politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Vince Cable looks set to become the first Strictly contestant

The news tonight that ex-coalition cabinet minister, Ed Davey, is not planning to stand for the LD leadership means that that former Business Secretary Secretary looks set to take over from Tim Farron as LD leader.
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His unwritten promise is to stand down in a couple of years. Let's hope he sticks to it.
The rules say "This market will be settled based on the first official announcement of the next permanent Liberal Democrat leader after Tim Farron, as chosen by a Liberal Democrat leadership contest."
If there is only one contender, is there a contest? Or is the contest the result of the request for nominations?
The reason I ask is that am sitting on a pile of winning on Vince but don't know whether I should attempt to lay it. And even if I am successful in laying it (or cash out) and go all green, will I lose the greenery if the bet is declared void?
Edit/ and, no, cashing out doesn't make you immune from a bet being voided. Cashing out simply balances out your back/lay position with new bets, which all remain live until the market is finally settled, or voided.
Is like when Brown succeeded Blair or when Sturgeon succeeded Salmond.
How did you resist 'A period of Radiohead silence from you would be appreciated'?...
The pithier "a period of Radiohead silence would be appreciated" sounds better - in both senses...
Sir Vince isn't a bona fide Strictly contestant.
He was merely on the Christmas show.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/05/08/revealed-sir-vince-cable-urges-lib-dem-supporters-back-labour/
Are you honestly suggesting that Cable would ever lead the LDs into a coalition other than with Labour?
I wish Corbyn had half her bottle. We might not now be leaving. Incidentally I don't believe he and McDonnell will escape the fallout after Brexit unravels
Leavers sleep easy in their beds.....
Even so, if I was a LibDem member I would still probably think him the best option -- with the situation the party is in, they really need someone who has something of a public profile to even get noticed, even when that profile isn't wholly positive. They can't afford to take a punt on some new MP who might theoretically have broader appeal to their pre-Coalition voters (if there are any MPs who meet that criteria), they need to go with someone who the public already know just to get back into the game.
I don't mind you being rude, but I hope for your sake that you try to think things out a little more in the future before doing something like venturing our of your house.
Edit: Sorry that was very rude, and uncalled for. You annoyed me and I let it get the better of me. I apologise.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/wintour-and-watt/2010/may/11/coalition-talks-libdem-labour-deal
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/06/24/liam-fox-interview-country-made-views-clear-part-dont-people/
He's beaming a lot surrounded by his art collection, but still seems to be fighting the EU referendum a little bit much to my mind. Come on, Liam - put that triumph behind you. You won. Now roll up your sleeves and start securing us those trade deals!
By the next GE they will be keener still.
Although admittedly he was quite good at that portfolio.
(Realised after I posted that he was only minister of state, but let the error ride)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/06/27/dup-demand-460m-tax-cuts-keep-theresa-may-power-brexit/
He is the only one in the cabinet speaking sense over Brexit. There needs to be a soft Brexit transition phase or a car crash Brexit. The latter looks increasingly likely.
They must be confusing the Conservatives with UKIP in the same way you have.
She will have 20 New Bastards.
She will have about 80 Brexit hardliners.
And a split cabinet. And a playful House of Lords.
It will take diplomatic genius to reconcile all that lot.
(on the plus side, the Labour opposition is nowhere near as coordinated - in Parliament - as it was under Kinnock and Blair, and McDonnell will do what he will)
I do think Hammond isn't fully inside the tent yet, and I'm not sure whether he wants to be.
This is between Davis and Barnier and I'm confident they'll reach a sensible settlement if the like's of Hammond and Boris aren't allowed to stir things up too much.
Who could have predicted that!
'In all fairness G, your wisdom about the Labour Party could be written on the back of one of Uncle Vince's cruelly privatised postage stamps '
Believe me I have lived through all kinds of labour parties and remember Kinnock saving them from the hard left only for the hard left to arise through Corbyn. I remember the refuse in the streets and the dead lyjng unburied. I also voted for Tony twice - so do not patronise me