politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » ICM blow for Corbyn as he tries to hang on: LAB now 16% beh

In many ways the latest ICM poll is hardly surprising. The Tories have a new leader who is enjoying a honeymoon period while Labour is in all sorts of trouble with 80% of its MPs saying they have no confidence in their leader.
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CON LAB LIB UKIP Green SNP Plaid N.Ire
Predicted 322 240 10 1 1 55 3 18
Seat Error +9 -8 -2 0 0 +1 0 0
http://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/trackrecord_15errors.html
Main source of error was the raw polling data.
http://www2.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2016/07/24/how-theresa-may-could-turn-out-to-be-the-labour-partys-very-unlikely-saviour/
It is entirely down to the shocking inability of elements of the PLP to respect the overwhelming democratic mandate granted to Jeremy only last year.
By being so divisive, disloyal and disrespectful of their own institutions they are undermining the social-democratic cause and drowning out Jeremy's message about a kinder, gentler and more inclusive politics.
Perhaps the magnitude of the moment we face is too great for us collectively to bear. Shortly there will be an election, in which the Tories will increase its majority, and in so doing utterly shatter the glass paradigm of cyclical politics which has contained us for the century since 1906. This ought to herald another decade of strong, confident, consensual Tory government. Which will finally and irrevocably transform the nature of politics and civic life in Britain.
Obviously to the extent any poll can be trusted it looks very bad for Labour, but I still think May will not want a GE any time soon, and in any case in the absence of a split (and I don't think there will be one) a few will come back to Labour if they fear the Tories winning. It's still bad for an opposition to be down so low, but as noted this is honeymood period stuff, and probably inflated with UKIP voters temporarily 'returning' to Con, who will abandon it again if a Brexit fudge is announced.
So it is bad, but not as apocalyptic as at first glance. Or so it is stated.
Personally I prefer 'so called Islamic State'. It makes clear its proper islamic and state credentials are not accepted by, say, us, but does not deny what they call themselves and that millions think they are both islamic and a state, which hopefully upsets the majority of muslims who don't support them.
So no need to ditch Jez.
Still, some are already crawling back to make the best of it.
As I said on the previous thread Labour is truly a name worth fighting for. It has a bedrock of support that almost nothing will diminish. A major problem for the development of any sane centre left party.
The FTPA was simply a coalition figleaf to reassure Clegg that Dave wouldn't throw him off the bus if he fancied it later.
More likely Labour's machismo means they would support the dissolution vote.
Where there's a will, etc.
I imagine a lot of traditional Labour supporters will reason in the same way about Labour today.
Yes, that's a vote winner.
Trump's meme has been 'don;t let this happen here...'
When do the boundaries change btw ?
Incidentally, are you the other chap who lives nearish Morley? I seem to remember another PBer did and couldn't remember who. [No special reason for asking, just that half-remembering something irritates me].
Go for it Tezza!
The only two age groups Labour are ahead in are 18-24 and 25-34. However, these are the two age groups with by far the worst certainty to vote, 39% and 49% respectively.
But I wouldn't put it past the Lefebvrists who are very strong in France (there are more of them than mainstream Catholics in some places) and I suspect almost to a man they vote Fronte Nationale (assuming they dont regard Fronte Nationale as leftist pinko's
A minute of erhh well round and round and rounds the houses we go before yeah probably was Jahadi terrorism.
Not sure I could have voted for an IDS led Tory party.
I voted Tess or Tessie.
But then we should put nothing past Comrade Corbyn.
T for Theresa, and Bag for the handbagging she gave Jez last week.
The past participle for that is T-Bagged
Section 2 of the Act also provides for two ways in which a general election can be held before the end of this five-year period:
If the House of Commons resolves "That this House has no confidence in Her Majesty's Government", an early general election is held, unless the House of Commons subsequently resolves "That this House has confidence in Her Majesty's Government".
This second resolution must be made within fourteen days of the first.
If the House of Commons, with the support of two-thirds of its total membership (including vacant seats), resolves "That there shall be an early parliamentary general election".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed-term_Parliaments_Act_2011
I supported the NEC interpretation of the rule book that put Corbyn on the ballot without nominations. Might seem like a daft rule but I don't think the writers contemplated a leader not supported by 20% of the PLP with mass support in the membership. Anyway, perhaps the high court might save us by overturning the decision...
Regarding an early election I keep banging on about November because why wouldn't she? Labour will be on our knees at conference, demoralised, divided, heading from leadership battle into witch hunts and pogroms. We can only go up from there or split or Corbyn drops dear or other events (dear boy, events). Her majority in waiting can only shrink from what she could get in November.
So the time to go is the autumn. May is already making progress on a deal over Brexit - it won't satisfy many Leave voters, it won't be exactly what was on the referendum question, it won't be what the majority of MPs want and besides she has no working majority. And Labour will be in ruins.
Why would she not announce in her speech that upon Parliament's return the following Monday that she will seek an early election and its over to Labour MPs if they want to block it.
Not getting the right stall at the Summer Fete clearly gets some people very angry.
Universal Credit now delayed to 2022. 6 years and almost nothing achieved. That's IDS for you.
>11:37AM edited 11:38AM
>>Paul_Bedfordshire said:
>>If I was in Church and someone tried to raid >>and desecrate the Blessed Sacrament I >>would do everything to stop them even if >>they killed me as a result.
>What if the only way to stop them was to kill >them?
What a silly thing do say. Did not Jesus Himself tell St Peter to put away his sword and not attack the High Priests guard who had come to arrest him.
Did St Thomas of Becket take up a sword against the Kings men who had come to kill him? (a story in itself which reverberates down the centuries as a warning to those who would attack a priest in church).
He asked what I thought about Corbyn, and I gave it to him straight between the eyes. To be fair to him, he did listen and concede I might have a point.
Whether it will stop him supporting him, or not, is another matter.
NO POSSIBLE WAY WE CAN GUESS.
We're going to Brexit and we're going to make a success of it (we'll keep the best of the single market access, without all the EU red tape and we'll have the world beating down our door to business with us through bespoke trade agreements. What's not to like?)
Get with the programe please!
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/world/migrant-hacked-to-death-in-bloodbath-at-calais-jungle-camp-a3304491.html
If May is to that she will, as you allude to, do so once the new deal is clear and preferably with the new boundaries in place.
Otherwise she will wait full term.
The only substantive effect of the FTPA is to give the opposition parties an additional two weeks in which to gear up for a snap general election.