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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Richard Tyndall on the exit strategy

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  • ThrakThrak Posts: 494

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    As shocking as it appears that is, indeed, the position we are in.

    Like I said, Britain is now the 'thick man of Europe'.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735
    edited June 2016
    SeanT said:

    Thrak said:

    Boris hitting reverse gear. He is clearly looking at EEA/EFTA. Why not say that during the campaign instead of lying?

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/06/26/i-cannot-stress-too-much-that-britain-is-part-of-europe--and-alw/

    If they are going to betray the wwc that handed them their victory there will be carnage.

    Seriously, this is a section of society that thinks it has now been listened to and they will turn very nasty if denied. I mean seriously, civil unrest type nasty.
    If we're going to be brutally honest, the immigration that worries these people is not, really, Polish plumbers and Slovak dentists, let alone French bankers, it is burqa'd Muslims and maybe Roma, with a side order of cheap brickies.
    Depends where you are - no one seems to care about muslims round my way, it's Polish people they side eye.
    Scott_P said:

    He is going to get crucified

    @NickThornsby: Immigration nothing to do with vote to leave says Boris. That'll be why Vote Leave never mentioned it then. https://t.co/CA9TyOnclr

    Smooth move, Boris. Fine by me, but, er, I think other people got a different impression. Somehow.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Alistair said:
    Well, still closer than I had thought it would be - the question is if that hardens or softens at all.
    I don't think 500,000 million No switchers is that close..
    I didn't say I thought it was that close, I said it was closer than I thought it would be - I assumed it would already be at 60-40
    Error in headline. I don't think there is 500000000000 No voters going to switch.
  • SaltireSaltire Posts: 525
    malcolmg said:

    I bet he's not far wrong. A lot of people are thinking and talking out of a place of shock and fear after Thursday's unexpected result. Once things settle down, appetite in Scotland for another referendum will decline and when it's called 'No' will win again. Scotland will be choosing between the UK and the EU, which will focus minds.
    Bollox, may be the opinion in Kent but not in Scotland
    The appetite for another referendum is not as strong as you might think.

    Do Scots Want A Second Independence Referendum? - Full details and tables: https://t.co/iRz36LkUt6 pic.twitter.com/kWUNW6FRY0

    — Survation. (@Survation) June 26, 2016
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,925
    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    Populus 22 June Remain 55% Leave 45%
  • Y0kelY0kel Posts: 2,307
    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Some you win, some you lose.
  • DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215
    RodCrosby said:

    DanSmith said:

    I personally don't understand how anyone can blame the 'moderates' for resigning today/tonight. If you give a damn about the Labour party, the working class, and the people of this country you will want Jeremy Corbyn gone and you will be supporting all the shadow cabinet ministers who have put two fingers up at Corbyn. Let me say who is damaging the electability of the Labour party: Jeremy Corbyn and his associates. This man is one of the biggest threats to British democracy at this moment in time. His leadership and the sheer competence that has ensued from it is preventing this country from being a functioning democracy right now. HM Opposition is an absolute total joke, and I have to be honest and say I consider Corbyn supporters to be totally delusional. This man will never win a GE and is setting Labour and the Left in general back by decades. By supporting Jeremy Corbyn, you cannot claim to care about the working classes. Corbyn's leadership virtually guarantees a Conservative government - and not just any Conservative government - but a total disaster of a Conservative government.

    I hope Dan Hodges is right re 30 shadow ministers resigning. Labour needs to take this opportunity to get rid of Corbyn.

    Corbyn is done I *think*. One way or another, you can't have so many MPs refusing to serve you and operate. As long as they hold their nerve (and they way they've worded their resignations makes it impossible for them to serve under him again) someone is going to tell Corbyn to back down.
    He won't go. He'll view this as an opportunity to purge and purify the Labour Party.
    He has no powerbase. One man can't do that by himself. He's just dragging this out and wasting everyone's time.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    Danny565 said:

    Corbyn's leadership virtually guarantees a Conservative government - and not just any Conservative government - but a total disaster of a Conservative government.

    Whereas a bunch of people who thought cheerleading for the EU, right up until the day it was rejected by the country, would have the political nous to prevent a Conservative government?

    So many of these arguments are based on the premise that it's *UNDENIABLE* that the "moderates" are more electable than Corbyn. That is just not obvious to me or many other members, at all.
    A lot of this isn't even about the EU. Labour have merely taken advantage of the fall-out from the EU referendum to try and rid of Corbyn. Even Cameron and Blair have misjudged the EU situation: but it doesn't change the fact that they were, for a time at least successful political operators who won elections (Blair in particular). The issue of the EU cannot be used to dismiss the judgement of whole swathes of the PLP, whose assessment of Corbyn is 100% right. It is not even about the 'moderates' being more electable than Corbyn. At this stage there is surely got to be someone even from the Left of the Labour party who is more electable than Jeremy Corbyn. If Labour have no one within their ranks that is more electable than Corbyn then they may as well throw in the towel in and cease to exist as a political party.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Alistair said:
    Well, still closer than I had thought it would be - the question is if that hardens or softens at all.
    I don't think 500,000 million No switchers is that close..
    I didn't say I thought it was that close, I said it was closer than I thought it would be - I assumed it would already be at 60-40
    JOKE

    Not extremely hilarious, I'll admit.
    No, if I'd not missed, somehow, the 'million', I'd have Lol'd.
  • YellowSubmarineYellowSubmarine Posts: 2,740

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    You were warned.
  • LowlanderLowlander Posts: 941
    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    In terms of Podemos, the fact they have four distinct strands probably makes it very nearly impossible to get an accurate figure. Each strand has to have its own margin of error.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735
    Lowlander said:

    kle4 said:

    Alistair said:
    Well, still closer than I had thought it would be - the question is if that hardens or softens at all.
    To date, none of the gains that Yes has made have been shown to be soft.
    Yes. The hope was in time it might become so, but far faster than I'd anticipated it has hardened and accelerated again.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,040
    Danny565 said:

    Corbyn's leadership virtually guarantees a Conservative government - and not just any Conservative government - but a total disaster of a Conservative government.

    Whereas a bunch of people who thought cheerleading for the EU, right up until the day it was rejected by the country, would have the political nous to prevent a Conservative government?

    So many of these arguments are based on the premise that it's *UNDENIABLE* that the "moderates" are more electable than Corbyn. That is just not obvious to me or many other members, at all.

    Yep, a lot of Labour members are so deeply tucked into the comfort blanket they are completely divorced from reality. Why does the alternative to Corbyn have to be a "moderate"? Is corbyn really the best the left can offer?

  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,229

    Danny565 said:

    Corbyn's leadership virtually guarantees a Conservative government - and not just any Conservative government - but a total disaster of a Conservative government.

    Whereas a bunch of people who thought cheerleading for the EU, right up until the day it was rejected by the country, would have the political nous to prevent a Conservative government?

    So many of these arguments are based on the premise that it's *UNDENIABLE* that the "moderates" are more electable than Corbyn. That is just not obvious to me or many other members, at all.
    A lot of this isn't even about the EU. Labour have merely taken advantage of the fall-out from the EU referendum to try and rid of Corbyn. Even Cameron and Blair have misjudged the EU situation: but it doesn't change the fact that they were, for a time at least successful political operators who won elections (Blair in particular). The issue of the EU cannot be used to dismiss the judgement of whole swathes of the PLP, whose assessment of Corbyn is 100% right. It is not even about the 'moderates' being more electable than Corbyn. At this stage there is surely got to be someone even from the Left of the Labour party who is more electable than Jeremy Corbyn. If Labour have no one within their ranks that is more electable than Corbyn then they may as well throw in the towel in and cease to exist as a political party.
    Labour have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to win an election and unify the country against a totally discredited Tory shower. Corbyn needs to go on a very long motorcycling holiday.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,364
    Samantha Cameron's sister is to join the Labour Party
    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/how-quickly-can-join-labour-8285483
  • No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 5,034

    Alistair said:

    SeanT said:

    kle4 said:

    Alistair said:
    Well, still closer than I had thought it would be - the question is if that hardens or softens at all.
    Quite. I thought it would be more like 65/35 YES/NO.

    Sturgeon won't risk it on these numbers. SO FAR.
    Article 50 hasn't been engaged yet. A large number of people in my social media circle are still at the bargaining stage and don't really believe actual brexit is going to happen yet.
    Also people are hoping for some kind of indy-lite reverse Greenland, where we stay in the EU, so they don't have to make the decision on indy.
    Reverse Greenland? Is that some kind of Eskimo porn?

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,716
    Lowlander said:

    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    In terms of Podemos, the fact they have four distinct strands probably makes it very nearly impossible to get an accurate figure. Each strand has to have its own margin of error.
    I'm sure that's part of it, but still the PP was forcast to be on 28.5%, and ended up on 33%, that's a huge miss.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,532
    There will come a moment, when whatever it is, that we should all unite in being British,

    I make little distinction in day-to-day life between people - frankly if you happen to have purple skin and walk on 13 legs then my only care is that you conduct yourself in a civilised manner (admittedly measured by my standards)

    If you're British though you may have a sneaky thing calling upon you. Great Britain - not just any old place, but a Great place.

  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,671

    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    Populus 22 June Remain 55% Leave 45%
    That wasn't so much an exit poll as a comfort poll.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    Speedy said:

    Scott_P said:
    Let me guess.
    They placed large bets on Remain on Betfair.
    Some of which I, and others on here, relieved them of :-)
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,081
    edited June 2016
    Lies, self-interest, indecision, bigotry - what more can the Leave camp offer?
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @pdacosta: Worst than Lehman: Post-#Brexit global equity loss of over $2 trillion worst ever, S&P says https://t.co/uzbCiTyCvP

    Project Fear...
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,375

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
    Exit polls conducted outside Primrose Hill.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,357
    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
    Basically that was what Nick Palmer was saying earlier. In their party they are blessed with a good mix of suitable and electable candidates...but none of those who are suitable are electable and none of those electable are suitable.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,855
    We've had over 4,000 comments in less than 22 hours.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,925
    DanSmith said:

    RodCrosby said:

    DanSmith said:

    I personally don't understand how anyone can blame the 'moderates' for resigning today/tonight. If you give a damn about the Labour party, the working class, and the people of this country you will want Jeremy Corbyn gone and you will be supporting all the shadow cabinet ministers who have put two fingers up at Corbyn. Let me say who is damaging the electability of the Labour party: Jeremy Corbyn and his associates. This man is one of the biggest threats to British democracy at this moment in time. His leadership and the sheer competence that has ensued from it is preventing this country from being a functioning democracy right now. HM Opposition is an absolute total joke, and I have to be honest and say I consider Corbyn supporters to be totally delusional. This man will never win a GE and is setting Labour and the Left in general back by decades. By supporting Jeremy Corbyn, you cannot claim to care about the working classes. Corbyn's leadership virtually guarantees a Conservative government - and not just any Conservative government - but a total disaster of a Conservative government.

    I hope Dan Hodges is right re 30 shadow ministers resigning. Labour needs to take this opportunity to get rid of Corbyn.

    Corbyn is done I *think*. One way or another, you can't have so many MPs refusing to serve you and operate. As long as they hold their nerve (and they way they've worded their resignations makes it impossible for them to serve under him again) someone is going to tell Corbyn to back down.
    He won't go. He'll view this as an opportunity to purge and purify the Labour Party.
    He has no powerbase. One man can't do that by himself. He's just dragging this out and wasting everyone's time.
    No powerbase

    Jeremy Corbyn votes in leadership election 251,417 59.5%

    I really am off now
  • KentRisingKentRising Posts: 2,918

    I bet he's not far wrong. A lot of people are thinking and talking out of a place of shock and fear after Thursday's unexpected result. Once things settle down, appetite in Scotland for another referendum will decline and when it's called 'No' will win again. Scotland will be choosing between the UK and the EU, which will focus minds.
    Thanks for your expertise on what's going on in Scotland.
    No problem!
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,040
    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".

    Ha, ha. You have absolutely no idea about what Corbyn stands for, do you? Clue - he supports unlimited immigration because he is an intern .... You complete the sentence.

  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,873
    edited June 2016
    HYUFD said:

    Samantha Cameron's sister is to join the Labour Party
    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/how-quickly-can-join-labour-8285483

    Even by mirror standards that is a piss poor story. She is a previous labour voter who only voted tory to support Cameron.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,716

    Speedy said:

    Scott_P said:
    Let me guess.
    They placed large bets on Remain on Betfair.
    Some of which I, and others on here, relieved them of :-)
    Thursday night was - by an order of magnitude - my most profitable gambling evening ever. The market was totally out of line with AndyJS's spreadsheet.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,907
    edited June 2016
    That's not how I read it. He's still saying there's going to be a "point's based system" which would not be compatible with the single market or free movement.

    He's going for full, 100% Brexit and leave the single market IMO.

    I'm sure we'll find out tomorrow anyway.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    Pulpstar said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
    Exit polls conducted outside Primrose Hill.
    Oh yes, I forgot about that piece of brilliance during the Long Betting Night.
  • DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215
    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    Populus 22 June Remain 55% Leave 45%
    That wasn't so much an exit poll as a comfort poll.
    Finally got to look at the crosstabs for that, they took a 45-41 Remain lead (wrong but MOE stuff) and weighted it to 55-45. Extraordinary.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,390

    Don't trust him at all.

    I have to agree, he may think he's damping things down, but it is more likely that he is stoking a "betrayal".
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,375
    Sean_F said:

    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    Populus 22 June Remain 55% Leave 45%
    That wasn't so much an exit poll as a comfort poll.
    Populus thinking the same people that would come out for a Dave vs Ed battle would head out for an EU referendum.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @chrishanretty: Oh hello EFTA court! What's that? You say you're bound by ECJ case law? https://t.co/SSn0NnLB9F Oh... #NorwayOption https://t.co/J6nEGfjj5d
  • RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737
    Sky: "Make no mistake, civil war now in the Labour Party"
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    @rottenborough Thank you!

    @DanSmith I am swaying towards your view as well. If more (especially if it's 30) shadow ministers resign tomorrow then you have to question how possible it will be for Corbyn to 'reshape' the shadow cabinet. My feeling is that they will have to find a single candidate to rally around and there will be a leadership election. Multiple candidates risks splintering any potential 'anti-Corbyn' vote.

    @kle4 I thought this as well. All in all the coalition wasn't a bad government at all. Certainly, I thought Clegg made the right decision in 2010. I think more than ever in the last year or so, people have been able to see the difference the LDs made.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,081
    edited June 2016
    Omnium said:

    There will come a moment, when whatever it is, that we should all unite in being British,

    I make little distinction in day-to-day life between people - frankly if you happen to have purple skin and walk on 13 legs then my only care is that you conduct yourself in a civilised manner (admittedly measured by my standards)

    If you're British though you may have a sneaky thing calling upon you. Great Britain - not just any old place, but a Great place.

    Unite - what a good idea!

    I am re-posting this from my FB.

    After the referendum, all I've heard is "let's unite and come together" for the good of the nation. It's a very laudable ideal and in most circumstances I would agree but in this particular example, I have to sadly decline the offer. I am not going to ally myself and come together with people who stoke the fear of immigration and pander to racists. There are some things where I quite rightly have zero tolerance - racism is one of them.

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,716
    edited June 2016

    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".

    Ha, ha. You have absolutely no idea about what Corbyn stands for, do you? Clue - he supports unlimited immigration because he is an intern .... You complete the sentence.

    "an intern at Google in his spare time"?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735
    That's just a fact, it wasn't overwhelming. I presume emphasised to explain why iimmigration will be off the table - half wanted leave, half wanted remain, so meet in the middle, leave but not so different if we can manage it.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,229
    IanB2 said:

    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
    Basically that was what Nick Palmer was saying earlier. In their party they are blessed with a good mix of suitable and electable candidates...but none of those who are suitable are electable and none of those electable are suitable.
    David Miliband, via Batley & Spen by-election.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,375
    Couldn't the entire hedge fund industry have hired John Curtice, Chris Hanretty or even looked at my polling spreadsheet before piling on Sterling and remain ?
  • DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215

    DanSmith said:

    RodCrosby said:

    DanSmith said:

    I personally don't understand how anyone can blame the 'moderates' for resigning today/tonight. If you give a damn about the Labour party, the working class, and the people of this country you will want Jeremy Corbyn gone and you will be supporting all the shadow cabinet ministers who have put two fingers up at Corbyn. Let me say who is damaging the electability of the Labour party: Jeremy Corbyn and his associates. This man is one of the biggest threats to British democracy at this moment in time. His leadership and the sheer competence that has ensued from it is preventing this country from being a functioning democracy right now. HM Opposition is an absolute total joke, and I have to be honest and say I consider Corbyn supporters to be totally delusional. This man will never win a GE and is setting Labour and the Left in general back by decades. By supporting Jeremy Corbyn, you cannot claim to care about the working classes. Corbyn's leadership virtually guarantees a Conservative government - and not just any Conservative government - but a total disaster of a Conservative government.

    I hope Dan Hodges is right re 30 shadow ministers resigning. Labour needs to take this opportunity to get rid of Corbyn.

    Corbyn is done I *think*. One way or another, you can't have so many MPs refusing to serve you and operate. As long as they hold their nerve (and they way they've worded their resignations makes it impossible for them to serve under him again) someone is going to tell Corbyn to back down.
    He won't go. He'll view this as an opportunity to purge and purify the Labour Party.
    He has no powerbase. One man can't do that by himself. He's just dragging this out and wasting everyone's time.
    No powerbase

    Jeremy Corbyn votes in leadership election 251,417 59.5%

    I really am off now
    Lets see how many of those have melted away now they realise that Corbyn doesn't really care about the stuff they care about.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Boris's entire Telegraph manifesto is rapidly being ripped apart by "experts"

    What a buffoon.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,040
    GIN1138 said:

    That's not how I read it. He's still saying there's going to be a "point's based system" which would not be compatible with the single market or free movement.

    He's going for full, 100% Brexit, IMO.

    I'm sure we'll find out tomorrow anyway.

    But Brits will be free to live, work, study and travel in the EU. Of course!!

  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    Buy.
    All of them are mutually exclusive and have a time limit till the end of October.
    We already know the answers to all of the above and when they will be resolved.

    1+2 The new PM will push the button after he is selected in October and a new government formed.

    3. Corbyn will still be Labour leader until and if he loses a GE, a smaller more loyalist shadow cabinet might be an improvement from the previous arrangement in terms of stability.

    4+5+6. I haven't seen any riots or any appetite for riots, spirits will cool as the days go by.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,081
    Scott_P said:


    What a buffoon.

    This is old news Scott - you didn't know this?

  • CopperSulphateCopperSulphate Posts: 1,119
    GIN1138 said:

    That's not how I read it. He's still saying there's going to be a "point's based system" which would not be compatible with the single market or free movement.

    He's going for full, 100% Brexit and leave the single market IMO.

    I'm sure we'll find out tomorrow anyway.
    I assumed he meant a points based system for non-EU and freedom of movement for EU. Which is probably quite a good idea.
  • JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    You voted for this shit.
  • Hertsmere_PubgoerHertsmere_Pubgoer Posts: 3,476
    edited June 2016
    Charles said:

    Charles' comments about the french position pre-referendum are very encouraging. Good will on both sides will help with the UK-EU negotiation.

    I would probably be arrested if I was to repeat the suggested punishment for Britain.

    Suffice to say that it involved Cameron, Admiral Byng.
    There's no need to drag my local Wetherspoon's into it.

  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,532

    We've had over 4,000 comments in less than 22 hours.

    Any good ones?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    Pulpstar said:

    Couldn't the entire hedge fund industry have hired John Curtice, Chris Hanretty or even looked at my polling spreadsheet before piling on Sterling and remain ?

    I guess it shows that at heart they don't have any sense of imagination. They really couldn't conceive of the idea that the Brits would be bonkers enough to pull the plug.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @IanDunt: Farage will be happy. It'll give him a reason to exist. Real Brexit.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,671
    murali_s said:

    Omnium said:

    There will come a moment, when whatever it is, that we should all unite in being British,

    I make little distinction in day-to-day life between people - frankly if you happen to have purple skin and walk on 13 legs then my only care is that you conduct yourself in a civilised manner (admittedly measured by my standards)

    If you're British though you may have a sneaky thing calling upon you. Great Britain - not just any old place, but a Great place.

    Unite - what a good idea!

    I am re-posting this from my FB.

    After the referendum, all I've heard is "let's unite and come together" for the good of the nation. It's a very laudable ideal and in most circumstances I would agree but in this particular example, I have to sadly decline the offer. I am not going to ally myself and come together with people who stoke the fear of immigration and pander to racists. There are some things where I quite rightly have zero tolerance - racism is one of them.

    So be it.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    What a shambles British politics is tonight. Difficult to believe it's really happening.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    I assumed he meant a points based system for non-EU and freedom of movement for EU. Which is probably quite a good idea.

    You mean, exactly what we have now...
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772

    IanB2 said:

    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
    Basically that was what Nick Palmer was saying earlier. In their party they are blessed with a good mix of suitable and electable candidates...but none of those who are suitable are electable and none of those electable are suitable.
    David Miliband, via Batley & Spen by-election.
    It seems impossibly mad. But given the political year so far, is probably about to happen. For this reason, I have a small wager on the Prince.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,907

    GIN1138 said:

    That's not how I read it. He's still saying there's going to be a "point's based system" which would not be compatible with the single market or free movement.

    He's going for full, 100% Brexit and leave the single market IMO.

    I'm sure we'll find out tomorrow anyway.
    I assumed he meant a points based system for non-EU and freedom of movement for EU. Which is probably quite a good idea.
    Possibly. Until we hear from him and Gove we just don't know. I'm hoping things will become clearer tomorrow...

    And as far as Osborne staying on after Cameron. No. Just No.
  • BromptonautBromptonaut Posts: 1,113
    HYUFD said:

    SeanT said:

    John_N4 said:

    "A Yougov poll on 8th June showed that 42% of Leave supporters would prefer the EFTA/EEA route post-Brexit"

    And how many understood that that would mean allowing Poles, Romanians and Lithuanians to retain their existing rights to live and work in Britain?

    Talking of which, has anyone got rough figures for how foreigners voted in the recent British referendum? These include Australians, Canadians, Indians and other Commonwealth citizens, as well as Irish people.

    If Britain leaves the EU, British people will lose our EU citizenship. We will lose our freedom of movement in the EU and our rights to live and work in the EU. Frankly I think that is a matter for British people to decide, not for foreigners whose citizenship and rights will not be affected one way or the other. They themselves will either stay EU citizens - Cypriots, Maltese, Irish - or stay without EU citizenship - Australians, Canadians, Indians, New Zealanders, South Africans, etc. What were they doing on the franchise?

    Once we quit the EU (if we do) Britain should suggest free movement between the UK, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand.

    Why the F not? Four rich English speaking democracies, all under the Crown. Let's do it.
    Because they won't want the unwashed British landing on their shores. Utterly utterly ridiculous. Get a grip man.

    The British Empire was lost last century. The English Empire (Scotland, what's left of Ireland, even possibly Wales) will be lost this century.
    Wales voted Leave and given the choice of keeping the English 'Empire' but being part of the even greater EU 'Empire' English voters chose to forgo imperialism and take freedom, may not prove to be such a bad choice in the end!
    Wales was the first nation to be conquered by the English - or the Normans, to be more accurate. It will be the last to go.

    The shrinking of the British/English Empire has been going on for decades. It ain't finished yet.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    SeanT said:

    Pulpstar said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
    Exit polls conducted outside Primrose Hill.
    I do wonder about that. WTF. Primrose Hill???
    Amazing to think that PBers seemed to have a better idea of what was happening on Thursday night than Hedge Fund managers.
  • The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    RE Boris: plenty of people saw this coming with him, and called it months ago when Boris came out for leave. He'll be a total disaster as PM: the Tories' best bet is May. Osborne's leadership ambitions are in the dust: I don't see how he can get anywhere near the level of support from Conservative MPs, or members to win the leadership.
  • CopperSulphateCopperSulphate Posts: 1,119
    Scott_P said:

    I assumed he meant a points based system for non-EU and freedom of movement for EU. Which is probably quite a good idea.

    You mean, exactly what we have now...
    Do we have a points based system for non-EU?

    People were getting visas to work in fast food restaurants in their thousands.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    Speedy said:

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    Buy.
    All of them are mutually exclusive and have a time limit till the end of October.
    We already know the answers to all of the above and when they will be resolved.

    1+2 The new PM will push the button after he is selected in October and a new government formed.

    3. Corbyn will still be Labour leader until and if he loses a GE, a smaller more loyalist shadow cabinet might be an improvement from the previous arrangement in terms of stability.

    4+5+6. I haven't seen any riots or any appetite for riots, spirits will cool as the days go by.
    Corbyn will not be leader until he loses a GE.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    GIN1138 said:

    That's not how I read it. He's still saying there's going to be a "point's based system" which would not be compatible with the single market or free movement.

    He's going for full, 100% Brexit and leave the single market IMO.

    I'm sure we'll find out tomorrow anyway.
    I assumed he meant a points based system for non-EU and freedom of movement for EU. Which is probably quite a good idea.
    I've vaguely got this feeling that this model has been employed somewhere before...
  • LowlanderLowlander Posts: 941
    edited June 2016
    A few comments on the Survation Independence polling.

    55% at this stage following Brexit is very encouraging. I think those expeting 60% or more (I expected upper 50s) have got a bit carried away with how they view other people going through the process of coming to terms with Brexit.

    In reality, there will be huge numbers of people in the early stages - Denial and Bargaining. There will be further movement to Yes.

    The history of Yes gains is such that once people make the deicsion, they very rarely go back on it. For sure, some people do but it is a tiny portion. The direction of travel has never changed and the Yes vote has always hardened.

    A good indicator that the situation is still in flux is the 52% to 48% for a second referendum. This is likely due to lots of Yes supporters feeling it is too early in case they lose. However polls like this will increase the figure quickly.

    There may even be a virtuous cycle after each poll. more Yes voters commit to the second referendum and more people wanting a second referendum seeing Yes as the winning side and wanting to be on it.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,573
    SeanT said:

    Pulpstar said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
    Exit polls conducted outside Primrose Hill.
    I do wonder about that. WTF. Primrose Hill???
    Why not Primrose Hill - Dartmouth Park is full of 'ordinary people' according to EdM.

    Remind us again what happened after you had voted.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,671
    Speedy said:

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    Buy.
    All of them are mutually exclusive and have a time limit till the end of October.
    We already know the answers to all of the above and when they will be resolved.

    1+2 The new PM will push the button after he is selected in October and a new government formed.

    3. Corbyn will still be Labour leader until and if he loses a GE, a smaller more loyalist shadow cabinet might be an improvement from the previous arrangement in terms of stability.

    4+5+6. I haven't seen any riots or any appetite for riots, spirits will cool as the days go by.
    I don't know about 3, but the rest seem correct.
  • PongPong Posts: 4,693
    This is turning into a complete f*cking disaster.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,907
    AndyJS said:

    SeanT said:

    Pulpstar said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
    Exit polls conducted outside Primrose Hill.
    I do wonder about that. WTF. Primrose Hill???
    Amazing to think that PBers seemed to have a better idea of what was happening on Thursday night than Hedge Fund managers.
    This is the best political website bar none. I've donated a few £ to Mike today and everyone should do the same.
  • SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    kle4 said:

    That's just a fact, it wasn't overwhelming. I presume emphasised to explain why iimmigration will be off the table - half wanted leave, half wanted remain, so meet in the middle, leave but not so different if we can manage it.
    He has to be careful or else Farage might find a new cause to accuse any new Tory leader of backtracking from what the Brexit promised.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    edited June 2016

    IanB2 said:

    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
    Basically that was what Nick Palmer was saying earlier. In their party they are blessed with a good mix of suitable and electable candidates...but none of those who are suitable are electable and none of those electable are suitable.
    David Miliband, via Batley & Spen by-election.
    The man who thought it was a good political strategy to say that Leave voters (i.e. a majority of the electorate) were "arsonists".

    No.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    Don't say we weren't warned. And warned. And warned.

  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,375
    edited June 2016
    A Lib Dem majority will stop art. 50 being invoked ^^;;;;;;

    For the best I think. No that isn't sarcasm.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,357

    IanB2 said:

    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
    Basically that was what Nick Palmer was saying earlier. In their party they are blessed with a good mix of suitable and electable candidates...but none of those who are suitable are electable and none of those electable are suitable.
    David Miliband, via Batley & Spen by-election.
    It seems impossibly mad. But given the political year so far, is probably about to happen. For this reason, I have a small wager on the Prince.
    I always wondered about him, and thought him over-rated before, particularly in terms of potential voter appeal. And as a re-tread it could even more of a gamble.
  • RodCrosbyRodCrosby Posts: 7,737

    IanB2 said:

    Danny565 said:

    IanB2 said:



    They need someone more effective AND more in tune with their voters especially outside London AND who their members will vote for. I am not sure who is in the middle of that Venn Diagram?

    There is no-one. Corbyn is the least-worst option, as far as I can see.

    A more competent and charismatic version of Frank Field or John Mann would be closest to what's needed, but, even if such a candidate existed, the Labour "moderates" would be too ideological to allow someone who's Eurosceptic and economically populist to take the helm -- it would damage their desired purity of being "internationalist" and "outward-looking".
    Basically that was what Nick Palmer was saying earlier. In their party they are blessed with a good mix of suitable and electable candidates...but none of those who are suitable are electable and none of those electable are suitable.
    David Miliband, via Batley & Spen by-election.
    It seems impossibly mad. But given the political year so far, is probably about to happen. For this reason, I have a small wager on the Prince.
    It's crazy. The timeline doesn't fit, and a Miliband flying home from a globalist sinecure to 'save Labour, save the UK' would receive a derisory vote, making Kendall look good.

    There's only one candidate who could run Jezza close. And he departed the stage 2000 years ago...
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 40,040

    SeanT said:

    Pulpstar said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Instead of useless exit polls.
    Exit polls conducted outside Primrose Hill.
    I do wonder about that. WTF. Primrose Hill???
    Why not Primrose Hill - Dartmouth Park is full of 'ordinary people' according to EdM.

    Remind us again what happened after you had voted.

    Lots of council housing in Dartmouth Park. There's a big estate about 100 yards from EdM's house. That's inner London for you.

  • glwglw Posts: 10,390
    GIN1138 said:

    And as far as Osborne staying on after Cameron. No. Just No.

    That's a red line for me.
  • YellowSubmarineYellowSubmarine Posts: 2,740
    Brexit crisis won't end for years – and no one is taking responsibility

    http://gu.com/p/4myk4?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Copy_to_clipboard
  • OUTOUT Posts: 569
    Y0kel said:

    IanB2 said:

    Scott_P said:
    They should have been reading PB...
    Some you win, some you lose.
    Didn't they err, hedge?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,229
    Pong said:

    This is turning into a complete f*cking disaster.
    I said this before. All the talk in my bubble of London ABers (typically in consulting, FS, or advertising) is about delaying or abandoning investments, relocations, and potential opportunities abroad. I accept we represent a tiny fraction of the population, but we drive the economy. Any rebalancing away from a services-led, London-led economy is decades away. Or perhaps not now that we've decided to go full Pol Pot.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    Right I'm off to bed, slightly reassured that Brexit is not likely to actually happen now. The whole project to leave had been successful hijacked by Boris in order to become PM.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735
    I used to advocate remain based off that clip (in part)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735
    Speedy said:

    kle4 said:

    That's just a fact, it wasn't overwhelming. I presume emphasised to explain why iimmigration will be off the table - half wanted leave, half wanted remain, so meet in the middle, leave but not so different if we can manage it.
    He has to be careful or else Farage might find a new cause to accuse any new Tory leader of backtracking from what the Brexit promised.
    That's inevitable - I guess Boris is trying to please both Tory Remainers and Leavers. He's been both himself after all.
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746
    Lowlander said:

    A few comments on the Survation Independence polling.

    55% at this stage following Brexit is very encouraging. I think those expeting 60% or more (I expected upper 50s) have got a bit carried away with how they view other people going through the process of coming to terms with Brexit.

    In reality, there will be huge numbers of people in the early stages - Denial and Bargaining. There will be further movement to Yes.

    The history of Yes gains is such that once people make the deicsion, they very rarely go back on it. For sure, some people do but it is a tiny portion. The direction of travel has never changed and the Yes vote has always hardened.

    A good indicator that the situation is still in flux is the 52% to 48% for a second referendum. This is likely due to lots of Yes supporters feeling it is too early in case they lose. However polls like this will increase the figure quickly.

    There may even be a virtuous cycle after each poll. more Yes voters commit to the second referendum and more people wanting a second referendum seeing Yes as the winning side and wanting to be on it.

    I don't think there will be another Scottish referendum. The last one was in 2014. The unionists won.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,716

    rcs1000 said:

    I know I'm in a minority of one here, but what the f*ck was wrong with Spanish exit polling?

    Just four hours ago, Bloomberg was running a story about how P + PSOE had probably won a majority.

    The PP was forecast to drop 4 seats, and Citizens to lose 12. The Right wing block was expected to be down 16 seats. (I.e. 10% of their total). The reality? The block gained 6 seats. The polls were 5% out on the PP vote share, and 3% on Citizens.

    According the exits, Podemos was expected to be just 3% behind the PP on 26%. Reality, they were third behind the PSOE on 22%.

    Did people lie to the pollsters? Or were they just shit?

    Populus 22 June Remain 55% Leave 45%
    That wasn't an exit poll.
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,081
    RodCrosby said:

    Sky: "Make no mistake, civil war now in the Labour Party"

    Corbyn and Abbott v the rest?
  • anotherDaveanotherDave Posts: 6,746
    alex. said:

    GIN1138 said:

    That's not how I read it. He's still saying there's going to be a "point's based system" which would not be compatible with the single market or free movement.

    He's going for full, 100% Brexit and leave the single market IMO.

    I'm sure we'll find out tomorrow anyway.
    I assumed he meant a points based system for non-EU and freedom of movement for EU. Which is probably quite a good idea.
    I've vaguely got this feeling that this model has been employed somewhere before...
    Austria?

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,735

    Lowlander said:

    A few comments on the Survation Independence polling.

    55% at this stage following Brexit is very encouraging. I think those expeting 60% or more (I expected upper 50s) have got a bit carried away with how they view other people going through the process of coming to terms with Brexit.

    In reality, there will be huge numbers of people in the early stages - Denial and Bargaining. There will be further movement to Yes.

    The history of Yes gains is such that once people make the deicsion, they very rarely go back on it. For sure, some people do but it is a tiny portion. The direction of travel has never changed and the Yes vote has always hardened.

    A good indicator that the situation is still in flux is the 52% to 48% for a second referendum. This is likely due to lots of Yes supporters feeling it is too early in case they lose. However polls like this will increase the figure quickly.

    There may even be a virtuous cycle after each poll. more Yes voters commit to the second referendum and more people wanting a second referendum seeing Yes as the winning side and wanting to be on it.

    I don't think there will be another Scottish referendum. The last one was in 2014. The unionists won.
    Things have changes since then. What the scottish public is willing to risk may have changed.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @SimonFraser00: Smart move... after UK referendum we now have a Latvian rather than a Brit in charge of #EU financial services policy...

    Top Work
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    £ rallying on news Boris is to lead the charge to stay in the EU
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,772
    James Gleick @JamesGleick
    What happens when a democracy makes a profound decision by popular vote and immediately senses, collectively, that it made a mistake?



    Now I really am away.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,402
    EFTA really is the only sane option at the moment. We need something in place quickly, or face utter chaos if we're turfed out without single market access once Article 50 expires.
  • BigIanBigIan Posts: 198
    Sean_F said:

    Speedy said:

    So in summary:
    1. We voted to leave but Cameron won't push the button having quit
    2. We have no government as Cameron remains as lame duck PM and the Tories are too busy arguing about who voted for what to start a leadership contest properly
    3. We have no opposition as the Labour front bench consists of Corbyn, a scouser waiting to be crowned mayor of Manchester and Diana Abbot
    4. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if the referendum isn't overturned
    5. We have millions of citizens ready to take to the streets if there is any u turn from whatever they think they were offered if we Vote Leave
    6. We have thousands (?) of citizens about to start serious race riots because they can't understand why operation deport the darkie hasn't started already

    Now, if you were an investor, what would your instinct have you do tomorrow....?

    Buy.
    All of them are mutually exclusive and have a time limit till the end of October.
    We already know the answers to all of the above and when they will be resolved.

    1+2 The new PM will push the button after he is selected in October and a new government formed.

    3. Corbyn will still be Labour leader until and if he loses a GE, a smaller more loyalist shadow cabinet might be an improvement from the previous arrangement in terms of stability.

    4+5+6. I haven't seen any riots or any appetite for riots, spirits will cool as the days go by.
    I don't know about 3, but the rest seem correct.
    How about SDP2? Do you think it might come to that?
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