP and others are lower, with Labour the beneficiary.
A minor point here is the sequencing - the LibDems are listed above Labour for no obvious reason (Alphabet? No. Result last time? No.), and it's possible to surmise that their sponsoring the poll was a factor - the way it works is you propose a question and the polling company decides if there's an obvious bias. I shouldn't think it makes a huge difference but essentially it's a 3-way marginal.
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
I suspect many BXP candidates will stand in name only. Perhaps some might not even turn up to Farages mass signing.
I find it hard to believe that BXP have been able to find 650 brexity randomers, all of whom think Boris's deal is a sell out, and none of whom would not wish for a tory government. It defies logic.
Brexit defies logic, but hey, we have a party that once believed in sound economics and business, now advocating a policy of self harm.
That moment when Tories who've been incessantly frotting themselves over Domski's wargaming skills revert to 'Nobody knows who he is, he represents NO-ONE!'
I suspect that will be played and played by those opposing the Tories through the campaign. Everyone should know who Cummings is, what he stands for. If they don't know now, they will in a few weeks. He will perhaps eventually be seen as yet another Bozo strategic error.
HYUFD said: "Better to pick a solid Tory like Eleanor Laing, the Brexit Party would run against Hoyle as Speaker and in a 2 horse race might win it anyway"
Laing has gone right out in the betting now. Can get 20/1 with Betfair. Bryant still moving up in the betting.
Better to pick a solid Tory like Eleanor Laing, the Brexit Party would run against Hoyle as Speaker and in a 2 horse race might win it anyway
Nah. It is time to return to the Speaker being genuinely neutral and above any party politics. Hoyle has shown himself more than capable of this under some pretty difficult circumstances and it should be him.
If the BP are dumb enough to run against him it shouldn't be with the tacit support of the Tories.
I think MPs are robust on this, like you - they will pick who they like, and that's probably Hoyle. Whether that might possibly affect the party result nationally by 1 seat won't be a major factor.
That moment when Tories who've been incessantly frotting themselves over Domski's wargaming skills revert to 'Nobody knows who he is, he represents NO-ONE!'
I suspect that will be played and played by those opposing the Tories through the campaign. Everyone should know who Cummings is, what he stands for. If they don't know now, they will in a few weeks. He will perhaps eventually be seen as yet another Bozo strategic error.
Very old news, and from years ago.
It doesn't matter how long ago it is. It is very potent, and very damaging for the Tory brand, though maybe they are banking on their vote being so right wing now they won't care. If Labour don't also use it, I would be very surprised.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
To get away from generalities, what specific measures do you think should be taken to increase “agility” and “flexibility” that can’t now be taken, which groups of voters would benefit and what would the cost be and for whom?
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
As I mentioned in the previous thread, the UK is already the ninth most business friendly economy in the world according to the World Bank's Doing Business survey, one of 7 EU economies in the top 20. Being in the EU has not prevented us creating a flexible economy. But removing ourselves from the EU single market puts up new barriers to doing business and so we will inevitably have to deregulate elsewhere (lower Labour standards, laxer environmental rules?) just to stand still.
Interesting that Labour seem to be underperforming in some of these constituency polls. I wonder whether this poll is consistent with the Survation national polls? My model runs off the latter but gives the seat to Labour, albeit in a tight 3-way split with the three main parties all within 1.5pp of each other (ie any of them could win it). The Tory and Lib Dem shares are all within 2pp of my projection, but BXP and others are lower, with Labour the beneficiary.
A minor point here is the sequencing - the LibDems are listed above Labour for no obvious reason (Alphabet? No. Result last time? No.), and it's possible to surmise that their sponsoring the poll was a factor - the way it works is you propose a question and the polling company decides if there's an obvious bias. I shouldn't think it makes a huge difference but essentially it's a 3-way marginal.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
To get away from generalities, what specific measures do you think should be taken to increase “agility” and “flexibility” that can’t now be taken, which groups of voters would benefit and what would the cost be and for whom?
Great question, which he will be unable to answer.
Sinn Fein standing down to help Sylvia Hermon is quite startling, and a very good move in terms of getting Northern Irish politics a little more like our normal, sober political system (well...). Seriously, it's great.
Sinn Fein standing down to help Sylvia Hermon is quite startling, and a very good move in terms of getting Northern Irish politics a little more like our normal, sober political system (well...). Seriously, it's great.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
To get away from generalities, what specific measures do you think should be taken to increase “agility” and “flexibility” that can’t now be taken, which groups of voters would benefit and what would the cost be and for whom?
I think we discussed this a few weeks back and the main upside was freedom to feed chickens our leftovers.
Sinn Fein standing down to help Sylvia Hermon is quite startling, and a very good move in terms of getting Northern Irish politics a little more like our normal, sober political system (well...). Seriously, it's great.
Yep - the NI parties look like just about the only adults in the room.
Sinn Fein standing down to help Sylvia Hermon is quite startling, and a very good move in terms of getting Northern Irish politics a little more like our normal, sober political system (well...). Seriously, it's great.
The DUP look to be in some trouble in these elections, facing a pincer movement with multiple pincers. They'll be lucky if they come out of these elections only an MP or two down.
Interesting that Labour seem to be underperforming in some of these constituency polls. I wonder whether this poll is consistent with the Survation national polls? My model runs off the latter but gives the seat to Labour, albeit in a tight 3-way split with the three main parties all within 1.5pp of each other (ie any of them could win it). The Tory and Lib Dem shares are all within 2pp of my projection, but BXP and others are lower, with Labour the beneficiary.
A minor point here is the sequencing - the LibDems are listed above Labour for no obvious reason (Alphabet? No. Result last time? No.), and it's possible to surmise that their sponsoring the poll was a factor - the way it works is you propose a question and the polling company decides if there's an obvious bias. I shouldn't think it makes a huge difference but essentially it's a 3-way marginal.
Bit of straw clutching going on there Nick?
Well, yes, Nick's comment did read a bit like that, but he's perfectly right that the poll shows nothing more than that it might be a three-way marginal: on a sample of 406 (even if it's a representative one, which is difficult for single-constituency polls) the difference between the three parties is not statistically very significant.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
To get away from generalities, what specific measures do you think should be taken to increase “agility” and “flexibility” that can’t now be taken, which groups of voters would benefit and what would the cost be and for whom?
I think we discussed this a few weeks back and the main upside was freedom to feed chickens our leftovers.
Since about 2015 I have been asking those who advocate leave what actual benefits will result. The only thing they can ever come up with is "sovereignty", which is, of course, guff. Brexit is fool's gold, unless you are Tory politician at the right wing of the spectrum, a journalist or a hedge fund manager. Everyone else loses out.
Sinn Fein standing down to help Sylvia Hermon is quite startling, and a very good move in terms of getting Northern Irish politics a little more like our normal, sober political system (well...). Seriously, it's great.
The DUP look to be in some trouble in these elections, facing a pincer movement with multiple pincers. They'll be lucky if they come out of these elections only an MP or two down.
Fear not, the Unionists have a coherent, thought-through response to this.
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
But if the effect of taking back control, as you put it, is that voters then have a choice between significant economic damage on one hand, or accepting policies they don’t like in order to mitigate that damage on the other hand, doesn’t that suggest the cost of taking back control is too high? It looks a lot like an ideological benefit with no practical benefit at that point.
By all accounts, Hoyle's a good and independent deputy speaker, and fully deserves the top job. It'd be a short-sighted act to lumber the House with an inferior Speaker (again) to satisfy a small, narrow-minded ambition.
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
The BXP are hurting Labour in the North as the Workington poll showed but the Tories against the LDs in the South
For BXP to enable the LDs to take Tory seats reveals whole landscapes of stupidity that one could scarcely have imagined to exist...
You’re assuming their objective is to Brexit rather than, say, allow Farage to play the martyr for another decade or two
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
I suspect many BXP candidates will stand in name only. Perhaps some might not even turn up to Farages mass signing.
I find it hard to believe that BXP have been able to find 650 brexity randomers, all of whom think Boris's deal is a sell out, and none of whom would not wish for a tory government. It defies logic.
Are you seriously suggesting that Farage cannot find 650 crazies? Out of 65 million people? It is only 0.001%
That seems to suggest the BP really hurting the Tory vote . I think it’s crucial for the Lib Dems that the BP stand , especially in Tory v Lib Dem marginals .
The BXP are hurting Labour in the North as the Workington poll showed but the Tories against the LDs in the South
For BXP to enable the LDs to take Tory seats reveals whole landscapes of stupidity that one could scarcely have imagined to exist...
You’re assuming their objective is to Brexit rather than, say, allow Farage to play the martyr for another decade or two
Farage has been a pro-Labour agent-provocateur ever since he left the Tory Party.
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
I'd be surprised if, by December, there are more than 50 'active' BXP candidates, possibly hurting lab more than con.
From a libdem perspective though, the more the merrier. From a betting perspective I have no idea, though I shall be trawling here for clues.
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
I suspect many BXP candidates will stand in name only. Perhaps some might not even turn up to Farages mass signing.
I find it hard to believe that BXP have been able to find 650 brexity randomers, all of whom think Boris's deal is a sell out, and none of whom would not wish for a tory government. It defies logic.
Plus all the nominators (how many per constituency?)
That makes it 63 MPs standing down now I believe. May be a few more to come yet such as Keith Vaz and Dennis Skinner (rumoured). Wonder whether Ian Austin will stand again.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
To get away from generalities, what specific measures do you think should be taken to increase “agility” and “flexibility” that can’t now be taken, which groups of voters would benefit and what would the cost be and for whom?
One specific example I have oft-quoted is that we should with an independent trade policy look to liberalise trade with the rest of the world. We can get a trade deal with countries like the USA [which is bigger than the entire Single Market combined] and many more which the EU don't have a trade deal with.
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
I'm surprised that the Lib Dems are commissioning public rather than private polling.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
To get away from generalities, what specific measures do you think should be taken to increase “agility” and “flexibility” that can’t now be taken, which groups of voters would benefit and what would the cost be and for whom?
I think we discussed this a few weeks back and the main upside was freedom to feed chickens our leftovers.
Since about 2015 I have been asking those who advocate leave what actual benefits will result. The only thing they can ever come up with is "sovereignty", which is, of course, guff. Brexit is fool's gold, unless you are Tory politician at the right wing of the spectrum, a journalist or a hedge fund manager. Everyone else loses out.
A number of us have regularly pointed out benefits but you have always chosen to ignore them or deride them. There gets a point where it is no longer worth taking your questions at face value as clearly you have no interest in the answers.
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
I suspect many BXP candidates will stand in name only. Perhaps some might not even turn up to Farages mass signing.
I find it hard to believe that BXP have been able to find 650 brexity randomers, all of whom think Boris's deal is a sell out, and none of whom would not wish for a tory government. It defies logic.
Plus all the nominators (how many per constituency?)
Twelve. Nomination, second and ten assenters. All have to be on the register in the constituency. Candidate doesn't have to live there, though, but has to be on the Register somewhere.
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
I'd be surprised if, by December, there are more than 50 'active' BXP candidates, possibly hurting lab more than con.
From a libdem perspective though, the more the merrier. From a betting perspective I have no idea, though I shall be trawling here for clues.
TBP would rather we remained in the EU than let this deal go through. They genuinely believe it is a sellout and will see no logic in standing aside as do a lot of their supporters. His decision to not fight a seat is actually quite canny being able to campaign without being tied down and removing the media circus from a single constituency.
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
I'd be surprised if, by December, there are more than 50 'active' BXP candidates, possibly hurting lab more than con.
From a libdem perspective though, the more the merrier. From a betting perspective I have no idea, though I shall be trawling here for clues.
TBP would rather we remained in the EU than let this deal go through. They genuinely believe it is a sellout and will see no logic in standing aside as do a lot of their supporters. His decision to not fight a seat is actually quite canny being able to campaign without being tied down and removing the media circus from a single constituency.
That might be true of Farage but I'm sure plenty of their candidates and activists disagree. We've already seen some standing aside.
Damn right we will be competitors after Brexit and too right too, that is the entire point.
Competition is a good thing, competition makes us healthier and better.
That is all very fine as a general statement.
But how politically acceptable do you think the measures needed to make this competition effective will be to the sorts of voters the Tories are targeting?
I hope they would be very acceptable and they would only occur post-Brexit if the population is carried to agree with the changes overall.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
But if the effect of taking back control, as you put it, is that voters then have a choice between significant economic damage on one hand, or accepting policies they don’t like in order to mitigate that damage on the other hand, doesn’t that suggest the cost of taking back control is too high? It looks a lot like an ideological benefit with no practical benefit at that point.
I never put the choice as that and I don't agree with such a negative attitude. I don't agree that the damage will be significant and I think the point of takin back control is not to "mitigate that damage" it is to cease currently neglected opportunities outside.
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
I'm surprised that the Lib Dems are commissioning public rather than private polling.
Isn’t it only public because they decided to make it public?
Comments
https://twitter.com/Survation/status/1191341300001517568
Does it make any real difference to the size of the majority though? Doesn’t a labour speaker have 2 Tory deputies and 1 Labour deputy to even things out?
The Brexit party is ensuring that Brexit doesn't happen.
https://twitter.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1190402686828580865?s=20
That still makes it crucial that the Brexit Party stand for the Lib Dems, as it would seem to turn a two-way Con/Lab marginal into a three-way marginal.
https://twitter.com/roger_scully/status/1191301446664433665
https://twitter.com/byHeatherLong/status/1191322579639947264
If the BP are dumb enough to run against him it shouldn't be with the tacit support of the Tories.
If they don't stand, Johnson may get his majority and he can pass his Brexit deal. Nigel Farage apparently thinks this is Brexit in Name Only (BINO) and it will also break up the United Kingdom.
So the alternative is that the Brexit Party do stand, do contest with vigour and do even get a few MPs. They may then get the leverage in Parliament to exact the kind of Brexit (No Deal) that they want. Even without MPs they could push that agenda hard, even if via a second referendum.
The chances of a Corbyn outright win are next-to-zero and either way Brexit would probably go to another vote which gives Farage another go at what he's after.
So much as it would suit the tories to have the BXP stand down, if I were them, I wouldn't.
https://twitter.com/theSNP/status/1191335619949137927?s=20
Sorry about that!
I find it hard to believe that BXP have been able to find 650 brexity randomers, all of whom think Boris's deal is a sell out, and none of whom would not wish for a tory government. It defies logic.
Oh, hang on, it's a telephone poll. As you were.
That is the whole point of taking back control, if the voters dislike what is proposed done they can prevent or reverse it.
Laing has gone right out in the betting now. Can get 20/1 with Betfair. Bryant still moving up in the betting.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7646647/Prankster-15-dupes-Jeremy-Corbyn-signing-paper-saying-support-terrorists.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/03/world/europe/eu-farm-subsidy-hungary.html
https://twitter.com/CJLittlemore/status/1191302217455800320
Basically Trump is doing well with the white working class, as many of them who voted for moderate Dems in the midterms return to him in the GENERAL.
https://mobile.twitter.com/Nate_Cohn/status/1191324016038043744
https://twitter.com/dup_online/status/1191349085124456448?s=20
Think there will be quite a lot of this. Plenty of candidates will stand aside so you would think it's better Farage makes the decision himself rather than have the candidates for him. Heard the original Portsmouth South candidate is no longer standing too.
That Portsmouth South poll could be the best thing that happened to the Tories.
By all accounts, Hoyle's a good and independent deputy speaker, and fully deserves the top job. It'd be a short-sighted act to lumber the House with an inferior Speaker (again) to satisfy a small, narrow-minded ambition.
From a libdem perspective though, the more the merrier. From a betting perspective I have no idea, though I shall be trawling here for clues.
Brexit dying right before our eyes.
https://twitter.com/lewis_goodall/status/1191354669286723585
He has said his target is labour in the north, midlands and Wales.
If however he is active in the south and south west it could result in problems for Boris
Early days but I have not been one of those expecting a large majority