politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Corbyn has clearly won – the big question is the size of hi
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I did watch the finale last year since it has gotten so popular everyone was talking about it. It seemed pretty entertaining, as these things go, but not my cup of tea for regular viewing.Dixie said:
It's not about baking. It's got humanity, British eccentricity, subtlety, calm, rhythm. It's formulaic heaven.kle4 said:
Dont watch it myself but don't 8-10 million people watch it? I presume it's on prime time because it is prime Tv viewing!Mortimer said:foxinsoxuk said:
What is such a problem of cookery talent show watchers having to press button 4 rather than button 1on the remote from the comfort of their sofas?DavidL said:
I think it's more about them. How very dare Ch 4. Lets stir up debates about privatising them. That'll show them.SquareRoot said:
I think its more about telling GGBO fans not to worry.. GBBO will be back in a slightly different format and a different coloured tent.. worry not . No Holywood, but who cares. Berry is the star.DavidL said:
I've never understood why it is on prime time. When it is on in our house I go and do paperwork...with Netflix in the background!foxinsoxuk said:
What is such a problem of cookery talent show watchers having to press button 4 rather than button 1on the remote from the comfort of their sofas?DavidL said:
I think it's more about them. How very dare Ch 4. Lets stir up debates about privatising them. That'll show them.SquareRoot said:
I think its more about telling GGBO fans not to worry.. GBBO will be back in a slightly different format and a different coloured tent.. worry not . No Holywood, but who cares. Berry is the star.DavidL said:
Could have used more discussions of local by elections.0 -
I don't know how things work with by elections in PR seats, but Labour's share of first preferences actually fell in Coatbridge:Dixie said:An outstanding night for Labour at local elections. A win in Scotland, in the South and Midlands. The party continues to reach vote shares that they did under Brown/Miliband, within MOE. The party is not dead under Corbyn, it is different. Likely unelectable in 2020 but they won't die. Also, as someone on here said, Lib Dem revival can take enough votes off Tories for Labour to slip through in some elections. All mayors will be Labour. They are strong.
To kill them they need to reach Scottish vote shares - 15% or so to bump them off. Unlikely.
https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/7790875409304453120 -
Morning all,Jonathan said:
Does Corbyn actually want to reach out beyond his tribe? I doubt it. He has enough people whispering in his ear about his "mandate" and his semi messianic status that he probably doesn't want to or think he needs to.NickPalmer said:Good by-election night for Labour (and, to be fair, the LibDems, even without wins). Terrible night for the Tories. As we've had two threads based on single Labour council by-election losses, time for one about the gains?
IMO, Curtice's research is the most significant factor here - essentially that Corbyn has a high floor (more people who positively like him than liked Cameron after a year as leader) but a low ceiling (loads of people not currently prepared to vote for him). That's after a summer of unremitting party feuding. The question is whether after a reasonably clear win (I'm forseeing something much like last tim, not 70%) and some degree of cooperation in the PLP, he can start to make inroads into the people who quyite like Labour but aren't up for a hugely divided left-wing party.
I suppose he might start listening to Owen Jones, who seems to have gone all Blairite in yesterday's Guardian, talking about need to persuade people who don't agree with you, reach out, use honed messaging to communicate effectively etc etc. Philip Gould would be proud of the lad.0 -
If he does better in 2020 I guess it justifies him staying in as leader as it is clearly a great victory.HYUFD said:In his interview last night Corbyn praised Foot but said he would do 'even better', so Corbyn's benchmark it would seem is beating the 209 seats and 28% Foot got in 1983
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A bit behind the times there, Mr Palmer. You must have missed the Lib Dem gain from the Tories in Teignmouth, declared about seven hours before you posted.NickPalmer said:Good by-election night for Labour (and, to be fair, the LibDems, even without wins). Terrible night for the Tories.
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Labour's problem isn't JC's policies (which Smith largely shares, even if the electorate no longer likes itself enough to do so) - nor even JC's personality, about which I agree with his ex-wife, Professor Chapman - and feel myself qualified to do so, having served, if only briefly, with both of them in Haringey Council when we were all young.
Labour's problem is that its members are perfectionists, and no government, democratic or otherwise, can deliver perfection. It's against human nature. Times past, this was kept in check by the realism of TU barons. Thanks to Ed M, this applies no longer.
Inner-party democracy has given us an Opposition that is very happy to oppose and has no wish to govern.0 -
Dangerous stuff. When you try and persuade people who disagree with you they might advance their current views and you could get contaminated. Or triggered. Who knows, you might find yourself thinking, just for a moment, that instinctive ideas held for decades without analysis or doubt could be wrong, or at least need modulating. Nobody wants that.rottenborough said:
Morning all,Jonathan said:
Does Corbyn actually want to reach out beyond his tribe? I doubt it. He has enough people whispering in his ear about his "mandate" and his semi messianic status that he probably doesn't want to or think he needs to.NickPalmer said:Good by-election night for Labour (and, to be fair, the LibDems, even without wins). Terrible night for the Tories. As we've had two threads based on single Labour council by-election losses, time for one about the gains?
IMO, Curtice's research is the most significant factor here - essentially that Corbyn has a high floor (more people who positively like him than liked Cameron after a year as leader) but a low ceiling (loads of people not currently prepared to vote for him). That's after a summer of unremitting party feuding. The question is whether after a reasonably clear win (I'm forseeing something much like last tim, not 70%) and some degree of cooperation in the PLP, he can start to make inroads into the people who quyite like Labour but aren't up for a hugely divided left-wing party.
I suppose he might start listening to Owen Jones, who seems to have gone all Blairite in yesterday's Guardian, talking about need to persuade people who don't agree with you, reach out, use honed messaging to communicate effectively etc etc. Philip Gould would be proud of the lad.0 -
There are lots of interesting charts on this on the migration observatory site but it is beyond me to post a link on an iphone. Basically the number of "voluntary" departures after ejection procedures commenced increased resulting in a fall in the number of forced departures. There is, however, no sign of any upward trend in total departures. The picture looks broadly static.foxinsoxuk said:
Just 12 056 enforced deportations in 2015, when Mrs May had full control of the Home Office.Paul_Bedfordshire said:Report on radio this morning about a lorry load of illegal immigrants stopped on the M1 by police causing chaos. Apparently they called 16 ambulances which virtually blocked a slip road in case they had got hurt in the back of the lorry.
Maybe I'm dumb but isn't that just a tiny bit over the top. Whats wrong with a minibus? No wonder our public services are in debt.
Why is she regarded as competent by PB Tories?0 -
On a SeanT note, I'm spending a few days in Venice with a friend next month. We like people, water, variety and colourful sights. We aren't much into buildings, galleries and other static things. Any recommendations/warnings?
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@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.0
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Yes, that would be awful. One might end up being a Red Tory Blairite scum who wins elections and changes things.kle4 said:
Dangerous stuff. When you try and persuade people who disagree with you they might advance their current views and you could get contaminated. Or triggered. Who knows, you might find yourself thinking, just for a moment, that instinctive ideas held for decades without analysis or doubt could be wrong, or at least need modulating. Nobody wants that.rottenborough said:
Morning all,Jonathan said:
Does Corbyn actually want to reach out beyond his tribe? I doubt it. He has enough people whispering in his ear about his "mandate" and his semi messianic status that he probably doesn't want to or think he needs to.NickPalmer said:Good by-election night for Labour (and, to be fair, the LibDems, even without wins). Terrible night for the Tories. As we've had two threads based on single Labour council by-election losses, time for one about the gains?
IMO, Curtice's research is the most significant factor here - essentially that Corbyn has a high floor (more people who positively like him than liked Cameron after a year as leader) but a low ceiling (loads of people not currently prepared to vote for him). That's after a summer of unremitting party feuding. The question is whether after a reasonably clear win (I'm forseeing something much like last tim, not 70%) and some degree of cooperation in the PLP, he can start to make inroads into the people who quyite like Labour but aren't up for a hugely divided left-wing party.
I suppose he might start listening to Owen Jones, who seems to have gone all Blairite in yesterday's Guardian, talking about need to persuade people who don't agree with you, reach out, use honed messaging to communicate effectively etc etc. Philip Gould would be proud of the lad.0 -
A loss done the right way is better than victory the wrong way. The people deserve the evils of Tory government if they reject the perfect labour government, they don't deserve a less than perfect labour government. So win or lose, it is still a great victory so long as people got the chance to vote for real labour.Charles said:
If he does better in 2020 I guess it justifies him staying in as leader as it is clearly a great victory.HYUFD said:In his interview last night Corbyn praised Foot but said he would do 'even better', so Corbyn's benchmark it would seem is beating the 209 seats and 28% Foot got in 1983
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kle4 said:Dixie said:kle4 said:Mortimer said:foxinsoxuk said:DavidL said:SquareRoot said:DavidL said:Scott_P said:
The GBBO coverage would suggest that civilisation has indeed crumbled...HYUFD said:foxinsoxuk said:DavidL said:SquareRoot said:DavidL said:
True:Scott_P said:HYUFD said:
I did watch the finale last year since it has gotten so popular everyone was talking about it. It seemed pretty entertaining, as these things go, but not my cup of tea for regular viewing.
Could have used more discussions of local by elections.
Britain Elects @britainelects 8h8 hours ago
Teignmouth Central (Teignbridge) result:
LDEM: 51.1% (+28.3)
CON: 29.8% (-12.6)
UKIP: 11.6% (+11.6)
LAB: 7.5% (-8.7)
Britain Elects @britainelects 8h8 hours ago
Liberal Democrat GAIN Teignmouth Central (Teignbridge) from Conservative
Britain Elects @britainelects 5h5 hours ago
Adderbury, Bloxham & Bodicote (Cherwell) result:
CON: 57.4% (+8.5)
LAB: 16.2% (-0.3)
GRN: 15.7% (-5.5)
LDEM: 10.7% (-2.8)
Britain Elects @britainelects 8h8 hours ago
Labour GAIN Arley & Whitacre (North Warwickshire) from Conservative.
Britain Elects @britainelects 5h5 hours ago
Old Stratford (South Northamptonshire) result:
CON: 77.2% (+77.2)
UKIP: 22.8% (+22.8)
Conservative HOLD.
Con previously elected unopposed
Britain Elects @britainelects 9h9 hours ago
Christchurch (Allerdale) result:
LAB: 40.7% (+5.8)
LDEM: 29.4% (+20.0)
CON: 25.9% (-19.3)
UKIP: 4.0% (+4.0)
Britain Elects @britainelects 9h9 hours ago
Labour GAIN Christchurch (Allerdale) from Conservative.
Britain Elects @britainelects 9h9 hours ago
Chopwell & Rowlands Gill (Gateshead) result:
LAB: 59.1% (-3.7)
UKIP: 15.6% (+1.3)
LDEM: 12.3% (+7.9)
CON: 8.6% (-2.3)
GRN: 4.4% (-3.2)0 -
That's long been known, not that it stops the less/fewer pedants.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
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In relative terms I suppose second worst leader since WW2 would be better than worstCharles said:
If he does better in 2020 I guess it justifies him staying in as leader as it is clearly a great victory.HYUFD said:In his interview last night Corbyn praised Foot but said he would do 'even better', so Corbyn's benchmark it would seem is beating the 209 seats and 28% Foot got in 1983
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It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
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That sounds like a good description of the Remainastan of the inner cities.YellowSubmarine said:Leaverstan for me is that section of England and Wales between the two. Overwhelmingly Labour voting, not or never needed for a Conservative majority, sometimes depopulating, ex industrial, very reliant on the State and crucially often at least partially responsible for it's own decline. A tendency to blame everything on Thatcher, elect crap one party state councils and overly nostalgic.
You might argue that they're now increasing in population - but renting a room in Brixton or Hackney doesn't seem preferable to me to owning a house in Bolsover or Castle Point.
I'm sure we'll be told how 'creative' Remainastan is. But the word 'creative' always brings to my mind Jez from Peep Show and the lyrics from this song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CU3mc0yvRNk0 -
Just a Friday morning kind of thought, but what if Boris and co actually pull it off? A free trade deal with EU that basically means we are still in single market and no free movement.
Surely, May would take that to the country a year or two earlier than 2020 and win a landslide of monumental proportions?0 -
Yougov this morning in the Times has it Tories 39% Labour 30% UKIP 13% LDs 8%. Only 15% of Labour voters now back Leave compared to a third at the general election with some switching to the Tories and UKIP (possibly made up by a few Greens and Plaid switching to Labour)0
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Only experts disregard the fact that our schoolteachers possessed absolute truth, or at least canes...Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
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That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
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Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
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Wasn't there an expert who wanted to get rid of apostrophes last year?0
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True but the EU will not let that happen. The most likely outcome is a limited free movement (probably you must have a job offer to come here) and limited free trade dealrottenborough said:Just a Friday morning kind of thought, but what if Boris and co actually pull it off? A free trade deal with EU that basically means we are still in single market and no free movement.
Surely, May would take that to the country a year or two earlier than 2020 and win a landslide of monumental proportions?0 -
Probably. Though if the meaning is clear either way I'm relaxed about it.Scott_P said:
Shouldn't that be "less flexible"...?kle4 said:Zing.
Unlikely. People who adore arbitrary grammatical rules invented to little obvious purpose are more inflexible than corbynites.
Hopefully since it is a nonsense distinction to be applied so rigidly, there'll be fewer such people.DavidL said:
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How about less qualified people?
Is that fewer qualified people or less-qualified people?0 -
Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/0 -
LOL. Brilliant.Scott_P said:0 -
May seems to have boosted the Tories a little in Scotland and WalesTheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/0 -
Try taking a boat trip to a glass factoryNickPalmer said:On a SeanT note, I'm spending a few days in Venice with a friend next month. We like people, water, variety and colourful sights. We aren't much into buildings, galleries and other static things. Any recommendations/warnings?
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It is not nonsense in that there are occasions when using one is a lot clearer in meaning than the other. CD13 has given a good example. Where the meaning is clear either way there are more exciting things to get wound up about.kle4 said:
Probably. Though if the meaning is clear either way I'm relaxed about it.Scott_P said:
Shouldn't that be "less flexible"...?kle4 said:Zing.
Unlikely. People who adore arbitrary grammatical rules invented to little obvious purpose are more inflexible than corbynites.
Hopefully since it is a nonsense distinction to be applied so rigidly, there'll be fewer such people.DavidL said:0 -
Arf - 'Owen Smith less popular in Wales than Jeremy Corbyn' - Fine fellows those Welsh...TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/0 -
Westminster VI from Welsh Barometer this morning:
Lab 35% (+1)
Con 29% (+6)
PC 13% (-3)
UKIP 14% (-2)
LibDems 7% (-1)
Others 2% (-1)0 -
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Scottish Tory Surge incoming?TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/0 -
I know you said no galleries, but you must see the Carpaccios at the Gallerie dell'Accademia.NickPalmer said:On a SeanT note, I'm spending a few days in Venice with a friend next month. We like people, water, variety and colourful sights. We aren't much into buildings, galleries and other static things. Any recommendations/warnings?
They give me goosebumps.0 -
So Tories up 2% on the general election, Labour and UKIP essentially unchangedTheScreamingEagles said:0 -
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that. People have used it for things pedants say is not permissable for hundreds of years. So I afraid taking such a rigid view of the extent of the distinction is nonsense. That there can be a dustinction does not change that people insist the 'rule' applies more than it does. If I want to say I have less potatoes or fewer potatoes I can, but some idiot would insist on upbraiding me. The examples where it can make a difference are far outweighed by the examples it doesn't but know it alls 'correct' it.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...0 -
Spend time on the canals, avoid the galleries! :-)NickPalmer said:On a SeanT note, I'm spending a few days in Venice with a friend next month. We like people, water, variety and colourful sights. We aren't much into buildings, galleries and other static things. Any recommendations/warnings?
Seriously, Venice is endlessly beautiful just to wander around. It gets remarkably uncrowded very quickly away from St Mark's Square. You should definitely visit the Jewish quarter - the world's first ghetto (a Venetian word, I think). There are lots of water buses you can travel around on. There's one that goes from the train station all the way down the Grand Canal which is a great journey. Others will take you to the various islands, including the Lido. There's also a water bus from the airport across the lagoon into Venice which is pretty spectacular - especially if you have not been before.
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Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/0 -
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...0 -
Con gain Pontypridd?TheScreamingEagles said:Westminster VI from Welsh Barometer this morning:
Lab 35% (+1)
Con 29% (+6)
PC 13% (-3)
UKIP 14% (-2)
LibDems 7% (-1)
Others 2% (-1)0 -
Doesn't she have a voice coach or something?PlatoSaid said:This is rather odd
https://youtu.be/0EyoKB3ZHSc
She sounds like an automaton with a glitch in its programming.0 -
Bootle is pretty close to Wales. Coincidence? I think not!Mortimer said:
Con gain Pontypridd?TheScreamingEagles said:Westminster VI from Welsh Barometer this morning:
Lab 35% (+1)
Con 29% (+6)
PC 13% (-3)
UKIP 14% (-2)
LibDems 7% (-1)
Others 2% (-1)0 -
Colour me shocked, the MSM have really gone WTF over the Mary Berry story, they must be virtue signalling. Waycist!0
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Difficult to imagine Corbyn beating Brown, Miliband.HYUFD said:
So Tories up 2% on the general election, Labour and UKIP essentially unchangedTheScreamingEagles said:
I think he'll get around Foot levels, but it almost depends how ruthlessly the Tories play and deep they're prepared to march into trad Labour territory.0 -
Agent Smith sent to the rescue of Agent Corbyn?MaxPB said:
Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/
Argclu would have polled better than Smith, surely?0 -
On the new boundaries these numbers produce 15 Labour and 10 Tories from Wales. A disaster for Labour of almost Scottish proportions making it ever more difficult for them to win an overall majority.SimonStClare said:
Arf - 'Owen Smith less popular in Wales than Jeremy Corbyn' - Fine fellows those Welsh...TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/0 -
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I wonder if she's trying to "do a Trump". Totally weird.PlatoSaid said:0 -
The only viable alternative to Corbyn before 2020 remains John McDonnell in my viewMortimer said:
Agent Smith sent to the rescue of Agent Corbyn?MaxPB said:
Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/
Argclu would have polled better than Smith, surely?0 -
Indeed and the boundary changes may be significant tooGardenwalker said:
Difficult to imagine Corbyn beating Brown, Miliband.HYUFD said:
So Tories up 2% on the general election, Labour and UKIP essentially unchangedTheScreamingEagles said:
I think he'll get around Foot levels, but it almost depends how ruthlessly the Tories play and deep they're prepared to march into trad Labour territory.0 -
He will do better than Foot.. in dragging his party towards total irrelevance.Charles said:
If he does better in 2020 I guess it justifies him staying in as leader as it is clearly a great victory.HYUFD said:In his interview last night Corbyn praised Foot but said he would do 'even better', so Corbyn's benchmark it would seem is beating the 209 seats and 28% Foot got in 1983
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Perhaps it's me but is big business stiffing small businesses not exactly what the US is about as a country? Isn't it what they seek to do to the rest of the world?Gardenwalker said:
I wonder if she's trying to "do a Trump". Totally weird.PlatoSaid said:0 -
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
Very weird. I could never vote for her.Gardenwalker said:
Doesn't she have a voice coach or something?PlatoSaid said:This is rather odd
https://youtu.be/0EyoKB3ZHSc
She sounds like an automaton with a glitch in its programming.0 -
He may have worse views, but he is a credible and convincing figure, at first glance. He has more gravitas. Mao's book notwithstanding.HYUFD said:
The only viable alternative to Corbyn before 2020 remains John McDonnell in my viewMortimer said:
Agent Smith sent to the rescue of Agent Corbyn?MaxPB said:
Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/
Argclu would have polled better than Smith, surely?
If you are indeed correct, it is a fine example of the flexibility of our 'rules' rather than applying when it adds no value to understanding.Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
If PC could get act together, then Labour would be finished like Scotland. Here's hoping.Mortimer said:
Con gain Pontypridd?TheScreamingEagles said:Westminster VI from Welsh Barometer this morning:
Lab 35% (+1)
Con 29% (+6)
PC 13% (-3)
UKIP 14% (-2)
LibDems 7% (-1)
Others 2% (-1)0 -
Sited?Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
Ha! Sited!Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
What scenario do you have in mind?HYUFD said:
The only viable alternative to Corbyn before 2020 remains John McDonnell in my viewMortimer said:
Agent Smith sent to the rescue of Agent Corbyn?MaxPB said:
Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/
Argclu would have polled better than Smith, surely?
On current rules if Corbyn somehow vacates his post (death,resignation) , the PLP will nominate candidates. JMcD will not get the votes. Corbyn didn't this time.
If Corbyn is challenged again, why would JMcD enter the race?
0 -
At this rate, us Blues are going to have more MPs than Labour in both Scotland and Wales.0
-
Who knows, they could be citing it's awesome sales figures.Mortimer said:
Sited?Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
and EnglandTheScreamingEagles said:At this rate, us Blues are going to have more MPs than Labour in both Scotland and Wales.
0 -
Media and commentators overly negative on Corbyyn. Just look at elections since 2015. Labour have won handsomely in the key ones. Overall, even keel at worst. I hate Labour, but one must always look at actual results, not potential.HYUFD said:
So Tories up 2% on the general election, Labour and UKIP essentially unchangedTheScreamingEagles said:0 -
I read that as something like: Pointing to continued investment in London,Jobabob said:
Ha! Sited!Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.
Sainsbury's cited...0 -
Not flexible. Saying 'Spurs is playing tomorrow' is 100% wrong even though everyone would understand it. Robert insists on saying 'England is playing badly' etc on here - gets my goat!kle4 said:
He may have worse views, but he is a credible and convincing figure, at first glance. He has more gravitas. Mao's book notwithstanding.HYUFD said:
The only viable alternative to Corbyn before 2020 remains John McDonnell in my viewMortimer said:
Agent Smith sent to the rescue of Agent Corbyn?MaxPB said:
Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/
Argclu would have polled better than Smith, surely?
If you are indeed correct, it is a fine example of the flexibility of our 'rules' rather than applying when it adds no value to understanding.Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
I realise there's uncertainty about this, so let me be clear.
Those who refuse to acknowledge the fewer/lesser difference will, under a Morris Dancer government, be sent for mandatory re-education.0 -
This proves there are FEWER experts around today. My grammar is LESS than perfect, mind!Innocent_Abroad said:
Only experts disregard the fact that our schoolteachers possessed absolute truth, or at least canes...Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
0 -
Did you see my long piece on the difference between the customs union and the single market?DavidL said:
Yes. According to that Labour should be in the low 20s at best but they are not. And they had local by election wins last night. My suspicion is that despite the obsession on here most of the population have either made or accepted the decision on Brexit and moved on to more important matters. Like GBBO.SquareRoot said:
And yet Mori has them at 34%..PlatoSaid said:David Jack
More than half those who voted Lab in 2015 and backed Leave have ditched their support for the party. Via @thetimes https://t.co/SoTCZfrzCx0 -
Although we have the second lowest deportation rate in the EU (albeit with a bigger base number), so that can't be the whole story.Paul_Bedfordshire said:
She didnt have full control of the home office policy. The ECJ and ECHR did.foxinsoxuk said:
Just 12 056 enforced deportations in 2015, when Mrs May had full control of the Home Office.Paul_Bedfordshire said:Report on radio this morning about a lorry load of illegal immigrants stopped on the M1 by police causing chaos. Apparently they called 16 ambulances which virtually blocked a slip road in case they had got hurt in the back of the lorry.
Maybe I'm dumb but isn't that just a tiny bit over the top. Whats wrong with a minibus? No wonder our public services are in debt.
Why is she regarded as competent by PB Tories?0 -
+ @RobDGardenwalker said:
I read that as something like: Pointing to continued investment in London,Jobabob said:
Ha! Sited!Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.
Sainsbury's cited...
Ha! Yes I realise it wasn't actually grammatically incorrect but as I hadn't intended that meaning I thought it only gentlemanly to fess up!! (Particularly given the topic!)0 -
It all seems complicated, but apparently they won! I don't understand it.tlg86 said:
I don't know how things work with by elections in PR seats, but Labour's share of first preferences actually fell in Coatbridge:Dixie said:An outstanding night for Labour at local elections. A win in Scotland, in the South and Midlands. The party continues to reach vote shares that they did under Brown/Miliband, within MOE. The party is not dead under Corbyn, it is different. Likely unelectable in 2020 but they won't die. Also, as someone on here said, Lib Dem revival can take enough votes off Tories for Labour to slip through in some elections. All mayors will be Labour. They are strong.
To kill them they need to reach Scottish vote shares - 15% or so to bump them off. Unlikely.
https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/7790875409304453120 -
I think British English may be the exception here. I am pretty sure the Canadians, Australians and New Zealanders refer to teams in the singular.Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.
0 -
Key point there is current rules. Corbyn is likely not going to step down until he has control over NEC, and can change the leadership election rules to reduce nominations threshold to 5% for example. Anyway, the PLP would be wise to accept JMcD in place of Corbyn. He would stand a better chance in 2020 as he could at least be taken more seriously, even if his ideas are ultimately likely to prove too unpalatable.Jonathan said:
What scenario do you have in mind?HYUFD said:
The only viable alternative to Corbyn before 2020 remains John McDonnell in my viewMortimer said:
Agent Smith sent to the rescue of Agent Corbyn?MaxPB said:
Owen whatshisface is less popular in Wales than Jez. Perfect candidate from a Tory point of view. So useless that he has legitimised Corbyn's leadership with an even bigger mandate from the members.TheScreamingEagles said:Theresa May has helped lift support for the Conservative party in Wales to its highest level for six years. This is the stand-out finding from the latest Welsh Political Barometer poll, the first opinion poll to be conducted in Wales since the change of Prime Minister.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2016-09-23/owen-smith-less-popular-in-wales-than-jeremy-corbyn-as-tories-cut-labours-lead/
Argclu would have polled better than Smith, surely?
On current rules if Corbyn somehow vacates his post (death,resignation) , the PLP will nominate candidates. JMcD will not get the votes. Corbyn didn't this time.
If Corbyn is challenged again, why would JMcD enter the race?0 -
Like Labour did a few years ago. Times change quickly. Watch out for hubris.RobD said:
and EnglandTheScreamingEagles said:At this rate, us Blues are going to have more MPs than Labour in both Scotland and Wales.
0 -
While we are talking grammar, I only realised the other day - at 38 - that won't is a contraction of "would not".
Was reading some Lewis Carroll and he uses wo'n't.0 -
Hubris? Never!Jonathan said:
Like Labour did a few years ago. Times change. Watch out for hubris.RobD said:
and EnglandTheScreamingEagles said:At this rate, us Blues are going to have more MPs than Labour in both Scotland and Wales.
0 -
Yep, New World English generally they are singular. However it's a stretch to call British English an exception given that it's the mother form of the language.SouthamObserver said:
I think British English may be the exception here. I am pretty sure the Canadians, Australians and New Zealanders refer to teams in the singular.Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
All Blacks definitely plural!SouthamObserver said:
I think British English may be the exception here. I am pretty sure the Canadians, Australians and New Zealanders refer to teams in the singular.Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
For your reading pleasure -- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Category:English_double_contractionsGardenwalker said:While we are talking grammar, I only realised the other day - at 38 - that won't is a contraction of "would not".
Was reading some Lewis Carroll and he uses wo'n't.0 -
I've just done a quick calculation on home ownership levels in Leaverstan * and Remainastan **another_richard said:
That sounds like a good description of the Remainastan of the inner cities.YellowSubmarine said:Leaverstan for me is that section of England and Wales between the two. Overwhelmingly Labour voting, not or never needed for a Conservative majority, sometimes depopulating, ex industrial, very reliant on the State and crucially often at least partially responsible for it's own decline. A tendency to blame everything on Thatcher, elect crap one party state councils and overly nostalgic.
You might argue that they're now increasing in population - but renting a room in Brixton or Hackney doesn't seem preferable to me to owning a house in Bolsover or Castle Point.
I'm sure we'll be told how 'creative' Remainastan is. But the word 'creative' always brings to my mind Jez from Peep Show and the lyrics from this song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CU3mc0yvRNk
Leaverstan 70%
Remainastan 31%
Of course different people have different lifestyle wishes and requirements but what does the average person with an average family and an average job want ? To own their own semi or to 'rent a flat above a shop' ?
* Leaverstan being the 12 parliamentary constituencies in the top 10 Leave areas (9 of these constituencies being Conservative incidentally).
** Remainastan being the 13 constituencies in the boroughs of Camden, Hackney, Haringey, Islington, Lambeth and Southwark.0 -
I think Australians use are instead of is as well for team sports, at least the few I know do that. It's Americans and Canadians who use is for team sports, which irritates me. Especially if I have Kindle books from the US Amazon shop as they refer to teams in the "is they playing" manner.0
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Wasn't Richmond-upon-Thames also 70% Remain?another_richard said:
I've just done a quick calculation on home ownership levels in Leaverstan * and Remainastan **another_richard said:
That sounds like a good description of the Remainastan of the inner cities.YellowSubmarine said:Leaverstan for me is that section of England and Wales between the two. Overwhelmingly Labour voting, not or never needed for a Conservative majority, sometimes depopulating, ex industrial, very reliant on the State and crucially often at least partially responsible for it's own decline. A tendency to blame everything on Thatcher, elect crap one party state councils and overly nostalgic.
You might argue that they're now increasing in population - but renting a room in Brixton or Hackney doesn't seem preferable to me to owning a house in Bolsover or Castle Point.
I'm sure we'll be told how 'creative' Remainastan is. But the word 'creative' always brings to my mind Jez from Peep Show and the lyrics from this song:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CU3mc0yvRNk
Leaverstan 70%
Remainastan 31%
Of course different people have different lifestyle wishes and requirements but what does the average person with an average family and an average job want ? To own their own semi or to 'rent a flat above a shop' ?
* Leaverstan being the 12 parliamentary constituencies in the top 10 Leave areas (9 of these constituencies being Conservative incidentally).
** Remainastan being the 13 constituencies in the boroughs of Camden, Hackney, Haringey, Islington, Lambeth and Southwark.
Edit to add: and Hammersmith & Fulham0 -
There is a law (Sod's?) that any post correcting another's grammar or spelling contains a tipee.Jobabob said:
Ha! Sited!Jobabob said:
Incorrect. You are correct to do so. Sports teams and bands are exceptions in British English. Only in US English are they singular.tlg86 said:
The one I have trouble with is talking about organisations as singular entities. I can't say Arsenal is fourth in the league, I have to say Arsenal are fourth in the league, even though I know it is wrong to do so.kle4 said:
I'm not saying there are not occasions less or fewer might seem better. But pedants who immediately respond 'you mean less/fewer' to any 'incorrect' usage usually pay no attention to context and are insisting it always makes a difference even when it doesn't in any real sense. It has never been a rigid universal rule which der youth get wrong and how dare they, and that is my principle objection to the pedants. English is more flexible than that.tlg86 said:
Mr Dancer gave a very good example the other day as to why it can make a very big difference.kle4 said:
That it is a fundamental rule sure is.tlg86 said:
It's not a f****** myth.Scott_P said:@HeidilBlake: A language expert on @BBCr4today just said the less/fewer rule is a myth and now my whole belief system has collapsed.
Now, to boldly go onto another topic, splitting infinitives is also fine...
Sainsbury's cited its new store next to White Hart Lane, where Spurs are playing tomorrow.0 -
Agreed. How difficult is it to understand:Morris_Dancer said:I realise there's uncertainty about this, so let me be clear.
Those who refuse to acknowledge the fewer/lesser difference will, under a Morris Dancer government, be sent for mandatory re-education.
If we're discussing something discrete, it's fewer.
If we're discussing something continuous, it's less.
Less water, fewer voters. You can't count water (you measure it), you can count voters.0 -
I can be less qualified or have fewer qualifications, though.rcs1000 said:
Agreed. How difficult is it to understand:Morris_Dancer said:I realise there's uncertainty about this, so let me be clear.
Those who refuse to acknowledge the fewer/lesser difference will, under a Morris Dancer government, be sent for mandatory re-education.
If we're discussing something discrete, it's fewer.
If we're discussing something continuous, it's less.
Less water, fewer voters. You can't count water (you measure it), you can count voters.0 -
Was in the Efra social club in Brixton with some mates last weekend. We mused that it would be more relaxing if still a con club. Does this mean we're getting old? #notyetthirty0
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In Scotland, London, and Wales, Labour's vote share was slightly down on 2015. In the English Districts, it was broadly the same. That's not good for an Opposition.Dixie said:
Media and commentators overly negative on Corbyyn. Just look at elections since 2015. Labour have won handsomely in the key ones. Overall, even keel at worst. I hate Labour, but one must always look at actual results, not potential.HYUFD said:
So Tories up 2% on the general election, Labour and UKIP essentially unchangedTheScreamingEagles said:0 -
Looking at the demographics of voter registration (which US states are ludicrously generous with) there has been no surge of white registration, things are in trend for Pew's prediction of the least white electorate ever.AndyJS said:
Trump is going to lose votes compared to Romney in all the places that don't matter, like Utah and Vermont. On the other hand he's going to pick up votes where needed in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan.
With no increase in non-voter participation Trump is reliant on flipping Dem voters. Dem voters who were turned out by Obama's clinical GOTV operation and need to be turned out by Trump's anemic operation that has never targeted them before.
If going into election day a sate is polling 50/50 I'm going to call it for Clinton on the strength of the GOTV.0