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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Why I’m betting that Paul Nuttall will be the next party leade

SystemSystem Posts: 11,683
edited February 2017 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Why I’m betting that Paul Nuttall will be the next party leader out

At the weekend I had a bet at 9/4 with William Hill that Paul Nuttall will be the next party leader to exit his post. That’s since tightened to 6/4 which still looks a good punt.

Read the full story here


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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    1st!
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    edited February 2017
    2nd. Like the Tories or Lib Dems in Stoke.
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    isamisam Posts: 40,929
    Diego Costa's copy of the Echo?
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,125
    The guy is a pillock.

    That said, UKIP only seem to have pillocks to choose from as leader. Give it up guys. You've had your moment in the sun. There's nothing left to do, nothing left to achieve. Go home.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    edited February 2017
    FPT but more on topic here re: Basingstoke by-election:
    justin124 said:

    Sandpit said:

    Sean_F said:

    CD13 said:

    Mr Senior,

    "No it is an anti May swing . She is poisonous to the Conservative vote'"

    Is that's why her personal ratings are so crap?

    I think she's over-rated, but you have to face facts.

    Bear in mind that Parliamentary elections (and Assembly elections) don't count. Only local by-elections are "real elections."
    Do we even know what happened in the ward in Basingstoke? Usually there's local factors behind such unusual looking swings, such as a scandal that resulted in the resignation of the councillor which caused the vacancy.
    Labour came very close to winning this ward in both 2014 and 2011 - though they have really romped home this time.
    I did a bit of digging and the councillor resigned on 5th Jan for no given reason, looks like he genuinely did just want to spend more time with his family.
    http://www.basingstokegazette.co.uk/news/15022805.Tory_councillor_resigns_position/

    The only news article in the local paper was one where Labour were campaigning against a possible school closure in the ward, as well as the introduction of fortnightly bin collections. There's also an ongoing row about proposed rising parking charges in the town centre. Maybe these are what swung the vote behind Lab this time - straightforward local politics resulting a a win for the local Opposition.
    http://www.basingstokegazette.co.uk/news/15100870.Leaflet_sparks_spat_in_lead_up_to_ballot/
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    edited February 2017
    I'm sure someone has posted this but it's brilliant. The Mail's campaign against Blair for compensating the ISIS man. Apparently the the campaign for his compensation was led by the Daily Mail! What's more it was agreed by the Conservatives.



    You really couldn't make it up

    Time for Dacre to answer some questions


    https://twitter.com/tonyblairoffice
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    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,190
    @isam for next Ukip leader!
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    isamisam Posts: 40,929
    tlg86 said:

    @isam for next Ukip leader!

    I was 200/1 w Ladbrokes once for that! Wish I had the screenshot
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    Not May? But, but, but - she personally and it was all her own fault lost a council bye-election in Basingstoke last night and is heading for fourth in Stoke & Copeland.....or something...
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    Professor Nuttall will be a great loss to UKIP and a great gain for academia.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited February 2017
    Petition to replace the House of Lords with an elected body:
    https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/170686

    Interesting that it seems to be getting more support in Tory areas so far:
    http://petitionmap.unboxedconsulting.com/?petition=170686
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    isam said:

    tlg86 said:

    @isam for next Ukip leader!

    I was 200/1 w Ladbrokes once for that! Wish I had the screenshot
    LOL! Is that because you put £100 on yourself?
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    isamisam Posts: 40,929
    Sandpit said:

    isam said:

    tlg86 said:

    @isam for next Ukip leader!

    I was 200/1 w Ladbrokes once for that! Wish I had the screenshot
    LOL! Is that because you put £100 on yourself?
    I think Shadsy did it for a joke, I didn't back it.

    I did back myself at 100/1 to win Islington South and Finsbury Park, but pulled out before the selection. Not the shrewdest bet ever placed!!
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,288
    Farron Fails Again.

    https://www.basingstoke.gov.uk/winklebury-by-election

    824 Lab, 4742 Con, LD 42. Turnout 28.5%
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    AndyJS said:

    Petition to replace the House of Lords with an elected body:
    https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/170686

    Interesting that it seems to be getting more support in Tory areas so far:
    http://petitionmap.unboxedconsulting.com/?petition=170686

    Oh for f*** sake. That last thing this country needs in the middle of Brexit and economic turmoil is a huge constitutional change in the House of Lords. Right idea long term, wrong now.
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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852
    The Supreme Court supports Mrs May's shameful minimum income law for foreign spouses

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2017/02/supreme-courts-ruling-foreign-spouses-breach-human-rights/

    This morning the court upheld a rule that forbids British citizens bringing a foreign spouse into the country unless they (the British citizen, not the foreign spouse) is earning at least £18,600 a year (or £22,400 if they have one or more children)
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    BudGBudG Posts: 711
    Todays Opinionway poll puts Macron up one point and ahead of Fillon again

    http://presicote.factoviz.com/index/more/id/qoo_lew_1
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    dr_spyn said:

    Farron Fails Again.

    https://www.basingstoke.gov.uk/winklebury-by-election

    824 Lab, 4742 Con, LD 42. Turnout 28.5%

    4742 Con ?
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    The Supreme Court supports Mrs May's shameful minimum income law for foreign spouses

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2017/02/supreme-courts-ruling-foreign-spouses-breach-human-rights/

    This morning the court upheld a rule that forbids British citizens bringing a foreign spouse into the country unless they (the British citizen, not the foreign spouse) is earning at least £18,600 a year (or £22,400 if they have one or more children)

    Why is it shameful.

    My son who married a Canadian 18 months ago took over 15 months to get the ok to join his wife in Canada from New Zealand but she has to sponsor him for three years so that he cannot claim any benefits from the government

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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2017
    Will he be stepping down to spend more time on finishing his PhD? Or to resume his professional football career...I hear Sutton Utd are looking for a new reserve goalkeeper.
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    Nuttall is a laughing stock. Apart from Farage, who else is in the queue of numpties for the spot?
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993
    Bayrou announcement today.

    I reckon he doesn't stand, but holds back on an endorsement at this time.

    Any other guesses?
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    Paul Nuttall will be the next party leader out. – Good call, his standing within the party is already in doubt and a poor by-election result for UKIP will destabilise him further.

    Suzanne Evans to step into the breach?
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    Nuttall is a laughing stock. Apart from Farage, who else is in the queue of numpties for the spot?

    I agree but the labour candidate is a disgrace. Poor Stoke - deserves so much more
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,993

    Nuttall is a laughing stock. Apart from Farage, who else is in the queue of numpties for the spot?

    I agree but the labour candidate is a disgrace. Poor Stoke - deserves so much more
    Hard to disagree with that.
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    EssexitEssexit Posts: 1,956

    AndyJS said:

    Petition to replace the House of Lords with an elected body:
    https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/170686

    Interesting that it seems to be getting more support in Tory areas so far:
    http://petitionmap.unboxedconsulting.com/?petition=170686

    Oh for f*** sake. That last thing this country needs in the middle of Brexit and economic turmoil is a huge constitutional change in the House of Lords. Right idea long term, wrong now.
    'economic turmoil'
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    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,288

    dr_spyn said:

    Farron Fails Again.

    https://www.basingstoke.gov.uk/winklebury-by-election

    824 Lab, 4742 Con, LD 42. Turnout 28.5%

    4742 Con ?
    FFS Con 472.
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    DeClareDeClare Posts: 483
    5/1 May is a terrible price, what do they think she is going to call an early election and then lose it?!
    If Corbyn is still there she wins, no matter when the election is and if it's in 2020 she's there until at least 2022.
    All four of the others could be gone by that time.
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    DixieDixie Posts: 1,221

    Paul Nuttall will be the next party leader out. – Good call, his standing within the party is already in doubt and a poor by-election result for UKIP will destabilise him further.

    Suzanne Evans to step into the breach?

    Evans would be great.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    DeClare said:

    5/1 May is a terrible price, what do they think she is going to call an early election and then lose it?!
    If Corbyn is still there she wins, no matter when the election is and if it's in 2020 she's there until at least 2022.
    All four of the others could be gone by that time.

    Sturgeon at 8-1 has appeal - 2nd Sindy ref could see her out.
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    Just so we're all clear:

    Nicola Sturgeon advises senior SNP figures: Don’t call it ‘indyref2’

    http://www.thenational.scot/news/15107713.Nicola_Sturgeon_advises_senior_SNP_figures__Don___t_call_it____indyref2___/

    so it's 'IndyRefNew'......
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    ParistondaParistonda Posts: 1,819
    FPT
    HYUFD said:

    Mr. HYUFD, assuming (as here) the French elderly turn out more, that's good for Fillon.

    Certainly to get to the runoff yes
    The difference seems to be less pronounced in France (already they have much higher turnout, 80% in 2012)

    http://www.ipsos.fr/sites/default/files/attachments/rapport_2ndtourelectionpresidentielle-6mai2012.pdf

    On page 8 of this report they break down the abstentionists by age group.

    18-24 ans: 28%
    25-34 ans: 24%
    35-44 ans: 24%
    45-59 ans: 17%
    60+ ans: 13%

    So while the elderly turn out more, the gap doesn't seem to be anywhere near as much as in the UK, so the elderly vote turnout will probably help Fillon less than it would help May for example.
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    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
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    EssexitEssexit Posts: 1,956
    Dixie said:

    Paul Nuttall will be the next party leader out. – Good call, his standing within the party is already in doubt and a poor by-election result for UKIP will destabilise him further.

    Suzanne Evans to step into the breach?

    Evans would be great.
    She wouldn't last if she somehow got elected. Farage and his allies don't exactly rate her.
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    SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,937
    edited February 2017
    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.
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    Getting rather fed up with Mikes obsession with Nuttall. I personally don't see 6-4 as value in any way shape or form, but as usual Mike is talking his own book up. Whatever happened to the great "independant" blogger Mike Smithson
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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852
    edited February 2017

    The Supreme Court supports Mrs May's shameful minimum income law for foreign spouses

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2017/02/supreme-courts-ruling-foreign-spouses-breach-human-rights/

    This morning the court upheld a rule that forbids British citizens bringing a foreign spouse into the country unless they (the British citizen, not the foreign spouse) is earning at least £18,600 a year (or £22,400 if they have one or more children)

    Why is it shameful.

    My son who married a Canadian 18 months ago took over 15 months to get the ok to join his wife in Canada from New Zealand but she has to sponsor him for three years so that he cannot claim any benefits from the government

    Any number of reasons.

    1. The income of the foreign spouse is not taken into consideration abroad, neither are the earning prospects or any job offer in the UK.
    2. Income earned outside the UK by the applicant or the spouse is not considered in the vast number of cases
    3. Savings that have not been deposited in a international bank for at least 6 months are not considered
    3. Couples living abroad which were married, and indeed had children before the act was even considered, and rightly expected to move back to the UK at a later date, are unable to relocate to the UK without passing the test
    4. Couples with a UK applicant and UK children but foreign mother allows the applicant and children to move to the UK and having to leave the spouse behind.
    5. EU (Non-UK) applicants with non-EU spouses don't have to meet the requirements.

    For the full monty check out https://www.jcwi.org.uk/policy/reports/impact-children-family-migration-rules

    To quote from the judgement:

    There can be no doubt that the MIR has caused, and will continue to cause, significant hardship to many thousands of couples who have good reasons for wanting to make their lives together in this country, and to their children. There are several types of family, not illustrated in the cases before us, upon whom the MIR will have a particularly harsh effect. These include British citizens who have been living and working abroad, have married or formed stable relationships there, and now wish to return to their home country. Many of these relationships will have been formed before the new Rules were introduced or even publicly proposed. They also include couples who formed their relationships before the changes in the Rules were introduced and who had every expectation that the foreign partner would be allowed to come here. Of particular concern is the impact upon the children of these couples, many or even most of whom will be British citizens themselves.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,005

    FPT

    HYUFD said:

    Mr. HYUFD, assuming (as here) the French elderly turn out more, that's good for Fillon.

    Certainly to get to the runoff yes
    The difference seems to be less pronounced in France (already they have much higher turnout, 80% in 2012)

    http://www.ipsos.fr/sites/default/files/attachments/rapport_2ndtourelectionpresidentielle-6mai2012.pdf

    On page 8 of this report they break down the abstentionists by age group.

    18-24 ans: 28%
    25-34 ans: 24%
    35-44 ans: 24%
    45-59 ans: 17%
    60+ ans: 13%

    So while the elderly turn out more, the gap doesn't seem to be anywhere near as much as in the UK, so the elderly vote turnout will probably help Fillon less than it would help May for example.
    True but when he is neck and neck with Macron to make the runoff that could be crucial
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    edited February 2017

    The Supreme Court supports Mrs May's shameful minimum income law for foreign spouses

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/2017/02/supreme-courts-ruling-foreign-spouses-breach-human-rights/

    This morning the court upheld a rule that forbids British citizens bringing a foreign spouse into the country unless they (the British citizen, not the foreign spouse) is earning at least £18,600 a year (or £22,400 if they have one or more children)

    Hopefully as we leave the EU there can be a more nuanced approach taken to issues like this, with more control over whom we allow and don't allow to move to and settle in the UK.

    The current system is a mess, full of anomalies, for example with regard to non-EU spouses of other (non-UK) EU countries, who are allowed to settle in the UK with no permission required. It's also not allowed to discriminate against a first-generation immigrant wanting to bring an arranged wife from abroad, as against, oh I dunno, a random example, someone born in Britain of British parents but who works abroad for a while and gets married to someone he meets there. Can't think why I chose that as an example.

    Also, income earned abroad or even a job offer in the UK isn't enough to satisfy authorities. Don't start on self-employment or company directors either, that's another nightmare.

    On the face of it, the majority of those who were petitioning the Surpreme Court were people who would clearly be a burden to the State.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/02/22/supreme-court-ruling-due-challenge-foreign-spouse-income-limit2/
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    Both Tony Blair and Paul Staines should be regarded with a great deal of caution. But if their stories are tallying, there might just be something in it.
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    isamisam Posts: 40,929
    edited February 2017

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    Like you! ;)
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    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,003
    Essexit said:

    Dixie said:

    Paul Nuttall will be the next party leader out. – Good call, his standing within the party is already in doubt and a poor by-election result for UKIP will destabilise him further.

    Suzanne Evans to step into the breach?

    Evans would be great.
    She wouldn't last if she somehow got elected. Farage and his allies don't exactly rate her.
    Yet they apparently rated Nuttall ...
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    edited February 2017
    Pulpstar said:

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    Both Tony Blair and Paul Staines should be regarded with a great deal of caution. But if their stories are tallying, there might just be something in it.
    It was probably one of the many stinking piles of poo left on the desks of incoming ministers in May 2010. Mrs May would have been acting on the advice of the civil service and home office lawyers when she signed off on the payment.

    Bliar doesn't get to walk away smelling of roses, although his ire at the Daily Mail does seem quite reasonable if the facts are as he stated.
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    PongPong Posts: 4,693
    staceyj said:

    Getting rather fed up with Mikes obsession with Nuttall. I personally don't see 6-4 as value in any way shape or form, but as usual Mike is talking his own book up. Whatever happened to the great "independant" blogger Mike Smithson

    Feel free to post your own betting tips.
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    MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,203
    edited February 2017

    Nuttall is a laughing stock. Apart from Farage, who else is in the queue of numpties for the spot?

    I agree but the labour candidate is a disgrace. Poor Stoke - deserves so much more
    The Labour candidate just posts the same kind of stuff the good denizens of pb post and retweet themselves every day. I'm not saying they couldn't have found someone better but hey, he just seems to be a man of the times to me.
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    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
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    Sandpit said:

    Pulpstar said:

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    Both Tony Blair and Paul Staines should be regarded with a great deal of caution. But if their stories are tallying, there might just be something in it.
    It was probably one of the many stinking piles of poo left on the desks of incoming ministers in May 2010. Mrs May would have been acting on the advice of the civil service and home office lawyers when she signed off on the payment.

    Bliar doesn't get to walk away smelling of roses, although his ire at the Daily Mail does seem quite reasonable if the facts are as he stated.
    Wasn’t there a group action for compensation by former Guantanamo detainees rumbling, long before the Coalition took power? More inherited merde from the previous administration.
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    DeClareDeClare Posts: 483

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    The problem is that there is a great deal of squabbling within the party, that's why Diane James didn't last long and also why Susanne Evans didn't win.
    There is a vacancy for a party on the centre-right but it needs a leader who can deal with the big egos and stop the in-fighting.
    Nuttall has been a fool for telling lies or exaggerating, these days everything can be checked and if you're involved in politics there are people who watch you closely and listen to everything you say and then check.
    It's much easier just to tell the truth at all times and be thought boring, after a while people will begin to respect your honesty.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,990

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    O/T ... a bit anyway. What do you well-informed chaps think of the proposal in Essex for the PCC to take over as the Fire and well as the Police authority?
    Going out for an hour just now, so if any questions I'll deal with them when I return.
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    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    Each Service does its own thing, with a little bit of cooperation thrown in. There's a lot of empire building in all aspects of the fire service, too many chiefs, not enough Indians, (literally!)
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    edited February 2017
    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    I wish them every success, looks to be a massive gap in the market to me.
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    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098
    Sandpit said:

    Pulpstar said:

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    Both Tony Blair and Paul Staines should be regarded with a great deal of caution. But if their stories are tallying, there might just be something in it.
    It was probably one of the many stinking piles of poo left on the desks of incoming ministers in May 2010. Mrs May would have been acting on the advice of the civil service and home office lawyers when she signed off on the payment.

    Bliar doesn't get to walk away smelling of roses, although his ire at the Daily Mail does seem quite reasonable if the facts are as he stated.
    I think the issue was not whether HMG had a genuine defence against the claims for compensation but how much about methods and capabilities would have to be exposed in order to defend the actions. In short it was judged preferable to pay out a few million than have the abilities of the intelligence agencies handed over to terrorist organisations.
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    DeClare said:


    It's much easier just to tell the truth at all times and be thought boring, after a while people will begin to respect your honesty.

    Sadly, that looks like rather a naive view nowadays.

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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852

    Sandpit said:

    Pulpstar said:

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    Both Tony Blair and Paul Staines should be regarded with a great deal of caution. But if their stories are tallying, there might just be something in it.
    It was probably one of the many stinking piles of poo left on the desks of incoming ministers in May 2010. Mrs May would have been acting on the advice of the civil service and home office lawyers when she signed off on the payment.

    Bliar doesn't get to walk away smelling of roses, although his ire at the Daily Mail does seem quite reasonable if the facts are as he stated.
    I think the issue was not whether HMG had a genuine defence against the claims for compensation but how much about methods and capabilities would have to be exposed in order to defend the actions. In short it was judged preferable to pay out a few million than have the abilities of the intelligence agencies handed over to terrorist organisations.
    It might also be time for us to look at those laws again. No such payouts are necessary to protect intelligence services in other countries, notably in Obama's USA.
  • Options

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    O/T ... a bit anyway. What do you well-informed chaps think of the proposal in Essex for the PCC to take over as the Fire and well as the Police authority?
    Going out for an hour just now, so if any questions I'll deal with them when I return.
    Not really a fan of it. Scope for lots of conflicts and would our budget get pilfered by the coppers? I think there are plenty of good reason for more joined up thinking regarding the Emergency Services, and I think Fire and Rescue and Ambulance Service would both benefit by being under the same umbrella. We have a good reputation in local communities, whereas the Police might be perceived as the "enemy", and being joined with the local police authority might jeopardise us doing community safety work, and close a few doors.
  • Options

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    He was declared not to be a security risk by then home secretary David Blunkett after lobbying by Tony Blair's government led to his release by the United States.

    Former terror law watchdog Lord Carlile said al-Harith had 'plainly' been a terrorist.
    He said the Government may have been right to pay the money to protect state secrets


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4248464/Former-Guantanamo-detainee-plainly-terrorist.html
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,306
    I disagree with the header that Nuttall would be under pressure to resign as leader even if he wins but I think that is an entirely academic issue. He is not going to win, probably not even come second. It looks a good bet, may even pay off on Friday.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited February 2017
    Oops:

    14:09 Tony Blair’s statement about Fiddler/al-Harith case and the Daily Mail includes a sentence accusing the paper of running entitled: “Still Think He Wasn’t A Danger, Mr Blair? Fury at Labour government’s £1m compensation for innocent Brit.” (See 12.52pm.)

    Blair was wrong about that. That headline is from the Sun.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/blog/live/2017/feb/22/pmqs-may-corbyn-ivan-rogers--eu-ambassador-ivan-rogers-questions-by-commons-brexit-committee-politics-live
  • Options
    JonathanDJonathanD Posts: 2,400

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    He was declared not to be a security risk by then home secretary David Blunkett after lobbying by Tony Blair's government led to his release by the United States.

    Former terror law watchdog Lord Carlile said al-Harith had 'plainly' been a terrorist.
    He said the Government may have been right to pay the money to protect state secrets


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4248464/Former-Guantanamo-detainee-plainly-terrorist.html
    The Daily Mail was a main cheerleader for his release in 2004 and was the one using his continued detention at Guantanamo to beat up Labour.
  • Options
    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    O/T ... a bit anyway. What do you well-informed chaps think of the proposal in Essex for the PCC to take over as the Fire and well as the Police authority?
    Going out for an hour just now, so if any questions I'll deal with them when I return.
    Not really a fan of it. Scope for lots of conflicts and would our budget get pilfered by the coppers? I think there are plenty of good reason for more joined up thinking regarding the Emergency Services, and I think Fire and Rescue and Ambulance Service would both benefit by being under the same umbrella. We have a good reputation in local communities, whereas the Police might be perceived as the "enemy", and being joined with the local police authority might jeopardise us doing community safety work, and close a few doors.
    Certainly keep the traffic police at arm's length, a police sergeant friend of mine bemoans at some length how hard it is to get people to talk when knocking on doors making enquiries, because too many of them have been pulled over for doing 73mph on the motorway, and tar all police with the same brush.
  • Options
    Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    O/T

    With the good results announced by Lloyds today, it would be a good time for the government to offload a large portion of their remaining shares
  • Options
    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Hmmm

    The Bolt Report
    WATCH: Islamic community leader @keysartrad says beating women is 'a last resort'. Live on #TheBoltReport on @SkyNewsAust https://t.co/ZsWICdgbbR
  • Options
    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    Each Service does its own thing, with a little bit of cooperation thrown in. There's a lot of empire building in all aspects of the fire service, too many chiefs, not enough Indians, (literally!)
    Thanks, Mr. Stopper. I rather thought that might be the case. The qualities of the very senior management I and my colleagues found in the Fire Service even made those of the police look good.

    As an aside, how after all the cuts to local government budgets, we still have two brigades in Sussex is astonishing. Two sets of chief officers, two lots of HQ staff, two lots of procurement policies, two training schools, two sets of standard operating procedures. The waste is appalling. I know how it has come about and it is not only empire defence at Chief Officer level the local authorities are as much to blame with councilors defending their own turf and power bases, but it really isn't good enough. Scarce resources are being sucked away from service delivery into HQs that are 50% unnecessary. The police forces in Sussex were forced into amalgamation in 1968, that the fire brigades continue to be separate nearly fifty years later is absurd.
  • Options
    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
  • Options

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    Each Service does its own thing, with a little bit of cooperation thrown in. There's a lot of empire building in all aspects of the fire service, too many chiefs, not enough Indians, (literally!)
    Thanks, Mr. Stopper. I rather thought that might be the case. The qualities of the very senior management I and my colleagues found in the Fire Service even made those of the police look good.

    As an aside, how after all the cuts to local government budgets, we still have two brigades in Sussex is astonishing. Two sets of chief officers, two lots of HQ staff, two lots of procurement policies, two training schools, two sets of standard operating procedures. The waste is appalling. I know how it has come about and it is not only empire defence at Chief Officer level the local authorities are as much to blame with councilors defending their own turf and power bases, but it really isn't good enough. Scarce resources are being sucked away from service delivery into HQs that are 50% unnecessary. The police forces in Sussex were forced into amalgamation in 1968, that the fire brigades continue to be separate nearly fifty years later is absurd.
    No arguments from me!
  • Options
    DixieDixie Posts: 1,221
    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    16 grand in London minimum. 20 grand average.
  • Options
    DixieDixie Posts: 1,221
    Dixie said:

    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    16 grand in London minimum. 20 grand average.
    per annum
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,306
    As anticipated, Q4 2016 has been revised up to 0.7% growth: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-39049073

    So we are basically where we were thought to be before Brexit. I heard the Governor explaining that this is because of the action taken by the BoE in light of the vote. IIRC that amounted to a 0.25% cut in interest rates and a suggestion (not yet acted on so far as I am aware) that we might have some more QE. Not his most convincing statement.
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    JonathanD said:

    So, according to Guido, it was Theresa May who signed off on the ISIS man's £1 million. Well, well. Presumably, this is one of those times when Guido is an untrustworthy source who should never, ever be quoted by anyone serious.

    He was declared not to be a security risk by then home secretary David Blunkett after lobbying by Tony Blair's government led to his release by the United States.

    Former terror law watchdog Lord Carlile said al-Harith had 'plainly' been a terrorist.
    He said the Government may have been right to pay the money to protect state secrets


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4248464/Former-Guantanamo-detainee-plainly-terrorist.html
    The Daily Mail was a main cheerleader for his release in 2004 and was the one using his continued detention at Guantanamo to beat up Labour.
    See preceding post to yours about inaccuracies in Blair's dodgy dossier statement
  • Options
    DeClareDeClare Posts: 483
    Pulpstar said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    I wish them every success, looks to be a massive gap in the market to me.
    Pulpstar said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    I wish them every success, looks to be a massive gap in the market to me.
    Bring in Stelios Haji-Ioannou
  • Options
    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    I can't see Nuttall lasting long, especially if he doesn't get elected. His actions and words have been easy targets, and he just doesn't have the feel of a credible leader. Maybe no one can actually lead UKIP as there doesn't really seem to be a need for them post the referendum.

    Glad you are here, Mr Stopper. I see your Brigade is recruiting again, after an alleged five year hiatus. What is that all about?
    18 months ago, we were all anointed with the black spot of redundancy. Now, we struggle to turn pumps out if we get much more than a bit o' burnt toast.
    It's actually only a ruse to try and up the diversity quotas, we only really want to recruit from certain demographics. As one of our senior managers told a certain table full of stale pale males a couple of weeks ago, "We want to recruit firefighters for the next 30 years, not the last 30 years................"
    OK, thanks. No surprise for me at least. Just out of idle curiosity has the fire service sorted out shared basic training yet or is each brigade still doing its own thing (I did some work as a consultant at the strategic leadership level a few years ago and wonder if anything really came of it).
    O/T ... a bit anyway. What do you well-informed chaps think of the proposal in Essex for the PCC to take over as the Fire and well as the Police authority?
    Going out for an hour just now, so if any questions I'll deal with them when I return.
    Well, Mr. Cole many years ago the police forces in many parts of England also ran the ambulance services through the Watch Committees and County Authorities, so there is a precedent for combining more than one emergency service under a single authority. The fire Service was never part of that scheme though.

    On the whole, I would be against giving the office of PCC greater scope at this time. The role has yet to bed in and prove itself effective in the job that it has now, I think it would be a bad idea to give people who are struggling with their present job more responsibilities.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    My alma mater was a day school, fees were £500 a term when I started in 1989 and around £650 a term when I left in 1996.

    £4,000 a term today. :o
  • Options
    Sandpit said:

    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    My alma mater was a day school, fees were £500 a term when I started in 1989 and around £650 a term when I left in 1996.

    £4,000 a term today. :o
    Same here, my alma mater charges £4,000 a term now, and you're a year old than me.

    I was in the last year that got their uni fees paid for, my father often observed Uni cost him less than schooling me did.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    She was the one who was in charge when the Brazilian electrician got shot. Public sector accountability at work as usual.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,850
    FPT local elections, note that Labour lost 4,000 seats between 1997 and 2004, and still won two more general elections (including a net loss of 190 in local by-elections)

    By way of comparison, the Conservatives have lost 800 seats since 2010.
  • Options
    A Good choice, the death of an innocent Brazilian should not hinder one’s career...
  • Options
    I guess that is going to be quite a controversial appointment.
  • Options
    Dixie said:

    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    16 grand in London minimum. 20 grand average.
    But almost certainly with far smaller classes than 30 years ago, which means more teachers, and a wider range of sports coached by ex-internationals with more equipment, including all the machines you'd expect in a high-end executive health club or whatever they call gyms these days, and a laptop and tablet for every child -- while in state schools they still have to use pens!
  • Options
    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    This is rather fun

    http://thefederalist.com/2017/02/22/media-hottakes-wed-see-chronicles-narnia-released-year/#.WK2iD67RkAQ.twitter

    "The American Conservative: “Narnia and the Problem of Borders”
    By not effectively maintaining border security, King Tirian ensured his nation would be invaded and plundered by the Calormenes. Also, Archenland should’ve been Narnia’s Benedict Option.

    The Atlantic: “How World War II Shaped Narnia”
    One of those very comprehensive and thoroughly researched articles that’s so long it’s divided up by roman numerals. It’s fascinating, but you have to go to class at some point. Most of your social media friends will share this article after reading about a third of the way through, and nod sagaciously when asked about it.

    Breitbart: “Narnia Ignored Calormene Jihad, Innocent People Died”
    The nation should’ve gotten smart and gotten tough. Also, Soros would’ve funded the Calormenes.

    BuzzFeed: “20 Times Eustace and Jill Almost Kissed”
    A series of GIFs with inconsistent formatting obviously poached from Tumblr. About ten of them can be viewed as vaguely romantic, if you stretch the definition...
  • Options
    FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486

    Sandpit said:

    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    My alma mater was a day school, fees were £500 a term when I started in 1989 and around £650 a term when I left in 1996.

    £4,000 a term today. :o
    Same here, my alma mater charges £4,000 a term now, and you're a year old than me.

    I was in the last year that got their uni fees paid for, my father often observed Uni cost him less than schooling me did.
    Private school, explains your obsession with ancient civilizations and raunchiness
  • Options
    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    A Good choice, the death of an innocent Brazilian should not hinder one’s career...
    Of all the candidates they have chosen the one whose ability to process information under stress and make sound judgements has been demonstrably shown as flawed. Astonishing.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    edited February 2017
    This school is going to be massively oversubscribed. As such there will be an entry exam, and my guess is the (Eventual A-level) results will be outstanding.
    That'll make it look very good indeed and I think the model may well be copied.
    Essentially it is grammar schooling outwith the state.
  • Options
    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    American History
    Happy Birthday Mr. Washington! #OTD George Washington was born in 1732. #GW ranked second in our #cspanPOTUSsurvey https://t.co/ECS06QmAiC https://t.co/KN6ISGwXsy
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    isamisam Posts: 40,929
    Which came first, the torture or the terrorist?

    https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2017/02/bbc-glories-death/
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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852
    edited February 2017

    I guess that is going to be quite a controversial appointment.
    The conspiracy theorists are going to go bananas.
    https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/deputy_assistant_commissioner_cr
    etc.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,929
    edited February 2017
    The private school nearest to me is an eye-watering price, but the results are no better than the local comp. Their fields are good to ride horses up the side of though.
  • Options
    Freggles said:

    Sandpit said:

    PlatoSaid said:

    Sandpit said:

    Here's something that could really shake up the education sector: £900 a term private school, and to hell with the swimming pools and playing fields.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/2017/02/21/britains-first-cut-price-private-school-will-charge-parents/

    My girls' school was £345 a term, meals were £25 same period. That was Newcastle 1978 with little increases until I left 6th form. What's the inflation price now?
    My alma mater was a day school, fees were £500 a term when I started in 1989 and around £650 a term when I left in 1996.

    £4,000 a term today. :o
    Same here, my alma mater charges £4,000 a term now, and you're a year old than me.

    I was in the last year that got their uni fees paid for, my father often observed Uni cost him less than schooling me did.
    Private school, explains your obsession with ancient civilizations and raunchiness
    Nah, rauchiness is in the eye of the beholder, and if you get it in her eye [rest redacted to preserve the innocence of PBers]
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    DavidL said:

    I disagree with the header that Nuttall would be under pressure to resign as leader even if he wins but I think that is an entirely academic issue. He is not going to win, probably not even come second. It looks a good bet, may even pay off on Friday.

    Not sure you should use the word "academic" in relation to Dr Nuttall, whose PhD in football stadium policing is widely cited.
  • Options
    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,897
    Pulpstar said:

    This school is going to be massively oversubscribed. As such there will be an entry exam, and my guess is the (Eventual A-level) results will be outstanding.
    That'll make it look very good indeed and I think the model may well be copied.
    Essentially it is grammar schooling outwith the state.

    Yep, and if they can hold the fees at those levels they'll have dozens of them open in short order.

    The private day schools have become an arms race of facilities, seeing fees inflation of so,etching like 10-12% per year for the las two decades. The public boarding schools are even worse, fees upwards of £30k mean they're now full of mainly foreign students from China, the Middle East and Russia. The rich locals here in the sandpit all try and get their kids into the British public schools.
  • Options
    Sandpit said:

    Pulpstar said:

    This school is going to be massively oversubscribed. As such there will be an entry exam, and my guess is the (Eventual A-level) results will be outstanding.
    That'll make it look very good indeed and I think the model may well be copied.
    Essentially it is grammar schooling outwith the state.

    Yep, and if they can hold the fees at those levels they'll have dozens of them open in short order.

    The private day schools have become an arms race of facilities, seeing fees inflation of so,etching like 10-12% per year for the las two decades. The public boarding schools are even worse, fees upwards of £30k mean they're now full of mainly foreign students from China, the Middle East and Russia. The rich locals here in the sandpit all try and get their kids into the British public schools.
    My wife works in a private school. The facilities and opportunities are amazing, but so are the fees.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,750
    MattW said:

    There's a touch of Gordon Brown when it comes to Mrs May.

    https://twitter.com/GwynneMP/status/834329709089529856

    He said. She said. No 10 says they didn't follow the procedure. They say they did.

    Who knows?
    It looks bad to turn people away and with sensitive stuff people will bend procedure as much as they can to allow people to submit their views, so I'm inclined to believe No.10 on this one. Stunt.

    Even if you believe the petition will never be genuinely considered (as is the case with most, and some may even deserve that), politicians and officials go through the motions with such things so they can be appear to have met people half way.
  • Options
    From my own experience, the main advantage of a private education is the smaller class sizes, the one on one teaching we got if we needed it.

    I hear of schools with class sizes of 30 or more, and I can't comprehend it.
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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852
    kle4 said:

    MattW said:

    There's a touch of Gordon Brown when it comes to Mrs May.

    https://twitter.com/GwynneMP/status/834329709089529856

    He said. She said. No 10 says they didn't follow the procedure. They say they did.

    Who knows?
    It looks bad to turn people away and with sensitive stuff people will bend procedure as much as they can to allow people to submit their views, so I'm inclined to believe No.10 on this one. Stunt.

    Even if you believe the petition will never be genuinely considered (as is the case with most, and some may even deserve that), politicians and officials go through the motions with such things so they can be appear to have met people half way.
    I suspect weasel words. The petition was probably received by the copper on the gate ("not received by No10").
This discussion has been closed.