politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The uncertainty over Brexit and TMay are set to make this year

We are little over two months away from this year’s local elections which because of the febrile political situation could have wider consequences than just who runs the local council.
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I suppose it could be the ultimate act of rebellion if you feel the direction is completely wrong and have to make a stand (or for negative reasons for anyone who doesn't like the person)
The BBC "Sunday Politics" had a piece on the London elections, based on the recent YouGov poll, indicating that the Conservatives might retain just 1 or 2 councils in London, even the prospect of losing Westminster.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b09rzbnk/sunday-politics-25022018
From around 29:30.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/0/93-cartoons-celebrating-30-years-telegraphs-matt/
That said I don't think local election results would be the trigger for a move against May in May (sorry for the grammar). They might however make an autumn putsch more likely when the EU talks have reached agreement/collapsed entirely due to Davis' incompetence and Barnier's intransigence.
UNIVERSITY chiefs were yesterday told by Ministers to hand the wages of striking lecturers to STUDENTS.
Education Minister Sam Gyimah waded into the bitter industrial action to say youngsters should be compensated for the disruption caused to their courses
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/5670190/education-minister-tells-universities-to-give-striking-lecturers-pay-back-to-students/
https://twitter.com/Telegraph/status/967448853841670146
At the moment the Tories have an immensely strong base in LG. I think that they will be quite sanguine about the loss of 100 seats or so, particularly in Councils where they already have little say. The recoveries from UKIP should reduce the net damage to acceptable proportions.
We did have some rain yesterday though, which has the same effect of making everyone forget how to drive!
For example, what Corbyn says today is meaningless, unless he says how much he is prepared to pay Brussels for his/a/the Customs Union. And if he is pledging it is going to be "full tariff-free", as the BBC reports, then that looks like no change in our relationship with the EU. How well is that going to play with those Labour Brexit voters in Leeds?
Jezza and Tony Blair arm in arm fighting the good fight to ignore the referendum.
How unsurprising.
To call Barnier's mindless posturing a dishonest fantasy would be to dignify it. He seems to genuinely believe that he can impose any conditions he likes and there will be no consequences or potential downsides for the EU, or better yet that we will simply give up and remain (at least, that's the only logical explanation for his lies and smear tactics although as he is an associate of Juncker we should also perhaps consider the possibility he is drunk all the time). May has set out several position papers some of which are mutually incompatible (for example, no borders and restrictions on immigration) most of which she has subsequently ignored depending on which group of Tory rebels is shouting the loudest. And Corbyn - well, let's face it, he hasn't come to a decision because he's a straightforward populist and in this situation there is no popular option for him and he hasn't the brainpower to work out on for himself. As a result, most of the actual work is done by Starmer, a rather creepy and oily lawyer chiefly memorable for his mighty mess-ups as DPP.
If this was about a snooker club it would be funny. As the consequences could be a nasty trade war which would damage the entire continent it is not.
I never, ever thought I would be nostalgic for Brown. But right now I am.
https://twitter.com/heidi_mp/status/968030106487750656
As it turns out it was not the Messiah...
Work beckons alas. Have a good day everyone.
On topic, while not many Labourites might know the intricate details of "the" and "a" Customs Union, we all know about giving the Tories a bloody nose by inflicting a government defeat on their Brexit policy.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/comment/may-s-carnival-of-indecision-over-brexit-has-cost-us-dear-g3qjq8bh6
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthaeum,_Hove
Does it put May's speech in a few days even more under pressure? (and we know how well she responds to that)........
F1: Force India and Toro Rosso unveiled:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/43195086
And testing's livefeed is here:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/live/formula1/43190400
Are we in danger of eating ourselves out of house and home?
@IanDunt: Corbyn supporters should listen closely. This is what happens when you reject one of the greatest international solidarity projects in history.
Or they could go wah, wah, wah some more
It may well be that with the national polls almost tied because Corbyn is starting from a much higher base than the general election, as he was in the 2017 local elections, the Tories may do a bit better than expected and Labour a bit worse
... also that it can maintain full single market access while getting FoM changes
shadow Cabinet conducting a shadow negotiation with Europe?
Anyone can sell to European markets. That's not access to the Single Market, it's application of the CET. If you want SM membership, it's the four freedoms - an EU red line that they've reiterated a hojillion times.
And colder.
Why has the man who has not changed his mind on anything since the 1970s suddenly changed his mind? Bangs goes "stable". His USP has gone. And why now - when STFU about Brexit seemed to be working so well for them?
How sad.
He's looking to bring down May's administration. In fairness, it would be a mercy killing.
Politically it's quite clever, and I think it's worth the gamble. Muggles won't be paying attention anyway.
And it appears the new McLaren has just three wheels. It seems a novel approach to racing car design: take the old Tyrell six-wheeler and half the number of wheels to reduce friction. I'm unsure it'll be very fast, though...
F1 2018 is GO GO GO!!!!
< / MurrayWalker >
*Unless your name’s Alonso, in which case you’re sitting beached in a gravel trap with three wheels on your wagon.
The labour movement must stop the labour London mafia running a once great party.
As a Labour leaver we have to have Brexit and it has to give us power to make our own decisions.
Much as I admire Jezza there are definitely lines like 2nd referendums or membership of the single market I would not be prepared to cross and still vote Labour
http://politicalbetting.vanillaforums.com/discussion/5918/politicalbetting-com-blog-archive-at-100-1-or-longer-osborne-dmiliband-tblair-for-next-ld-lea/p2
Your accusation of "victim blaming" is in response to my post which says not a word about hostesses. If you are going to call me stupid, that's fine because I know I am not, whereas lying about your own posting history when you know it is searchable is not Mensa level behaviour.
Mind you searching the site is so bloody laborious that I'm not doing it again, so feel free to witter on about isolated instance, taken out of context, yada yada. And GOSH have cut you off at the knees, rather than inflicting a mere flesh wound.
It's simple maths.
https://twitter.com/DavidDavisMP/status/968042823256813568
This is the sort of behaviour i expect from cretinous West Ham and Chelsea fans.
https://twitter.com/Peston/status/967792953371570176
https://twitter.com/Peston/status/967832823196512256
On those numbers Hillingdon should be retained albeit with a much reduced majority - I think Havering is very hard to call and assuming a Conservative gain seems to assume a transfer from UKIP to CON which may or may not happen.
You've gone on about the "Jewish vote" in Barnet but the swing needed for Labour to take control is incredibly small.
As for Sutton, "outside chance", well, perhaps and I did cite this as a possibility last year but the LDs held the Borough for a decade before they captured the Parliamentary seats so it's not a simple rationale that because the Conservatives now hold Sutton & Cheam they will mop up the Council seats.
And showed how out of touch they were the rest of the country and the Conservative MPs who had their constituencies there.
Within six months Thatcher was gone.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_local_elections,_1990