Over the next seven weeks this spreadsheet from Guido and others like it are going to be a key part for those following and betting on the LAB leadership contest. For we are nearly two months away from ballots going out – this is stage one of gathering the nominations simply in order to be able to proceed to the next stage.
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-51011000
We intend to bring full fibre and gigabit-capable broadband to every home and business across the UK by 2025.
We know how difficult it will be, so we have announced a raft of legislative changes to accelerate progress and £5 billion of new public funding to connect premises which are not commercially viable.
(Did no-one proof-read the manifesto, by the way? I don't think it means the premises themselves are not viable. If only there were a leading journalist, novelist and Churchill biographer in the government.)
As the Telegraph helpfully pointed out, the new rules on borrowing for investment tear up the economically-illiterate Osbornian austerity and mark a return to the golden age rule of Gordon Brown.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2019/11/07/chancellor-sajid-javid-launches-investment-boom-ending-era-slash/
On the general point, as I think I've posted before, a son who lives in Kent is envious of my 60+ mb/s download speed, but the other son, who lives in Thailand is rather contemptuous of it, as he gets 100mb/s.
'Twill be interesting to see what the Governments detailed plans are, as opposed to the pie in the sky of pre-election ones.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-51013308
Surely there are countless comrades lining up behind the colossus that is Burgon?
Japan has shown that Keynesian isn't required and Modern Monetary Theory claims you can spend what you want provided you have control of your own currency.
And when you look at it that way Greece and Italy are the North East and Wales of the Eurozone - not getting the money required to lift themselves out of the mess they are in (I'm ignoring all arguments that their tax collection is beyond useless).
The 09/10 spending was not normal or sustainable, the taps had been turned on full. Yet the conservatives managed to maintain most of it and by 2020 still spending a greater percent of gdp on public spending than even immediately post crash.
https://tinyurl.com/Austerityfiction
I still think that Starmer (1.85 BF) is too short. Labour members will - surely - be concerned how it will look if from such a line-up the man is chosen.
Edit - but more pertinently, out of the field if he doesn’t win they will have chosen a weaker candidate on gender grounds. Perhaps a better question should be, why, after 25 years of all women shortlists and an election that finally saw more than half the PLP female, somehow they are less impressive than their male counterparts? Because surely that is the real puzzle.
It’s a myth to suggest it might.
Phillips will have more trouble - there are not many CLPs who liked the open hostility shown to Corbyn by her and even more the MPs who have endorsed her (all 4 are people who gave countless media quotes to that effect) - there are plenty of non-Corbynites who felt that they should STFU.
Lewis will struggle in both PLP and CLP camps - he's been running for most of a month with little sign of support, and his potential left-wing backers will be focused on RLB.
I'm not sure about Nandy. - essentially the candidate of the pro-soft Brexit non-left non-Corbynites. There is a constituency for that in the party but is it large enough?
So we could well end up with just 2 or 3 names on the ballot.
Inevitably, however, there are limits to such policies and there comes a point where the public sector, which shed the best part of 1m employees over that period, simply cannot provide the public services that we want without additional resources. We probably reached that point under spreadsheet Phil but he never noticed.
But, I’m perhaps not the best reader of the Labour pschy.
Form an orderly queue to thank Fatcha, Labour......
Lavery isn’t really dropping out and supporting her because she’s a woman. He’s doing it because he realises he doesn’t have the support or popularity to win, but supports her politics.
Her gender is entirely incidental, and will be throughout this contest even though you can guarantee the BBC will make a big headline thing of it whoever wins.
What is your view about the second hurdle (unions/affiliates)? Please will you rate Starmer/RLB/Nandy/Philips`s chances of securing the necessary backing to get to the final stage.
It will play on the mind.
People are going to be voting on policy, values and leadership potential; confirmation bias will be what does the work on gender.
This really is a clash for the ages.
The best option for them is Nandy but her problem isn't her gender it’s that she can’t set a room alight, and she’ll be rapidly tarred with the “right wing” brush by the true believers, which will probably be terminal.
If I were a Labour member, I think I`d go for Nandy (but without much confidence).
It’s spelled like this: Keir.
K-E-I-R
Let’s see how long it takes for yet another overqualified PBer to cock up the spelling!
Morning everyone.
Keir-Rosena would be an attractive pairing up top.
Starmer will be pummelled for years about his role in the Benn "surrender" Act. Remainer-in chief. A gift for the Tories. Do you agree?
I thought Nandy had a union - but I may be wrong. I wonder whether Phillips may prove popular with the CLPs?
Very few nominations have been declared so “n” is too small to draw conclusions at this stage
Punters are grasping at factoids and extrapolating wildly. It`s what makes it fun I guess.
My largely ignorant observation on the current odds is: Starmer is too short and Nandy too long.
Philips is probably too short too, but not sure how much value there is there in laying that.
Starmer - unless he can deploy a previously unseen aptitude for withering humour, he is going to struggle against Boris. A details man you say? Spreadsheet Phil without the spreadsheet I say.
Nandy - she is just sensible. She doesn't come with a hundred years of discredited idealogy underpinning her every pronouncement. She showed a level of uncertainty on how to implement Brexit that many can relate to (although her opponents will paint it as indecision). She just comes across as somebody who will arrive to the right decision for the right reasons. Which is why she will build up a healthy respect over the near five year term of this Parliament before being tested with the voters. And why the Tories should fear her.
Phillips - anybody who gleefully adopts "gobby" as a self-descriptor will keep most decent folk at arms length. The candidate most likely to induce Buyer's Remorse. "What WERE we thinking?" Electing her means doing it all again in 2022.
Burgon. Hur hur hur.....
This does not mean that Starmer will not win. It just means that his vote will be materially less than it would have been if absolutely everything else was the same apart from his gender. It's the dead opposite of the Beyonce song if you know that one.
This faithful belief is what is keeping Starmer’s odds close to evens, so I’m happy.
Some in Labour might despair at "What's the point?"......
Boris's and the Tory's luck / misfortune since 2015 has been the leadership of the other parties - and I say misfortune as it was Corbyn doing nothing which probably won Boris the referendum and cost Cameron and Osbourne their jobs.