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  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    MaxPB said:

    Sean, the difference is that you are now in UKIP and I'm a Tory member. TMay seems to have forgotten how much the party has changed in the last ten years, both the MPs and membership.
    The vast majority of the public (consistently polling between 50%-70%) want reductions in the numbers of net immigration.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    Chris said:

    Taking those four Rasmussen polls at face value would still give St Hillary a fairly comfortable win, wouldn't it?
    Nationally Rasmussen has Trump ahead and Ohio going to Trump would be the first time it had not gone to the winning candidate since 1960 if he lost
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,809

    I must be in a small minority on here who think Theresa May is right to focus on immigration.

    This has been in the top three issues of public concern for very many years with a clear majority of the public having significant concerns about it. Such is the extent of that concern a large chunk of the electorate was prepared to take a big risk in casting their votes on 23rd June in the hope of bringing it under control.

    It may well be we become a high immigration country in future, where that is both accepted and commands popular support. But, in my view, that will only ever take place when voters feel they are in control of both the quantity and parameters of it through the ballot box.
    There are ways to reduce immigration within the single market, it means making hard decisions at home on benefits and welfare while investing heavily in education to complete the Gove reforms rather than being sidetracked by selective education.

    Within a few years the UK could see net migration down quite significantly if we make the tough decisions rather than put them off. As we diverge with the EU and our overseas trade is much less reliant on the EU we may be in a position to impose a work permit system if immigration is still too high (though without the draw of benefits and tax credits it won't be). Right now doing so and buggering about with tariffs and other barriers to trade is not a good idea. Even if the EU does have this obsession with linking free trade to immigration.
  • Ally_B said:

    I wouldn't engage with anybody if I were you CR. Since the Brexit vote I have lost well over 10% of my savings/pension as it is paid in £ but I live with my wife in Malaysia for half the year and here the other half. I truly believe anyone who voted for Brexit has the intelligence of an amoeba or doesn't give a damn about this country. Living away from the UK for a period of time made it clear to me that no one was going to give us anything, because they see us as behaving like moaning minnies for many years and that any trade deals we negotiate will be on worse terms that we currently have or be with partners that have no real beneficial impact to us.

    The only 'traitors' posting here are those who sold out our country to those who promised much but could deliver zero. Obviously they are not 'traitors' as such but perhaps people who would benefit from 'reeducation', if we can afford that. But then of course we can, the Conservative Party symbol is the 'Magic Money Tree' that is going to pay for all this.
    'they see us as behaving like moaning minnies'

    they probably do after having met you.

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,809

    I don't there exists the numbers or the appetite for that sort of move at the moment.
    Not right now, but I think if the autumn 2017 figures are poor then she could be in trouble. The Tories trashing their economic record over immigration might not be a good way to head into an election.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,462
    Ally_B said:

    I wouldn't engage with anybody if I were you CR. Since the Brexit vote I have lost well over 10% of my savings/pension as it is paid in £ but I live with my wife in Malaysia for half the year and here the other half. I truly believe anyone who voted for Brexit has the intelligence of an amoeba or doesn't give a damn about this country. Living away from the UK for a period of time made it clear to me that no one was going to give us anything, because they see us as behaving like moaning minnies for many years and that any trade deals we negotiate will be on worse terms that we currently have or be with partners that have no real beneficial impact to us.

    The only 'traitors' posting here are those who sold out our country to those who promised much but could deliver zero. Obviously they are not 'traitors' as such but perhaps people who would benefit from 'reeducation', if we can afford that. But then of course we can, the Conservative Party symbol is the 'Magic Money Tree' that is going to pay for all this.
    Do you truly believe that comparing people to amoeba is going to make them take your argument seriously?
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    MaxPB said:

    Not right now, but I think if the autumn 2017 figures are poor then she could be in trouble. The Tories trashing their economic record over immigration might not be a good way to head into an election.
    Against Corbyn it doesn't particularly matter what Theresa May does.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340

    No problem. Happy to do so.

    Will you also commit to dial down the invective on your side as well?
    I have nothing to dial down.

    Remember, this is your hobby horse and you have to make this work. I continue to regard the Leave campaign as being one of cretinous malevolence, the malign consequences of which are (entirely predictably) coursing their way through our political bloodstream. Leavers have to work out how to change that perception. For the last four months they've been doing their level best to reinforce it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896

    They do yes but on terms that are favourable to them rather than the UK . Countries trying to achieve a trade deal with the UK will seek to take advantage of their perceived view that we are a weak isolated island nation with a weak currency .

    They do yes but on terms that are favourable to them rather than the UK . Countries trying to achieve a trade deal with the UK will seek to take advantage of their perceived view that we are a weak isolated island nation with a weak currency .
    Any trade deal will see a nation try to benefit its own interests first but the UK also exports over £4 billion of goods and services to Canada, a deal would benefit both our nations. The collapse of the EU-Canada deal as MaxPB suggests is also increasingly going to make it look like the UK rather than the EU is a global, internationalist power, a 21st century David to the EU's Goliath, even if there is some short-term pain
  • The Telegraph: Ministers snub life sciences industry’s report on Brexit. http://google.com/newsstand/s/CBIw8YHEjTA
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    MaxPB said:

    Not right now, but I think if the autumn 2017 figures are poor then she could be in trouble. The Tories trashing their economic record over immigration might not be a good way to head into an election.
    The threat to her is losing both Carney and Hammond, possibly in a semi-coordinated way in quick succession, not from her own backbench MPs.

    But, both of them know the severe consequences of taking any action like that.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,858
    HYUFD said:

    Trump today effectively said he would tear up TPP, while his trade adviser has said he would do a deal with the UK ahead of the EU
    Clinton also said she would tear up TPP, but that's probably posturing. MY point is that even with it being a cornerstone of US foreign policy, it's difficult to get the TPP into light of day. How much difficult will it be to get a meaningful UK trade deal that has no urgency.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,462

    I don't there exists the numbers or the appetite for that sort of move at the moment.
    i think there's a prevailing assumption here that the politicians and voters as a whole view the interests of the City and multinational companies as paramount.

    I think that assumption is incorrect.
  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133

    I have nothing to dial down.

    Remember, this is your hobby horse and you have to make this work. I continue to regard the Leave campaign as being one of cretinous malevolence, the malign consequences of which are (entirely predictably) coursing their way through our political bloodstream. Leavers have to work out how to change that perception. For the last four months they've been doing their level best to reinforce it.
    That's not invective?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    MaxPB said:

    There are ways to reduce immigration within the single market, it means making hard decisions at home on benefits and welfare while investing heavily in education to complete the Gove reforms rather than being sidetracked by selective education.

    Within a few years the UK could see net migration down quite significantly if we make the tough decisions rather than put them off. As we diverge with the EU and our overseas trade is much less reliant on the EU we may be in a position to impose a work permit system if immigration is still too high (though without the draw of benefits and tax credits it won't be). Right now doing so and buggering about with tariffs and other barriers to trade is not a good idea. Even if the EU does have this obsession with linking free trade to immigration.
    Decisions on benefits and welfare and education will do next to nothing to reduce immigration from Eastern Europe given their gdp per capita will still be significantly lower than ours, that requires implementation of some controls which was what Leave voters voted for
  • The Independent: Ukip's biggest donor backs former Nigel Farage aide Raheem Kassam to be next party leader. http://google.com/newsstand/s/CBIw1-fKjTA
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454

    I have nothing to dial down.

    Remember, this is your hobby horse and you have to make this work. I continue to regard the Leave campaign as being one of cretinous malevolence, the malign consequences of which are (entirely predictably) coursing their way through our political bloodstream. Leavers have to work out how to change that perception. For the last four months they've been doing their level best to reinforce it.
    I really enjoy seeing your discomfort at having your false prophet "the EU" defrocked.

  • JonathanDJonathanD Posts: 2,400
    edited October 2016

    The Telegraph: Ministers snub life sciences industry’s report on Brexit. http://google.com/newsstand/s/CBIw8YHEjTA

    Jeez. Still we absolutely are on for Soft Brexit.

    “It was basically the industry whining about Brexit and it was not very constructive and has gone straight into the hopper,” Government sources said.

    A senior figure in the pharmaceuticals industry said: “We heard some feedback that it didn’t go down well, which is disappointing. The message we heard was: ‘You guys don’t get it, Brexit means Brexit.’"
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    MaxPB said:

    Not right now, but I think if the autumn 2017 figures are poor then she could be in trouble. The Tories trashing their economic record over immigration might not be a good way to head into an election.
    Tory voters and members all put controlling immigration above all else, they are even prepared to accept some short-term pain to achieve that, opposing her on this would be as successful as the Wets were against Thatcher in the early years of her premiership
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    Ally_B said:

    I wouldn't engage with anybody if I were you CR. Since the Brexit vote I have lost well over 10% of my savings/pension as it is paid in £ but I live with my wife in Malaysia for half the year and here the other half. I truly believe anyone who voted for Brexit has the intelligence of an amoeba or doesn't give a damn about this country. Living away from the UK for a period of time made it clear to me that no one was going to give us anything, because they see us as behaving like moaning minnies for many years and that any trade deals we negotiate will be on worse terms that we currently have or be with partners that have no real beneficial impact to us.

    The only 'traitors' posting here are those who sold out our country to those who promised much but could deliver zero. Obviously they are not 'traitors' as such but perhaps people who would benefit from 'reeducation', if we can afford that. But then of course we can, the Conservative Party symbol is the 'Magic Money Tree' that is going to pay for all this.
    I'm sorry you feel that way.

    I hope you understand if I say I will continue to choose for myself who I engage with on this debate, and on what terms.
  • NoEasyDay said:

    The mandate is not wafer thin, did you not see Sunils post on this matter.
    http://www2.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2016/10/18/the-nearest-run-thing/
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    NoEasyDay said:

    I really enjoy seeing your discomfort at having your false prophet "the EU" defrocked.

    Im not a fan of the EU, never mind seeing it as a prophet. The choice was between highly unattractive and morally bankrupt.
  • Sean_F said:

    i think there's a prevailing assumption here that the politicians and voters as a whole view the interests of the City and multinational companies as paramount.

    I think that assumption is incorrect.
    Well voters certainly don't.

    And its really not a good idea for the Conservatives to become viewed as the party of the Philip Greens and Fred Goodwins.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,809
    edited October 2016
    @Casino_Royale Mark Carney will be gone in mid-2017 anyway. There is no way he sticks around, even though Brexit is probably the financial challenge of a lifetime, a good central banker could make themselves into a rock star at the end of it.

    The threat isn't from resignation, it's from a poor outlook. May will also have her hands tied by the OBR which won't be overly optimistic like the Treasury during Brown's twilight years.

    If the November 2017 figures are poor based on the PM not being able to negotiate free trade in goods and financial services I think she will br under serious pressure to then do whatever it takes to get it done, if she can't then the party will begin to look elsewhere.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176

    It was from people who voted Leave, albeit they wanted the EEA option.
    So you keep saying. That doesn't mean I'm wrong.
  • MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    I have nothing to dial down.

    Remember, this is your hobby horse and you have to make this work. I continue to regard the Leave campaign as being one of cretinous malevolence, the malign consequences of which are (entirely predictably) coursing their way through our political bloodstream. Leavers have to work out how to change that perception. For the last four months they've been doing their level best to reinforce it.
    Leavers have only one obligation, and that is to try to make a success of Brexit. We have absolutely no obligation to change your perceptions, and frankly at this point, given your cretinous malevolence, don't give a shit about them.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,087
    MaxPB said:

    There are ways to reduce immigration within the single market, it means making hard decisions at home on benefits and welfare while investing heavily in education to complete the Gove reforms rather than being sidetracked by selective education.

    Within a few years the UK could see net migration down quite significantly if we make the tough decisions rather than put them off. As we diverge with the EU and our overseas trade is much less reliant on the EU we may be in a position to impose a work permit system if immigration is still too high (though without the draw of benefits and tax credits it won't be). Right now doing so and buggering about with tariffs and other barriers to trade is not a good idea. Even if the EU does have this obsession with linking free trade to immigration.
    Immigration has been high because our economy has been doing relatively well, the U.K. was seen as a friendly tolerant place, and the wages they could earn in £ were high valued against the cost of living back home.

    Brexit campaigners appear well on the way to curing most of these 'problems' without the hassle of actually having to leave the EU.

    The only trick they appear to have missed is changing our national language from English to Welsh.
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454

    Im not a fan of the EU, never mind seeing it as a prophet. The choice was between highly unattractive and morally bankrupt.
    The EU is both "unattractive and morally bankrupt"

    Which one was the vote remain for bankrupt or unattractive.
  • Irish Examiner: Poll sees Micháel Martin stay as most popular leader, but Fine Gael are ahead of Fianna Fáil. http://google.com/newsstand/s/CBIwt4TLjTA
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    MaxPB said:

    @Casino_Royale Mark Carney will be gone in mid-2017 anyway. There is no way he sticks around, even though Brexit is probably the financial challenge of a lifetime, a good central banker could make themselves into a rock star at the end of it.

    The threat isn't from resignation, it's from a poor outlook. May will also have her hands tied by the OBR which won't be overly optimistic like the Treasury during Brown's twilight years.

    If the November 2017 figures are poor based on the PM not being able to negotiate free trade in goods and financial services I think she will br under serious pressure to then do whatever it takes to get it done, if she can't then the party will begin to look elsewhere.

    No-one is now forecasting a recession during the Brexit period. There will be lower growth but higher exports from the lower pound will see us through.

    I'd wait to hear more from the autumn statement first. It should start to outline the Government's MTFS.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    FF43 said:

    Clinton also said she would tear up TPP, but that's probably posturing. MY point is that even with it being a cornerstone of US foreign policy, it's difficult to get the TPP into light of day. How much difficult will it be to get a meaningful UK trade deal that has no urgency.

    The problem with TPP is that so many nations are involved, as with an EU-UK deal, UK deals one on one with other nations will be easier to agree
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176

    I have nothing to dial down.

    Remember, this is your hobby horse and you have to make this work. I continue to regard the Leave campaign as being one of cretinous malevolence, the malign consequences of which are (entirely predictably) coursing their way through our political bloodstream. Leavers have to work out how to change that perception. For the last four months they've been doing their level best to reinforce it.
    I see we remain in our quandary then.
  • Sean_F said:

    i think there's a prevailing assumption here that the politicians and voters as a whole view the interests of the City and multinational companies as paramount.

    I think that assumption is incorrect.

    Voters do like the tax money these companies and institutions generate. Pensioners especially.

  • glwglw Posts: 10,349
    MaxPB said:

    I think the looming failure of CETA has changed a few minds overseas about Brexit. Most can't believe that a few million people in Belgium have brought an end to 7 years of talks for a deal that it favourable to both nations. At least that's from a couple of Americans I know at work.

    Events since we voted have supported our view of the EU as being dysfunctional and not as trade friendly as it claims to be. The problems with CETA and TTIP, and the massive tax demand from Apple are much more effective at persuading our North American friends that we Brits haven't gone bonkers than anything a politician could say. If the EU keeps this record up we'll soon have leaders of other countries saying "we can't believe you stayed in so long".
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,809
    HYUFD said:

    Decisions on benefits and welfare and education will do next to nothing to reduce immigration from Eastern Europe given their gdp per capita will still be significantly lower than ours, that requires implementation of some controls which was what Leave voters voted for

    Actually it will, if we stop paying low paid people to keep up with the cost of living in the UK then the gulf in per capita GDP is much lower. On a nominal basis the gap is around 4.5x, on a PPP basis the gap is under 2x. Our wage subsidies make the 4.5x earnings a reality for Eastern European workers. Without them they would have to cover the cost of living out of their own wages rather than housing benefit and working tax credit. People are much less likely to move to double their income than to get 4.5x their income.
  • PeterCPeterC Posts: 1,275
    edited October 2016
    MaxPB said:

    @Casino_Royale Mark Carney will be gone in mid-2017 anyway. There is no way he sticks around, even though Brexit is probably the financial challenge of a lifetime, a good central banker could make themselves into a rock star at the end of it.

    The threat isn't from resignation, it's from a poor outlook. May will also have her hands tied by the OBR which won't be overly optimistic like the Treasury during Brown's twilight years.

    If the November 2017 figures are poor based on the PM not being able to negotiate free trade in goods and financial services I think she will br under serious pressure to then do whatever it takes to get it done, if she can't then the party will begin to look elsewhere.

    Triggering A50 will be red meat to the true believers. A simultaneous application to rejoin EFTA would draw the sting of the A50 deadline and secure current trading arrangements for as long as required. The timeline would then be to leave the EU political union by 2019 and negotiate a FTA sometime before 2030.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,673
    PeterC said:



    TM is stringing the Hard Brexit set along imo. Remember, she did vote Remain. The issue will go into the long grass with an EFTA/EEA interim arrangement of unspecified duration. That does not mean we do not require an International Trade ministry - just that it may not have much to do for several years. Leaving the EU is a long-term project. TM is not daft enough to allow Fox to drive the economy over a cliff for purely ideological reasons.

    It's difficult to be sure - either the Government i being unusually successful at concealing it clear strategy, or it really doesn't have a clear strategy. As one of the European leaders said, the impression is that they are not so much preparing to negotiate with the EU as working to negotiate with themselves.

    But I'd think there is scope for a deal on benefits which can be presented as restricting immigration, because many voters do believe that immigration is driven by our benefits. Freedom of benefit access is not one of the 4 freedoms that the EU see as sacred. Making benefits in the first 6 months contribution-dependent, say, would probably be saleable to both EU and voters, though there's an obvious snag for people leaving school/uni, who by definition don't have a significant contributions record.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    HYUFD said:

    Any trade deal will see a nation try to benefit its own interests first but the UK also exports over £4 billion of goods and services to Canada, a deal would benefit both our nations. The collapse of the EU-Canada deal as MaxPB suggests is also increasingly going to make it look like the UK rather than the EU is a global, internationalist power, a 21st century David to the EU's Goliath, even if there is some short-term pain
    That is why the EU overplayed its hand today: some Canadians are now starting to understand why we voted to Leave.
  • MaxPB said:

    @Casino_Royale Mark Carney will be gone in mid-2017 anyway. There is no way he sticks around, even though Brexit is probably the financial challenge of a lifetime, a good central banker could make themselves into a rock star at the end of it.

    The threat isn't from resignation, it's from a poor outlook. May will also have her hands tied by the OBR which won't be overly optimistic like the Treasury during Brown's twilight years.

    So far the OBR has produced predictions which met Osborne's requirements.

    It predicted that in 2015 Britain's current account deficit would be £2bn and government debt would be 67% of GDP:

    http://budgetresponsibility.org.uk/docs/junebudget_annexc.pdf

    Actual results were £100bn current account deficit and 84% government debt.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,462
    MaxPB said:

    @Casino_Royale Mark Carney will be gone in mid-2017 anyway. There is no way he sticks around, even though Brexit is probably the financial challenge of a lifetime, a good central banker could make themselves into a rock star at the end of it.

    The threat isn't from resignation, it's from a poor outlook. May will also have her hands tied by the OBR which won't be overly optimistic like the Treasury during Brown's twilight years.

    If the November 2017 figures are poor based on the PM not being able to negotiate free trade in goods and financial services I think she will br under serious pressure to then do whatever it takes to get it done, if she can't then the party will begin to look elsewhere.

    Against Corbyn, May won't ever be doing badly, unless she's revealed to be a child molester.

    The Conservatives may well be level-pegging in the polls at some point in mid-term, they may lose ground in local elections, but only on the scale of the 1980s, not the 1990's.
  • MTimT said:

    Leavers have only one obligation, and that is to try to make a success of Brexit. We have absolutely no obligation to change your perceptions, and frankly at this point, given your cretinous malevolence, don't give a shit about them.

    Leavers won't make a success of Brexit by alienating - in word and deed - the wealth creating Remainers.

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    HYUFD said:

    Tory voters and members all put controlling immigration above all else, they are even prepared to accept some short-term pain to achieve that, opposing her on this would be as successful as the Wets were against Thatcher in the early years of her premiership
    I think tackling the challenge of mass immigration, now, by May, could be seen as a political challenge comparable to tackling the level of trade union influence of the mid-late 1970s by Thatcher.

    Very few thought it could be done, but done it was.
  • The Jerusalem Post - Brooklyn congregation dedicates sukkah to refugees. http://google.com/newsstand/s/CBIwmqW3jTA
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,462

    Voters do like the tax money these companies and institutions generate. Pensioners especially.

    Perhaps. But, they don't like to be kicked around.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176

    Leavers won't make a success of Brexit by alienating - in word and deed - the wealth creating Remainers.

    It's strange, you talk about Leavers attitudes to Remainers in the same way how some Tories talk about the attitudes of Labour voters to big business.

    Funny old world.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906
    HYUFD said:

    Nationally Rasmussen has Trump ahead and Ohio going to Trump would be the first time it had not gone to the winning candidate since 1960 if he lost
    Be that as it may, it's not going to be sufficient this time for Trump to win Ohio, if he loses Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, as those Rasmussen state polls indicate (taken at face value).

    And maybe there is an inconsistency between Rasmussen's national and state polling. But their national polling does seem quite erratic - the last five polls have included a Clinton lead of 7 and two Trump leads of 2, which seems like a larger variation than would be expected.
  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133
    JonathanD said:

    Jeez. Still we absolutely are on for Soft Brexit.

    “It was basically the industry whining about Brexit and it was not very constructive and has gone straight into the hopper,” Government sources said.
    That reads like the government is going to ignore any vested interest group that comes across as wanting to overturn or obstruct our democratic decision. This is obviously a good thing.
  • Sean_F said:

    Perhaps. But, they don't like to be kicked around.

    They need the wedge. They won't like it if it goes.

  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,462
    Chris said:

    Be that as it may, it's not going to be sufficient this time for Trump to win Ohio, if he loses Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, as those Rasmussen state polls indicate (taken at face value).

    And maybe there is an inconsistency between Rasmussen's national and state polling. But their national polling does seem quite erratic - the last five polls have included a Clinton lead of 7 and two Trump leads of 2, which seems like a larger variation than would be expected.
    If Trump wins Ohio but loses North Carolina, he's back where he started.

    IMHO, Trump is almost bound to lose, but it won't be a blowout.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,176
    MTimT said:

    Leavers have only one obligation, and that is to try to make a success of Brexit. We have absolutely no obligation to change your perceptions, and frankly at this point, given your cretinous malevolence, don't give a shit about them.
    Our one and only obligation is to do whatever is necessary to win back the respect of the likes of Alastair Meeks, who will under absolutely no circumstances whatsoever otherwise compromise with us.

    Then, and only then, might he do us the great privilege of at least listening to us.
  • Hindustan Times: American couple pledges $380-million art donation to France. http://google.com/newsstand/s/CBIwu9CQjTA
  • It's strange, you talk about Leavers attitudes to Remainers in the same way how some Tories talk about the attitudes of Labour voters to big business.

    Funny old world.

    I merely point out self-evident truth. And I do so as a convinced capitalist of long-standing.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    MaxPB said:

    Actually it will, if we stop paying low paid people to keep up with the cost of living in the UK then the gulf in per capita GDP is much lower. On a nominal basis the gap is around 4.5x, on a PPP basis the gap is under 2x. Our wage subsidies make the 4.5x earnings a reality for Eastern European workers. Without them they would have to cover the cost of living out of their own wages rather than housing benefit and working tax credit. People are much less likely to move to double their income than to get 4.5x their income.
    Such cuts to the living wage and benefits would hit the low paid native population too while Eastern Europeans are still going to be attracted by the chance to double their income
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187

    Leavers won't make a success of Brexit by alienating - in word and deed - the wealth creating Remainers.

    As is increasingly apparent here, some Remainers are entirely capable of alienating themselves. They've been thinking themselves out of Britain and our common ground since June 24th
  • 619619 Posts: 1,784
    OllyT said:

    The "add 3" to Clinton was surely because these are Rasmussen polls which are widely seen as having an inbuilt GOP bias.
    yup. If RAS is like that, the reality is a big clinton lead
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896

    That is why the EU overplayed its hand today: some Canadians are now starting to understand why we voted to Leave.
    Yes, I expect even the Chinese and Indians and Japanese will have raised an eyebrow over the farce of the collapse of this EU Canada trade deal
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454

    Leavers won't make a success of Brexit by alienating - in word and deed - the wealth creating Remainers.

    The wealth creating remainers are only interested in wealth. morals are not in any priority queue. Promise them a few bob down the week and they are back in your team.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896

    I think tackling the challenge of mass immigration, now, by May, could be seen as a political challenge comparable to tackling the level of trade union influence of the mid-late 1970s by Thatcher.

    Very few thought it could be done, but done it was.
    Exactly
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187
    edited October 2016

    Our one and only obligation is to do whatever is necessary to win back the respect of the likes of Alastair Meeks, who will under absolutely no circumstances whatsoever otherwise compromise with us.

    Then, and only then, might he do us the great privilege of at least listening to us.
    Because if the vote showed us anything it is surely that the people we need to help in this society are professional London dwelling neo-liberals who have done so badly out of politics in the last 45 years...
  • perdixperdix Posts: 1,806
    surbiton said:

    You are just revealing your ignorance. She could do whatever she pleased with non-EU nationals.
    You are just revealing your prejudice. She could not do as she pleased with EU nationals.

  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133

    Our one and only obligation is to do whatever is necessary to win back the respect of the likes of Alastair Meeks, who will under absolutely no circumstances whatsoever otherwise compromise with us.

    Then, and only then, might he do us the great privilege of at least listening to us.
    We all now have an obligation to make a success of the Leave vote, even those who didn't want it, because the alternative is wanting the country to fail.
  • Mortimer said:

    As is increasingly apparent here, some Remainers are entirely capable of alienating themselves. They've been thinking themselves out of Britain and our common ground since June 24th

    If you keep telling people how appalling they are they'll get the message. That applies on both sides of the argument, of course, but the Remainers are the wealth creators. Even the despised Mr Meeks.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    edited October 2016
    Chris said:

    Be that as it may, it's not going to be sufficient this time for Trump to win Ohio, if he loses Florida, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, as those Rasmussen state polls indicate (taken at face value).

    And maybe there is an inconsistency between Rasmussen's national and state polling. But their national polling does seem quite erratic - the last five polls have included a Clinton lead of 7 and two Trump leads of 2, which seems like a larger variation than would be expected.
    As an earlier posted poll showed Florida and especially Pennsylvania saw Trump outperform his poll rating in the primaries far more than he did nationally, so those 2 states have a higher than average share of shy Trump voters. Rasmussen had Clinton ahead after the first debate and the first groping allegations but Trump is now back ahead
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    edited October 2016
    Mortimer said:



    As is increasingly apparent here, some Remainers are entirely capable of alienating themselves. They've been thinking themselves out of Britain and our common ground since June 24th

    I guess they misunderstood all the friendly, inclusive 'Remoaner traitors , we won, get over it' stuff. It was all bridge building after all.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187

    If you keep telling people how appalling they are they'll get the message. That applies on both sides of the argument, of course, but the Remainers are the wealth creators. Even the despised Mr Meeks.

    I'm afraid that is utter balls. Leave won precisely because an awful lot of wealth creators joined forces with our brothers and sisters across the nation and voted for it.

    Myself included.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Sometimes I wish both Remainers and Leavers would both give it a rest . Arguably there are more important things than Brexit.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187
    Jonathan said:

    I guess they misunderstood all the friendly, inclusive 'Remoaner traitors , we won, get over it' stuff. It was all bridge building after all.
    Some of my most vehement Remainer friends have accepted the loss and moved on.

    Remoaners didn't need to be alienated - they achieved it all on their own...
  • welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,464
    edited October 2016
    IanB2 said:

    Immigration has been high because our economy has been doing relatively well, the U.K. was seen as a friendly tolerant place, and the wages they could earn in £ were high valued against the cost of living back home.

    Brexit campaigners appear well on the way to curing most of these 'problems' without the hassle of actually having to leave the EU.

    The only trick they appear to have missed is changing our national language from English to Welsh.
    Syniad da. Dim problem o gwbl dw'n siwr. :-)
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454
    Jonathan said:

    Sometimes I wish both Remainers and Leavers would both give it a rest . Arguably there are more important things than Brexit.

    Many things more important

    BUT winding up Remainers like TSE is SO FUNNY.
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    HYUFD said:

    As an earlier posted poll showed Florida and especially Pennsylvania saw Trump outperform his poll rating in the primaries far more than he did nationally, so those 2 states have a higher than average share of shy Trump voters. Rasmussen had Clinton ahead after the first debate and the first groping allegations but Trump is now back ahead
    The earlier post showed Trump overpolling in a lot of other states that are currently in the red column.

    The path to the White House for Donald looks less and less likely.

    His #Trumpstone promises today will not have changed the narrative.
  • Mortimer said:

    I'm afraid that is utter balls. Leave won precisely because an awful lot of wealth creators joined forces with our brothers and sisters across the nation and voted for it.

    Myself included.

    Some did. Most didn't. The non-productive won it for Leave.

  • Good Night to my fellow Traitors ( as well as victorious patriots ). Another interesting thread discussion. With every passing day I see June 24th as a cultural event as much if not more so that an political one. A sort of Black Mirror image of 1997 - the real millennium in Britain - which of course in it's way unsettled many was exclusive in it's inclusively. If things go very badly - and that isn't certain yet - it could be like an internalised 9/11. With the attack, response to the attack, counter attack and so on being internalised. Durkheim said you can't have a Culture without a Cult. Our old Cult is in internal exile. Our new Cult can't, as yet, syncretise what brought the old Cult down much less the old Cult it's self. Perhaps we've seen the last resurrection of the dying god in this cycle ?
  • 619619 Posts: 1,784
    HYUFD said:

  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187
    SeanT said:

    Indescribable snobbery. Just unbelievable. If you were in front of me now I would punch you in the face.
    I've often wondered if universal benefits are the enemy of nation state democracy - now I am far more concerned that metropolitanism has a detrimental impact.
  • Some did. Most didn't. The non-productive won it for Leave.

    LEAVE 52%
    REMAIN 48%

    :innocent:
  • It was from people who voted Leave, albeit they wanted the EEA option.
    Apparently TSE saw what he wanted to see while he was cheering for May during the brief leadership skirmish.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,833
    edited October 2016

    Rubbish
    Agreed. But I do think TM would be advised to get on with A50 ASAP as most of the "speculation" is coming from the vacuum being created by being in a no mans land between people voting to leave and nothing much happening.

    Is there really any difference between invoking A50 in November 16 Vs March 17?
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454

    Good Night to my fellow Traitors ( as well as victorious patriots ). Another interesting thread discussion. With every passing day I see June 24th as a cultural event as much if not more so that an political one. A sort of Black Mirror image of 1997 - the real millennium in Britain - which of course in it's way unsettled many was exclusive in it's inclusively. If things go very badly - and that isn't certain yet - it could be like an internalised 9/11. With the attack, response to the attack, counter attack and so on being internalised. Durkheim said you can't have a Culture without a Cult. Our old Cult is in internal exile. Our new Cult can't, as yet, syncretise what brought the old Cult down much less the old Cult it's self. Perhaps we've seen the last resurrection of the dying god in this cycle ?

    Its OK to drink.

    but try to punctuate.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    NoEasyDay said:

    The wealth creating remainers are only interested in wealth. morals are not in any priority queue. Promise them a few bob down the week and they are back in your team.

    (you have to imagine me doing a Foghorn Leghorn accent here)

    Son, it's a lot more than a few bob, I can assure you...

  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    edited October 2016
    The ongoing Brexit debate could be killed stone dead by a competent government with a plan that went some way to address the concerns of those who voted Remain.

    What we have now is a vacuum and zero confidence. What the government does say spooks the markets and picks at wounds.

    They need to get a grip.


  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187

    Good Night to my fellow Traitors ( as well as victorious patriots ). Another interesting thread discussion. With every passing day I see June 24th as a cultural event as much if not more so that an political one. A sort of Black Mirror image of 1997 - the real millennium in Britain - which of course in it's way unsettled many was exclusive in it's inclusively. If things go very badly - and that isn't certain yet - it could be like an internalised 9/11. With the attack, response to the attack, counter attack and so on being internalised. Durkheim said you can't have a Culture without a Cult. Our old Cult is in internal exile. Our new Cult can't, as yet, syncretise what brought the old Cult down much less the old Cult it's self. Perhaps we've seen the last resurrection of the dying god in this cycle ?

    Durkheim would have suggested that what you thought was dominant culture might not have been so dominant all along.

    Blair/Osbornite metropolitanism was a minority viewpoint imposed on a nation and reinforced by fiscal scare tactics.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,273

    She was constrained by free movement of people
    On non EU? how?
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906
    HYUFD said:

    As an earlier posted poll showed Florida and especially Pennsylvania saw Trump outperform his poll rating in the primaries far more than he did nationally, so those 2 states have a higher than average share of shy Trump voters. Rasmussen had Clinton ahead after the first debate and the first groping allegations but Trump is now back ahead
    Well, that 8-9 point reduction in Clinton's lead over the past fortnight is very different from what the national polls in general have been showing. Rasmussen's figures seem erratic to me.

    Of course, you may be right that even Rasmussen's polls are underestimating Trump's support. But this school of thought does seem eerily reminiscent of the insistence that the polls were underestimating Romney's support last time.
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454
    viewcode said:

    (you have to imagine me doing a Foghorn Leghorn accent here)

    Son, it's a lot more than a few bob, I can assure you...

    Imagined and smiled....
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Jonathan said:

    The ongoing Brexit debate could be killed stone dead by a competent government with a plan that went some way to address the concerns of those who voted Remain.

    What we have now is a vacuum and zero confidence. What the government does say spooks the markets and picks at wounds.

    They need to get a grip.


    I think so too.

    May dithering while the three stooges fight amongst themselves are doing us no favours at all.

    May got 5 min at 1 o'clock in the morning on Thursday. Humiliation begins.
  • MortimerMortimer Posts: 14,187

    I think so too.

    May dithering while the three stooges fight amongst themselves are doing us no favours at all.

    May got 5 min at 1 o'clock in the morning on Thursday. Humiliation begins.
    Ironically, May will likely be attending EU summits for longer than many there this time:

    Hollande, Renzi, maybe even Merkel, might not be there next year...
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,462
    edited October 2016
    SeanT said:

    Indescribable snobbery. Just unbelievable. If you were in front of me now I would punch you in the face.
    The term used to be The Herd, or The Great Unwashed.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,188
    NoEasyDay said:

    Imagined and smiled....
    :)
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906
    Jonathan said:

    The ongoing Brexit debate could be killed stone dead by a competent government with a plan that went some way to address the concerns of those who voted Remain.

    What we have now is a vacuum and zero confidence. What the government does say spooks the markets and picks at wounds.

    They need to get a grip.


    Exactly. At this stage even a plan that didn't address those concerns would have some reassurance value. It's the complete absence of any plan, four months on from the referendum, that is so unsettling.
  • ThreeQuidderThreeQuidder Posts: 6,133

    I think so too.

    May dithering while the three stooges fight amongst themselves are doing us no favours at all.

    May got 5 min at 1 o'clock in the morning on Thursday. Humiliation begins.
    More evidence that we are right to Leave.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    I think so too.

    May dithering while the three stooges fight amongst themselves are doing us no favours at all.

    May got 5 min at 1 o'clock in the morning on Thursday. Humiliation begins.
    The more I think about the more this rot is caused by poor leadership. Trying to close down debate on the fictitious grounds that we will give our negotiating position away is weapons grade bullshit.

    You can't give a position away when you don't have one. But if you engage the brightest minds in parliament you might just figure it out and toughen yourself up ready to negotiate abroad.

    It's the bullshit that gets to me.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    tN

    The earlier post showed Trump overpolling in a lot of other states that are currently in the red column.

    The path to the White House for Donald looks less and less likely.

    His #Trumpstone promises today will not have changed the narrative.
    The states he most underperformed in were the likes of Kansas which he will win anyway and
    Virginia was his most underperforming swing state which Kaine will almost certainly slot in the Clinton column too
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896
    Chris said:

    Well, that 8-9 point reduction in Clinton's lead over the past fortnight is very different from what the national polls in general have been showing. Rasmussen's figures seem erratic to me.

    Of course, you may be right that even Rasmussen's polls are underestimating Trump's support. But this school of thought does seem eerily reminiscent of the insistence that the polls were underestimating Romney's support last time.
    RCP has Clinton's average lead down to 5% today. What did for Romney was higher than expected minority and black turnout for Obama, that will not be the case for Hillary, the black vote in particular backs her with gritted teeth. Trump meanwhile connects with the white working class in a way no candidate has done since Reagan
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,896

    I think so too.

    May dithering while the three stooges fight amongst themselves are doing us no favours at all.

    May got 5 min at 1 o'clock in the morning on Thursday. Humiliation begins.
    It was the EU which was humiliated today after the failure of CETA, not May
  • 619619 Posts: 1,784
    HYUFD said:

    RCP has Clinton's average lead down to 5% today. What did for Romney was higher than expected minority and black turnout for Obama, that will not be the case for Hillary, the black vote in particular backs her with gritted teeth. Trump meanwhile connects with the white working class in a way no candidate has done since Reagan
    But she is getting more women and more hispanics.

    He aint no regan.
  • MP_SEMP_SE Posts: 3,642
    edited October 2016
    Jonathan said:

    The more I think about the more this rot is caused by poor leadership. Trying to close down debate on the fictitious grounds that we will give our negotiating position away is weapons grade bullshit.

    You can't give a position away when you don't have one. But if you engage the brightest minds in parliament you might just figure it out and toughen yourself up ready to negotiate abroad.

    It's the bullshit that gets to me.
    Lol.

    There an awful lot of people in parliament who are far from bright.
  • 619619 Posts: 1,784
    HYUFD said:

    RCP has Clinton's average lead down to 5% today. What did for Romney was higher than expected minority and black turnout for Obama, that will not be the case for Hillary, the black vote in particular backs her with gritted teeth. Trump meanwhile connects with the white working class in a way no candidate has done since Reagan
    and its 6.1 for Rcp

    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/us/general_election_trump_vs_clinton-5491.html
  • GeoffMGeoffM Posts: 6,071
    619 said:

    But she is getting more women and more hispanics.

    He aint no regan.
    From The Sweeney?
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    HYUFD said:

    It was the EU which was humiliated today after the failure of CETA, not May
    That story had a huge downside for us. Whilst it showed the EU is broken in some ways, it showed that the trade deals that we will rely on are difficult and fragile.
  • NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454
    Chris said:

    Exactly. At this stage even a plan that didn't address those concerns would have some reassurance value. It's the complete absence of any plan, four months on from the referendum, that is so unsettling.
    What nonsense.
    How do you know there isn't a plan.
This discussion has been closed.