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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Exactly six weeks to go to the day that Britain decides on

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  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    He must be a fan of the American political scene, with the playing the victim card by conservatives.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    Project fear I doubt it - labour are not popular having been in power too long and failed on the NHS and Education
    But they are still the most popular single party in Wales, clearly. And having everyone else gang up on them surely doesn't look good in this particular instance.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,227

    Project fear I doubt it - labour are not popular having been in power too long and failed on the NHS and Education
    Leanne would see a swift reversal of her Rhondda result.
  • chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341

    The problem for leave is that the ordinary voter will listen to these economic arguments. Voters are not like us on this forum and even leave must agree that today has not been a good day for them
    I have a feeling that a lot of people will think that £13bn given to the EU might be money better spent on the British in the event of a recession.

  • john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @HurstLlama

    "Take a family with 2 parents and two school age kids.

    How much do they have to earn to pay enough tax to be a nett contributor?"


    The figure for your example is around £35,00 - £ 37,000.gross salary.


    'How much we give the state in tax – and how much we get back ...
    www.telegraph.co.uk › Finance › Personal Finance › Tax

    15 Feb 2014 - Benefits Britain: how much do you pay in, and how much do you get ... out of about 30 million income tax payers, paid 30pc of all income tax. ... who are net contributors to the state and who are the net beneficiaries. ..... And people with a household income of £10,300 draw out a net amount of £9,539, giving ...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,820

    Bank of England confirm possibility of technical recession in the event of Brexit. Never mind 'everyone is wrong'.

    It may have already started tbh, none of the indicators are looking good. Though how much this is to do with Brexit is unclear. The whole of Europe is slowing down though, plus Asia and the US. Describing US Q1 growth as anaemic would be generous (0.5% annualised, which is 0.1% translated to here).
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675

    Project fear I doubt it - labour are not popular having been in power too long and failed on the NHS and Education
    It's an interesting speculation, and I have no inside knowledge whatever. But in general if losers force a rerun, they don't do well, so I suspect kle4 is right- to the extent that I think Labour should be setting severe conditions with a view to either getting a free hand or bringing an election about.
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822

    I'm chuckling at the arse licker versus vapid bilge debate, its the internet ffs, plenty of people change persona with pseudonyms, its harmless fun. I get called all sorts, dish plenty out too, everywhere I've worked and played its been the same. At least there's no physical fights on here, I abhor violence as a result of seeing plenty as a youngster.

    Sticks and stones may break my bones and all that.

    Pah! I've been popular and vapid since 2011.
  • Tissue_PriceTissue_Price Posts: 9,039
    edited May 2016

    NEW THREAD

    The more virulent Leavers may wish to stay on this one, given the author :smiley:
  • midwintermidwinter Posts: 1,112

    I'm no Tory so who am I to comment? But why shouldn't a moderate Tory prefer David Miliband to John Redwood?
    I'd certainly like to see the back of some of the right wingers from the Tory Party in the same way that I'm sure some Labour voters would like to see the back of Corbyn et al.
  • TonyE said:

    Take a family with 2 parents and two school age kids.

    How much do they have to earn to pay enough tax to be a nett contributor?
    Depends on whether a child breaks an arm, woman has to have wisdom teeth removed and mysterious head pains, man has problem with back .... like a Polish family I know. Others have had no health problems and must be net contributors.

  • HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098
    edited May 2016
    chestnut said:

    1) Industrial Production is already in recession;
    2) Is he still waiting for unemployment to drop below 6%?
    3) From Markit's PMI's
    “The PMI surveys are collectively indicating a nearstalling of economic growth, down from 0.4% in the first quarter to just 0.1% in April.
    I commented on those PMI figures a week or two ago. If they are in anyway correct , and @Surbiton and @AlanBrooke have both posted on here over the past few months giving evidence that they are, then it looks like this growth cycle has peaked and we might be heading for a recession, perhaps in early 2017 and nothing to do with a possible Brexit vote, though maybe quite a lot to do with problems in the Eurozone.

    If that is what happens then we will be going into a recession with a £1.5 trillion (ish) debt, a £70bn p.a. structural deficit, interest rates at near zero, and years of QE behind us. That should finally put paid to any thoughts that Osborne has been a "near-perfect chancellor".
  • News Management to downplay the news on 1.5 million more EU migrants here.
    1. Schedule the BBC Charter News for same day.
    2. Do it on same day Bank of England Governor says that Brexit carries risk of recession.

    We are getting royally shafted by this Govt.

    Menawhile I have deliverers for Vote Leave able to deliver to >4,000 homes and counting.
  • JackWJackW Posts: 14,787

    Thank you @Charles. You are a gent.

    When someone decides to promote themselves as a guru - especially on a political nerd site - it's likely to end in OMG
    "Guru" .... Tsk

    I spit on guru status. It represents the vapid drivel and detritus of the gutter level of PB.

    JackW
    PB TOTY.
  • TCPoliticalBettingTCPoliticalBetting Posts: 10,819
    edited May 2016
    SeanT said:

    Nonsense. The migration thing easily balances out the BoE warning. We've already had endless economic threats, but this info about EU immigrants is new.
    The LEAVE internal debate spat is unedifying, but trumped by Kettles and Toasters. I'd say LEAVE is marginally edging it, as of 12:57, today.
    And now I must do some BLOODY WORK.
    Anon.
    Bank of England is dominating the BBC news agenda over immigration.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214
    kle4 said:

    But they are still the most popular single party in Wales, clearly. And having everyone else gang up on them surely doesn't look good in this particular instance.
    Agreed. I don't quite know what the opposition parties are up to. There quite obviously isn't a viable alternative to Labour. Assuming that Labour don't put forward proposals that could lead to a coalition, then Plaid and WCon would be better off abstaining on the First minister vote and then opposing policies that Labour come up with as and when the opportunities present.
  • TCPoliticalBettingTCPoliticalBetting Posts: 10,819
    edited May 2016
    MaxPB said:

    It may have already started tbh, none of the indicators are looking good. Though how much this is to do with Brexit is unclear. The whole of Europe is slowing down though, plus Asia and the US. Describing US Q1 growth as anaemic would be generous (0.5% annualised, which is 0.1% translated to here).
    Osborne changed his line in early January, that looks to be when the first signs became known. Yet somehow against this "trend" we had from NIESR the other day a forecast for 2017 of circa 2.7% gdp growth in 2017 (with REMAIN) which seemed to ignore the trends of 2016.... shurely schome mishtake?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    A rarity - a Simon Jenkins article that I wholeheartedly agree with, wespecially the last paragraph:

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/may/12/crony-capitalist-corruption-david-cameron-british-tax-havens-avoidance
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    MikeK said:

    WTF? Is Arse Licker no longer de rigueur? How about Tuchus Lacher (yiddish) or other pejoratives such as Brown Noser? The latter was used a lot when I was in the army in the 1950's. ;)
    I'm not prone to citing How Clever I Am threads.

    Everytime I see such posts, my immediate reaction is "Insecure Bugger"

    Why would anyone tell others how Big & Clever they were, unless they wanted attention?
  • runnymederunnymede Posts: 2,536

    Osborne changed his line in early January, that looks to be when the first signs became known. Yet somehow against this "trend" we had from NIESR the other day a forecast for 2017 of circa 2.7% gdp growth in 2017 (with REMAIN) which seemed to ignore the trends of 2016.... shurely schome mishtake?
    Well a technical recession in 2016 is of course a possibility, as it is any given year.

    But how great a possibility? and to what extent linked to the June referendum?

    Industry is already in 'recession' in the G7, including the US. The US may even come close to an outright GDP recession in H1 as growth in Q1 was a mere 0.1% and Q2 is not shaping up that well, so far.

    I'd say we in the UK have a 20-25% chance of technical recession this year based just on the international environment. And probably a higher risk still in 2017.

    I'm sure if that does come to pass, EU supporters will claim it is a result of 'Brexit' or 'Brexit fears'. But that will be something that is impossible to prove and almost certainly bogus.

  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    45 days to save the BHS from the Tories.... !!!

    Oh? ..... Sorry...wrong thread.

    My bad.
  • Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    Breaking news

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