Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Maybe Ukip could be doing to the Tories what the rump of th

SystemSystem Posts: 11,002
edited March 2013 in General

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Maybe Ukip could be doing to the Tories what the rump of the SDP did to the yellows nearly a quarter of a century ago

This week there’s been a bit of focus on the creation of the Lib Dems which was formed by the merger of the old Liberal party and the SDP exactly 25 years ago.

Read the full story here


«1

Comments

  • Let us hope so.
  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    edited March 2013
    Floating voters will be too busy moving into their Osborne guaranteed new builds by 2015.

    Sorting out the kitchen layout will be far more important than deciding whether to vote UKIP or Tory.
  • JamesKellyJamesKelly Posts: 1,348
    Yes, Eastleigh was a strikingly Richmond-like result. But in some ways it's worse than that for the Tories. The Lib Dem-SDP battle was always likely to resolve itself fairly quickly, because there wasn't room for both parties. They both occupied the same terrain, and the only reason for the SDP's continued existence was Owen's ego.

    UKIP have a much more obvious niche.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    I don't get the equivalence between SDP and Liberals. When were UKIP part of the Tory party?
  • Wishful thinking by Messrs Bhaji and Smithson.
    I hope.
  • volcanopetevolcanopete Posts: 2,078
    I had a similar experience with 3 of us Labour councillors in an area we had been totally in absentia.One of my colleagues joined the SDP and that person was ex-British Communist Party.He resigned and a Liberal won the seat.Class traitors!
  • JamesKellyJamesKelly Posts: 1,348
    "When were UKIP part of the Tory party?"


    Plenty of people in UKIP - not least Farage himself - were once Tory members. Strictly speaking, nobody in the continuing SDP had ever been a member of the Liberal Democrats.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    James

    When was there a "Tory-UKIP Alliance"? Equivalent to the Steel-Owen bandwagon?
  • MikeSmithsonMikeSmithson Posts: 7,382
    edited March 2013
    There was a wonderful Dennis Healey joke about David Owen.

    When Owen was born, fairies gathered round his crib to shower every possible gift on him. He would be successful, intelligent, lucky, handsome, charismatic…

    But, unfortunately, the bad fairy also turned up. And she said, ‘He will have all those gifts, and more. But he will also be… A shit
  • JamesKellyJamesKelly Posts: 1,348
    "When was there a "Tory-UKIP Alliance"? Equivalent to the Steel-Owen bandwagon?"

    The 'Steel-Owen bandwagon' was more like a 1980s Lada with one wheel missing.

    You're always doing this, Sunil - pretending that an analogy has to be 100% precise before it has any validity at all.
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    "Hopefully Maria Hutchings can be accommodated on a list of some sort by the Tories "

    Tories have 4 South East MEPs. 3 of them (basically not Hannan) aren't in their youngest days. I don't think any of them announced retirement plans yet but I wouldn't be surprising to see some of them standing down. And 1 of them will risk a lot in a all members ballot anyway.

    but how many seats will Con get in SE? It's currently 4 Con 2 UKIP 2 LD 1 Green 1 Lab

    2009 Con 34.8 UKIP 18.8 LD 14.1 Green 11.6 Lab 8.2

    Something like Con 28 UKIP 25 Lab 14 Green 11 LD 11 would give 3 Con 3 UKIP 1 Lab 1 Green 1 LD and a close fight for the final seat between Con, Lab and UKIP.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    James

    Well otherwise it wouldn't be an analogy, would it?

    :)
  • JamesKellyJamesKelly Posts: 1,348
    "Well otherwise it wouldn't be an analogy, would it?"

    Er...yes it would.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    But you could argue from Mike's graphic that the Owenites stole heavily from the Labour vote rather than the Liberals (look how low the Labour share is).
  • fitalassfitalass Posts: 4,279
    Mike, only one problem with that scenario which could make the outcome of the next GE far more interesting. The Conservatives are currently in Government, and the alternative is a Labour majority or a Lab/Libdem coalition at a time of great economic difficulty. Its interesting that the more UKIP move to focus on Labour voters, the more that the Conservatives opponents would prefer that they stick to their previous strategy of focusing on the Conservative voters.

    If UKIP are to move into the mainstream of UK politics they need to become a more wide spread repository for the protest vote. And that kind of scatter gun approach will throw up some interesting results. UKIP have finally worked out that they appear to have a better chance of taking a Labour/Libdem held seat with tactical voting and support from Conservatives among others in much the same way tactical voting among Lab/Libdems kept the the Tories out in the past.

    Its worth noting that this current UKIP boost in the polls has happened while its the Labour party who form the main Opposition alone, just as the SDP/Liberal Democrat parties were formed against the back drop of the last period that Labour were in Opposition. I find that a fascinating fact in the current political climate with a Labour polling lead, and with a growing assumption by some now that Labour are nailed on to win the next GE regardless of any intervening events.
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 0
    edited March 2013
    UKIP have all but taken over the Conservatives, in the same way as the pro-EU Socialists took over the Liberals when they became the LD's, just before their more cautious colleagues took over the Labour Party, making the SDP completely irrelevant.

    These pro-EU Social Democrats (= Blairites) had taken over control of Labour and only recently have the anti-EU Socialists (= Brownites) come back into the ascendancy making Labour into a more overtly Socialist Party.

    Much the same is true within the Conservatives. The upper-class 'Grandee' grouping (aka pro EU 'Wets' - or Social Democrats) were gradually purged from the upper echelons from 1979-1990, but then slowly regained power, until Cameron's victory over Davies (Dry, anti-EU conservatives) meant they were back in charge again.

    The balance of power has swung decisively away from the Social Democrats, such that Downing St is now isolated and their next leader will be all but indistinguishable from UKIPs position on Europe and many other matters (ie truly conservative, seeking to roll back the 'ever more progressive' social agenda of recent decades)

    The disengagement of most voters from the political class and political process should be the single biggest concern to all politicians and followers of politics, as it allows the rise of populist, 'single, simple solution' parties to gain traction and increasing credence, as the successive failures of ConLabLib Govts show that these parties have no answer to the problems that they created: borrowing more from the future to buy votes today. Respect and the SNP are two such parties: UKIP are a third.

    That means that there MUST be a break with the traditional, post WW2, formula of more tax, more spend, more borrow, to one of bare need > minimum tax > efficiently enact, leading to a very much smaller State, with slowing decreasing taxes as the State shrinks at a much faster rate, thus allowing increasingly large Budget surplus' to be run (over decades) until we are net lenders, not net borrowers.

    It'll take decades, but it'll happen - few rules and regulations. Harder work, for fewer benefits and less security (and wages): lower asset prices, too, as running 'a balanced Budget' becomes written into UK law, so that the mistakes of the past 50 years cannot be repeated.

    In that respect, Benn was right: a UK Sovereign Wealth Fund would have been preferable to the large State (but lower taxes) nation that was the Thatcherite legacy: Brown's skill was in taxing areas that did not have an immediately obvious impact on the ordinary voter - slow-burn taxes which destroyed the UK and enslaved us to the State, but which were sugar-coated so we did not vomit them out of office in 2001 (or 2005).

    Farage has tapped into that national discontent, and, as such, is going to do increasingly well until the breaking-point of the current mess, when all bets are off: events then will be truly cataclysmic in scale, though who/what will emerge from that as the dominant political forces is outside the scope of my crystal ball: simplistic solutions do not work when confronted with harsh reality, but they offer A Cause, An Enemy (the EU) , A Hope and A Future - which the current ConLabLib parties do not, and have not these last 30 years.
  • JamesKellyJamesKelly Posts: 1,348
    Owen was seen as more sympathetic to Thatcherism than the (Social and) Liberal Democrats were. It's highly unlikely that he was hoovering up Labour votes.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    Actually looks like the Richmond SDP got most of their vote from the Tories rather than Liberal or Labour. Tories were down 24 on the GE, Libs down 5, Labour down 7.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Who spoke these words in an interview with the Telegraph today 'As long as quality of services doesn't change, there's no reason not to sack more of the people who provide them'?
    You would assume it was a Thatcherite Tory, in fact it was Danny Alexander. Who would have thought a senior LD would have spoken such words even 5 years ago?
  • SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976
    edited March 2013
    Not sure the analogy works – Labour MPs left the main party to form the SDP which later merged with the Liberal party - based on self preservation, rather than an ideological bent.

    UKIP support is comprised entirely of 'floating voters' and those disaffected with the three main parties. As UKIP have no MPs period, I fail to see how likening the “Owenites who refused to be part of (t)he merged party and would run candidates against it” enters into the equation.
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    edited March 2013
    "UKIP have finally worked out that they appear to have a better chance of taking a Labour/Libdem held seat with tactical voting and support from Conservatives among others in much the same way tactical voting among Lab/Libdems kept the the Tories out in the past. "


    Actually, I think they would have a better chance of taking some Conservative held marginals instead of Labour....but there won't be the Tory tactical support as the Tories hold the seat.

    The Labour seats where they would have a chance (basically some white working class seats where Lab did badly in 2010) probably have the Tories in a strong second right now
  • RichardNabaviRichardNabavi Posts: 3,413
    @JamesKelly Eastleigh was a strikingly Richmond-like result.

    Not so. UKIP took as many votes off the LibDems as they took off the Tories.

    But this fact runs counter to the narrative, so it is repeatedly ignored.

    Wise punters won't, however, have missed it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Apparently at the Investiture of Justin Welby last week Ed Miliband asked the PM who was sitting next to him whether he had any advice 'for a Jewish atheist' as the ceremony began. Reports differ on whether Cameron was simply perplexed or scowled at Miliband, but relations were resolved once they had to perform the peace!
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    Interesting that the SDPers didn't show up for the Vauxhall by-election later in the year, wot Kate Hoey won.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vauxhall_by-election,_1989
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 39,743
    edited March 2013
    @HYUFD
    'You would assume it was a Thatcherite Tory, in fact it was Danny Alexander. Who would have thought a senior LD would have spoken such words even 5 years ago?'

    I immediately thought 'Oor Danny', so we've evidently got used to the idea!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Mike Smithson = Good joke by Healey, but that only reflects his political differences with Owen. My mother used to be a receptionist at Bart's and Owen used to come regularly with a relative (I think it was his son) who was quite seriously ill and sit in the reception without fuss. Personally he was a decent man, very bright and with a successful career in medicine behind him before he entered politics, compared to most of the PPE/SPAD brigade he was a Titan of statesmanship!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    TheUnionDivvie - Indeed, it would only seem to confirm he is the most right-wing of the QUAD!
  • fitalassfitalass Posts: 4,279
    @RichardNabavi

    "@JamesKelly Eastleigh was a strikingly Richmond-like result.

    Not so. UKIP took as many votes off the LibDems as they took off the Tories.

    But this fact runs counter to the narrative, so it is repeatedly ignored.

    Wise punters won't, however, have missed it."


    For all the patronising abuse that Conservative voters have had on this site because they are not supposedly 'clever' enough to tactically vote etc. I reckon that its increasingly more likely that a first Westminster UKIP success would come from a Labour or Libdem held seat rather than a Conservative one due to tactically voting against the incumbent. And I think that is already a clear concern for both parties, and its also why UKIP are now turning their focus leftwards onto Labours lawn as they have finally worked this one out too.
  • ZenPaganZenPagan Posts: 689
    @AN1

    I feel this should be corrected
    "The disengagement of most voters from the political class and political process should be the single biggest concern to all politicians and followers of politics"

    Voters haven't disengaged from the political class and process. The political class has disengaged from us and become almost a caste in their own right disassociated from the general run of society. Until we kick out career politicians and start electing people who actually know how the normal person lives disaffection will continue to rise
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    Gooshays ward in Havering

    2010:

    Lab 1869
    Con 1682
    Con 1614
    Lab 1603
    Lab 1562
    Con 1551
    BNP 1445
    BNP 1346
    UKIP 944
    Residents 616
    Res 509
    Res 309

    ......

    This week (one of the 2 Tories died)

    UKIP 831
    Lab 569
    Con 280
    Residents 227
    BNP 202
    Residents 24

    ...

    here we also have a former strong BNP presence to complicate the picture. They topped the poll in 2006 locals. They collapsed this week. The Tories went considerably down. Labour didn't increase at all.

    The ward is in Hornchurch & Upminster constituency.



  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Private Eye front cover this week
    http://www.private-eye.co.uk/current_issue.php?
  • RichardNabaviRichardNabavi Posts: 3,413
    edited March 2013
    @tim - All the polling shows around 16% of 2010 Tories, 8% of 2010 Lib Dems and 4% of 2010 Labour voters going to UKIP.

    Indeed so, but NOT IN EASTLEIGH.

    People keep saying Eastleigh showed something which it didn't show. It's interesting to consider why 2010 LibDem voters in Eastleigh behaved so differently to what the opinion polls show.
  • Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    @Lucian_Fletcher

    I told you you would jinx it. I never modify bets after I've placed one :(
  • What a match between Wasps and Northampton. Not that much has survived the weather but this has been amazing.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Heffer lays into Ed Miliband and suggests many Blairites would prefer Cameron to win than Red ED!
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2297743/The-spectre-Red-Eds-Thought-Police.html
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    @fitalass

    what kind of constituencies do you have in mind?

    Because voting tactically would imply that the Tories are out of the race in that particular constituency.

    And in safe Labour results, I guess Rotherham may have showed how it would turn out.
  • Apologies, Rog. But it was hardly an unlucky run.
  • Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    @Lucian_Fletcher

    :) You're right a great day, all down to PtP
  • @Lucian/Blue

    Pretty disappointing end to an otherwise successful day.

    The writing was on the wall when they switched jockeys and the price began to drift.

    AW racing is generally pretty low grade stuff and you do have to accept the rough with the smooth. You see some truly dreadful rides and plenty of reason to wonder why the non-trier rules aren't invoked more actively.

    No matter. We did alright, and it cheered up a dull Saturday afternoon.

    Now all we need is a brisk Compton century.....

    Toodle pip!
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    Tim,

    There is no doubt that UKIP are taking more votes from the Tories than the other two, but make no mistake they are taking voters from them and they are worried about it. This is a bandwagon that will keep on rolling, I thought it may have lost momentum with Dave's 'brilliant' speech on Europe, but support is getting stronger.

    I don't know a single Kipper who will vote tactically, not because as you think they are too stupid but because they are totally fed up with all three parties. To UKIP supporters they are one and the same, see Farage's speech today about them all being the same.

    I see Clegg is now doing another U-turn, this time on immigration, Labour are apologising for the mistakes they made on immigration and Dave has promised a referendum that he will never have to carry out. Nobody believes a single word they say so why should they vote for any of them?

    As for the EU they are now in the eye of a perfect storm. The disgusting treatment of Cyprus, more forced immigration to come in 2014 and the distinct possibility of gas being rationed thanks to the EU madness on green policies meaning we have to shut down our coal and oil power stations.

    I'm sure the sensible among you now realise that the political landscape is now changing very quickly.

    Why would anyone vote for any of the three pro-Europe parties?

  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    Boris Beresovksy has 'died'.
  • This whole scenario - rather like most of the threads on this site recently - is to attack the conservatives and ignore the more serious threat to the LDs. The hope is that somehow voters will forget in a HE the role played by the LDs in govt and heap all the blame on the Tories by voting UKIP only in seats which can damage the Tories.

    It's wishful thinking on an epic scale. 2015 will be nothing like current polling.
  • RichardNabaviRichardNabavi Posts: 3,413
    @tim - I'm not seeking comfort from anything, I'm looking at the facts. And the most striking fact about Eastleigh was that LibDem voters who switched to another party switched to UKIP not (as I would have expected) to Labour. A pretty remarkable fact, is it not?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Avery LP - Indeed, breaking now, perhaps he had received some flowers from the Kremlin?
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21913356
  • To balance my over-long post, here's a short one:

    Farage's message is neatly summed up as 'Yes we can!'

    Anyone tried that one out?
  • old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    BBC News

    Russian oligarch, Boris Berezovsky has died.

    I would not like to be the one doing the autopsy.
  • @Andrea_Parma

    Thanks Andrea.

    Hornchurch is not so far from where I live and I can see it would be fertile UKIP territory.

    The result is another straw in the wind suggesting that the Party has a tremendous opportunity to take votes from its three main opponents over the next two years or so. I've placed a number of bets on them doing so. It is true that it has a high propensity to self-destruct, but if it does not, it has to do little more than position itself as the 'We Ain't Them' Party' to reap huge rewards.



  • @AN1

    Yes, Obama employed it in 2008. Four years later he was almost as successful with 'Have You Seen The Other Guy?'

    Farage could usefully adopt both.
  • AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    edited March 2013
    Hmmmm.

    I had better be very clear that this is a link to Wikipedia:

    Boris Abramovich Berezovsky (Russian: Бори́с Абра́мович Березо́вский, 23 January 1946 - 23 March 2013)[6][7] was a Russian business oligarch, government official and former mathematician. He was assassinated by Russian FSB agents in London on the orders of Vladimir Putin.

    No need for a police investigation, trial and jury verdict on Wikipedia!

    http://bit.ly/ORTmnF
  • hucks67hucks67 Posts: 758
    Wonder how many candidates UKIP will have in the local elections May 2013 and any before May 2015 ? UKIP will need to have a lot of people on the ground to do well at a general election. While people may be willing to vote for them in by-elections, locals and EU elections, I just question whether people will vote for them at a general election. If they were mostly p*ssed off Tories and there was a chance of Labour or Lib Dems beating the Tories, then I think most would think very hard before casting their vote for UKIP. This is why it is so important for UKIP to have local councillors and volunteers on the ground to do the leg work, to convince people to back them.
  • samsam Posts: 727
    edited March 2013
    @Andrea_Parma @Peter_the_Punter

    I am from Hornchurch and live in Upminster. The sitting mp Angela Watkinson certainly no Cameroon in outlook from what I can see. a Monday club tory...maybe she would switch?

    Gooshays is in Harold Hill which is very similar to Dagenham, ie a poor council house dominated rough neighbourhood. Not representative of the constituency as a whole.

    I reckon Thurrock is the constituency where UKIP have the best chance round here. Similar in profile to Harold Hill/Dagenham, the locals cal the area of Chafford Hundred (Lakeside) 'Chafrica' due to immigrants, and Farage was at the Dartford crossing the other day talking about scrapping the toll charge.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 12,741
    Afternoon all :)

    Just back from an entertaining afternoon watching Middle England at the Daily Telegraph Cruising Show (no, not that kind of cruising !!). Average age in the 60s, overwhelmingly white, the bedrock of Conservative support planning its next holiday and if the queues to book trips were any guide, not much evidence of a recession either.

    I remember Richmond and its aftermath. It was, in my view, the moment when the Liberal Democrats could have ceased to exist. Financially, the party was in a terrible state and morale was likewise low. Yet the Party survived due in no small part to Paddy Ashdown and the implosion of the Conservatives leading to the ousting of Margaret Thatcher in 1990.

    Even then, it needed the presence of Neil Kinnock's Labour Party to help keep the fledgling Party alive. Stodge's Seventh Law of Politics states that all a Party needs to do to survive and prosper is to have opponents who are unwittingly determined to help.

    UKIP is doing well because the parties facing are it are helping it to prosper by failing to adequately tackle the reasons why people are rushing to vote for it.
  • old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    @HYUFD
    http://politicalbetting.vanillaforums.com/discussion/comment/1576/#Comment_1576

    Poor Simon has still not got over the decimalisation of the currency in 1971. He probably thought the country started going to hell in a hand basket with the Great Reform Act of 1832.

    He is truly a caricature.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/simonheffer/8320068/Decimalisation-picked-our-pockets-of-truly-beautiful-coins.html
  • hucks67hucks67 Posts: 758
    HYUFD
    5:06PM

    I am a Blairite and I can't tell you how much I would prefer to see Ed Miliband win, than Cameron hang on in Downing Street. This coalition will have done enough damage to the country before May 2015. I thought that Ed gave a reasonable speech today, but Labour will have to provide much more detail about their policies ahead of the election to convince enough people to win a majority. Whoever is elected in May 2015 will have to implement real cuts, much more than Osborne has so far predicted in budgets. The public sector unions will not be happy that Labour will probably have to stick with the 1% cap on pay rises.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    Test
  • old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    @AveryLP
    http://politicalbetting.vanillaforums.com/discussion/comment/1592/#Comment_1592

    After reading your comment, I sometimes miss the 'like' button because it made me laugh so much.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,933
    Good evening, everyone.

    Malaysia pre-race article, including a tip, is up here:
    http://politicalbetting.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/malaysia-pre-race.html
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 39,743
    Off topic, another little insight into the price of a 'free' press:

    http://tinyurl.com/d2hars6
  • old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    @Carola
    Best to avoid Surrey, I think.
  • old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    Simon Heffer to join Nigel Farage for a public meeting in Kent.

    http://www.ukip.org/content/latest-news/2985-heffer-and-farage-host-a-night-to-remember
  • hucks67hucks67 Posts: 758
    Thought this was funnyish ! Smutty humour contained.

    https://twitter.com/RoyChubbsBrown/status/315020922400698368/photo/1
  • @Sam

    The toll charge is the kind of thing a good local Party could exploit.

    It's a minor injustice, but a manifest one for which the main Parties cannot escape responsibility.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,933
    Mr. T, I hope season 3 comes to the UK (free-to-air) fairly soon. I agree that the second season was a cut above the first. I can take or leave a zombie apocalypse, but very much enjoyed The Walking Dead.
  • @tim

    :-)

    Just occasionally I do miss the like button.
  • CarolaCarola Posts: 1,805
    'Opinium/Observer poll. Labour 38. Tories 28. Ukip 16. Lib Dems 9. 54% think Ed M will be next PM, against 25% who predict 2nd DC term.' tobyhelm
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited March 2013
    "Boris Berezovsky: the exiled critic of the Russian government is found in his bath, having been suspected of killing himself":

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21913356

    http://news.sky.com/story/1068891/boris-berezovsky-russian-oligarch-found-dead
  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,191
    @AN1 4.39pm

    Interesting article. I agree with much of the diagnosis but not necessarily the cure. The challenge facing all political parties is globalisation. Globalisation has been sold to the electorate as an incontrovertible good. At the same time the result of globalisation here has been export of jobs, asset stripping of mid-scale businesses, and ultimately growth of massive corporations leading to massive loss of competition, and development of multinational trade/political alliances like the EU that conspire to set barriers to entry.

    Globalisation has driven the economic holocaust that is now afflicting Europe and North America. Yet still all political parties seem to see no need to work to contain its worst excesses. The party that is prepared to confront the impacts of globalisation and present a modified or alternative vision of how we can engage with it, that puts its people first instead of multinational corporations, and truly supports entrepreneurial behaviour that delivers for the long term will get my support and that of many others.

    Unfortunately I don't see any that do at the moment.

    PS I don't understand what OGH means by commenting within vanilla?
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    @SeanT @6.04

    In Leics the BNP had 12% of the vote in 2009, winning a seat in Coalville, and coming very near in a second. These are quite working class areas of the county, and not ethnically diverse. Historically these have been Labour areas in the old Leics coalfields.

    With the collapse of the BNP electorally it will be interesting to see how things go. In 2009 UKIP did not compete, but now there are 2 county councillors for UKIP owing to defections.

    There is a lovely interactive map here by constituency, must be a political map nerd at county hall, wish all counties did the same!:

    http://www.leics.gov.uk/index/your_council/local_democracy/aboutthecountycouncil/useyourvote/election_results/election_2009/election_2009_division_results.htm
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,876
    The best thing about the rise of UKIP - if it is sustained - is that it will hasten the end of FPTP.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    @Carola

    I still think that if Ed becomes PM it'll be with no more than about 33-34% of the vote. In general you can take about 5 percentage points off the mid-term rating.
  • samsam Posts: 727
    @Peter_the_Punter

    I have never really given it much thought but i suppose it does seem unfair on someone from Essex working at Bluewater or someone from Kent who worked at Lakeside, paying £4 a day to drive to work. It's not exactly like the congestion charge as that is more to encourage public transport, although ukip want to knock that on the head as well...I don't think there is another way to get to Kent from Essex without going into London.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,933
    16% for UKIP and 9% for the Lib Dems seems incredible. I still think the Lib Dems will do rather better than many expect in the next election.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Andrew Neil - Od KGB saying: any fool could commit murder but it takes an artist to make it look like suicide
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 0
    edited March 2013
    UK - Opinium/Observer poll: CON 28%, LAB 38%, LD 9%, UKIP 16% (via Twitter)

    https://twitter.com/tobyhelm/status/315526675981033473
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Morris Dancer - As based on Danny Alexander's comments today the only likely LD voter in 2015 will be pro-gay marriage, pro-EU and pro-immigration but want to slash the size of the state we can presume UKIP have a rather larger voter pool to fish in!
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    @Morris_Dancer

    I think you can add 2 or 3 percentage points to whatever the LDs are registering in the polls due to the big personal votes that LD candidates tend to get, even those who aren't MPs.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    hucks67 - True, but then Blair and Mandelson are probably to the right of Cameron anyway on most things except Europe!
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 13,224
    edited March 2013
    @Sam

    The injustice is that when the new bridge was built the intention was that the toll was to be temporary until the construction was paid for and a sufficient maintenance fund established.

    This was achieved by 2003, but the toll then became a charge, analagous to a congestion charge but without the justification. The collection of the charge adds to the already considerable congestion and represents nothing more than a covert tax.

    UKIP could sweep the board in South East Essex if it were campaign on this issue.

    BTW, that's a very nice picture for your Avatar. Which one is you?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Blair was praising free schools in his latest speech!
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    @Sam

    yes, I agree, Thurrock fits in the type of seats I was thinking of
  • CarolaCarola Posts: 1,805
    @AndyJS 6.18pm

    I'm thinking of 2015 as the 'pin the tail on the donkey' election. It could all come down to chance ;)
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,263
    I'm sure that SeanT is right that BNP voters will switch to UKIP as the next best thing. I think he generalises too confidently about the voters - some are racist, some not, but they're all looking for a protest party. A difference between the parties is that the candidates for UKIP are generally recognisably human and often pleasant enough at a personal level, whereas BNP candidates always seemed determined to live down to their reputation.

    In the short term, it's entirely obvious that UKIP hurts the Tories more than any other mainstream party. In the long term, who knows? But they need a further series of spectaculars to keep up the momentum, and oddly enough the Tories would be wise to hope Labour beats UKIP in the Euros. Should we look forward to Richard Nabavi and Avery casting Labour tactical votes?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Old Labour - Simon Heffer probably thought the country was going down hill with Magna Carta!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    He is a heavyweight though and his views have influence with the right!
  • @Nick

    One surprising but important voting pattern in the 2010 GE was the resistance of Tory voters to the idea of voting tactically. It saved Labour a good few seats and nearly got Brown back into No.10 as Coalition Leader.

    I think we can safely assume that Richard and Avery will stay loyal to the tribe!
  • foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    @NickPalmer

    Sometimes BNP members enjoy their reputation. As one Coalvillian patient explained to me: "When you call the BNP Councillor to sort out anti-social neighbours, they pipe down quickly"

    Thuggish perhaps, but classical pavement politics!
  • samsam Posts: 727
    edited March 2013
    @Peter_the_Punter

    Thanks! Its not me... But one can dream... James Bond has a poster of Gunter Sachs on his wall I believe

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/8503379/Gunter-Sachs.html

    The height of that bridge is like a tax on my nerves, nevermind the two quid!


  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    "Nigel Farage, the UK Independence Party leader, has urged British savers with money in Spanish bank accounts to withdraw their cash to avoid being hit with any future attempts by European finance ministers to tax savings":

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/ukip/9950083/Ukip-urge-Brits-to-withdraw-their-money-from-Spanish-banks.html
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    After Rob Portman came out for gay marriage, no such change of heart from Georgia Senator Saxby Chambliss “I’m not gay. So I’m not going to marry one.”
  • nigel4englandnigel4england Posts: 4,800
    Agree totally Sean.

    The Russians won't take it lying down and will exact revenge on Germany.

    So the Cypriot banks suffered with the haircut the Greeks imposed, which totally f88ked up the Cyprus banks. However instead of the Greeks suffering a levy on deposits the poor Cypriots have to, even though it was the EU that forced the Greek bond haircut on them.

    I can see massive problems with this and the Germans/EU will live to regret it, think this may be the tipping point.

    Expect a run on the banks in Greece, Spain and Portugal this week.

    Meanwhile Iceland continues to grow.
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    edited March 2013
    Oddly enough, if UKIP start doing far better than anyone imagined it could be the LDs who benefit the most of the three main parties because their core vote is likely to be the least receptive to the UKIP message.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,281
    Q re benefits - we often hear about benefits going up by 1% but what is happening to the income thresholds which determine benefits?

    Looking at the tax and benefit tables in The Times they don't appear to be moving at all but can that be right? Quite hard to make the point clearly so illustrative numbers (not actual numbers). Someone with children:

    Income £15,000 - Benefit £6,000 - Benefit rises next year by 1% to £6,060
    Income £20,000 - Benefit £3,000 - Benefit rises next year by 1% to £3,030
    Income £25,000 - Benefit £0 - Benefit next year remains £0

    Now if benefits each year rise as above (at whatever rate) with inflation someone today earning £15,000 would in many years time earn £25,000 so get no benefit. Ultimately the benefit bill would fall to zero unless the income thresholds are also adjusted.

    But The Times tables definitely show the income thresholds are not changing. Does anyone know exactly what is happening? All we hear is "benefits are going up by 1%" but this is almost meaningless without saying what is happening to the income thresholds.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,909
    Sam

    I have been to both Lakeside and Bluewater in recent weeks and I have to say Bluewater is just so much more upmarket than Lakeside, which seems a little worse for wear nowadays. Maybe most people who used to go there now go to Stratford Westfield?

    Anyway, to squeeze in a transport geek reference, you can go direct from Lakeside to Bluewater and back on the X80 bus which uses the Dartford bridge (southbound only of course). Return fare is 4.40. I'm guessing Ensignbus must have to pay some sort of charge to use the crossing but not at the point of use, the X80 is just waved through at the tolls!
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,281
    edited March 2013
    Re Spanish bank run isn't the issue that you can have a run on one or two banks - eg Northern Rock - as people transfer their money into other banks.

    But how would the average person say in the UK go about taking £100,000 out of their UK bank without transferring it into any other UK bank? I don't think the average person would know what to do and the bank is hardly going to give them £100,000 in notes.
  • @Sunil 7:04
    Dart tags in the vehicle debit your account as you drive through.

  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    @MikeL

    yup, my dad was wondering the same this afternoon in case Italy is affected too (IIRC in 1992 the government actually did it).
This discussion has been closed.