politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » If you think Beto O’Rourke is going to win Texas in November t

In recent times Texas has been a safe banker for the GOP but demographics are trending back to the Dems, so what might help tip the balance is if the Dems choose a native son or daughter to be their nominee.
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As for banks, given they got burned over sub-prime mortgages, I am not sure they are going to be wanting to get into the sub-prime loan business with even more high risk individuals e.g. don't own their own home, so the bank doesn't have anything to recoup if they default.
For your first, you might be surprised. Most parishes in the Church of England have links to local funds left by benefactors in times past that most people never realise exist, and some of them have vast resources that are never properly tapped.
He was interviewed on Stephen Colbert’s show the other night, seemed quite good but he’s really up against it in Texas as opposed to a New York talk show.
Edit: damn, third.
As for CoE parishes having funds, £3bn worth of money? (cos that is what I believe the pay-day lenders do every year) and again do they want to get into what is an incredibly risky business.
I don't think it is a wise move, unless you are going to be extremely picky over who you lend money to, and to be honest those people probably aren't having issues anyway, as they more than likely pay back the money next week with the extra £10-20 they have been charged and move on.
I don't know what the answer is. People say credit unions, perhaps. If there was a dead easy low risk low cost answer that could make money (or very least break even), the likes of Wonga would never exist in the first place.
It is true however there are not easy answers. I am looking forward to using it as an example when teaching A-level Philosophy and Ethics!
https://youtube.com/watch?v=j5IES0UP9sc
'Broken' rail franchise system to be reviewed
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45532566
The problem is that while I think everyone agrees the current model is ridiculous nobody can agree on what should replace it.
But as I said, we actually had far fewer applications than we had income, never mind capital, to give away.
https://www.texastribune.org/2018/09/14/ted-cruz-beto-orourke-agree-3-debates/
If you’re betting on this race, worth following.
Yet still people wouldn't apply to us for what amounted to free money. And some of them must surely have gone to Wonga and got into trouble.
Membership of credit unions in Britain has climbed to more than one million people but the number of customers seriously behind with their loan payments has increased sharply
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2013/jul/29/credit-unions-membership-archbishop-welby-wonga
However, the number of active credit unions in Britain fell from 565 in 2004 to 390 in 2012.
Credit unions are frequently touted as offering an ethical alternative to banks – but are they a safe place to put your cash? UK credit unions are collapsing at a rate of one per month at present, and the liquidator of the latest to go under has told Guardian Money there will almost certainly be more casualties.
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2013/may/11/credit-union-liquidation-money-save
It seems trying to loan money at 2% a month to very high risk individuals probably isn't sustainable.
The problem is despite the Charity Commission reforms it can be difficult to unlock these funds.
It might therefore be posssible with your charity to merge with another that has a more general brief. If there is any trouble, it could be done on the understanding that widowed seamstresses would have priority in any grant applications.
Texas going blue would be game over for the White House.
TBH, I do have a solution, which is to absorb them into the Master Charitable Trust. But we have a very conservative Lay Vice Chairman who was concerned about loss of control. He'd rather sit there and do nothing - despite the legal risk (I am an ex-officio trustee of these charities as a result of being a churchwarden) - than do something useful with the money
Incidentally, I have read your last post on the other thread, and I fear your Trentchant criticisms have left me without a riposte. So I shall rest on my laurels for the moment in the hope this thread will be Tamar.
I replaced our church roof with a lottery grant - free money - and yet they fussed about like a bunch of eejits to the point where I wanted to walk away and tell them to do it themselves.
and then theres ++Welby :-)
Instead it's been sitting in a bank account for 10 years...
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/aug/31/wonga-borrowing-payday-lender
I think he also makes a very good wider point about debt.
Has that Kielder conversation or at least got us to call Tyne?
As with a lot of these state wide races they are a lot about personalities than parties. In Florida the Democrat is ahead in the Governors race but the Republican is ahead on polling averages in the Senate race for example.
A popular Democrat may well retain Montana and West Virginia for the Senate this year - but they will go Republican solidly for the Presidency. A Republican won a Senate Race in Massachusetts just a few years ago.
The long term trend is for Texas to go Democrat but this election may tell you as much about Cruz and O'Rourke as anything more fundamental. And on current polling averages Cruz remains ahead.
Still seems like he'll come up a bit short though.
Fortunately we have some friends with the access to prevent any real abuses if necessary...
What does this mean? Does it mean what it might mean?
Finally home with barely any train/tube service for a Sat in Wembley.
Liverpool are a team on the up - as everyone says its 1/2 between them and City.
Spurs look stale, tired & as for Dire & Rose having their own 'who can pass to the opponent most' competiton...well.
75 quid well spent.
I really can't see Drakeford being a success. He's got Phil Hammond's charisma, Johnson's acumen, Corbyn's leadership skills and Clinton's inability to connect to people.
The snag is with no obvious alternative government and two opponents who spent more time fighting each other than Labour Wales will still be stuck with them unless their vote share dips below about 25%.
Also can the genie can be put back in the bottle, now people have got used to easy credit, low interest rates and the rise of social media showing people all these luxury lifestyles.
SDP/Lib 42
Lab 29
Con 26.5
(Gallup 16/11/81)
or
SDP/Lib 44
Lab 27
Con 27
(Mori 1/12/81)
And there are plenty of others like those - I've not picked the most extreme.
If there was a major split within Labour, and the Tories ousted May and replaced her with either someone else tin-eared and dull or someone more interested in Brexit than the NHS, then in these retail politics-driven times, I could well see a new centre party (into which the Lib Dems would need to merge or act as junior ally), comfortably leading the polls.
Prominent remain supporters including Tony Blair and John Major have been working with Nick Clegg and Peter Mandelson on a diplomatic mission to try to persuade European leaders to stop Brexit.
Clegg, the former deputy prime minister, began the mission independently but has taken on the role of informal shop steward to the grandees.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/sep/14/clegg-leads-pro-remain-grandees-on-diplomatic-mission-to-stop-brexit
The real problem is that people are skint. Partly it is due to issues like UC, and in part due to excessive consumerism. Too many are living on the never-never.
Not former politicians with no standing to speak on behalf of our nation.
This is an arrogant step from this bunch who failed to win a referendum and are now seeking to prevent it from being implemented.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/sep/15/almost-half-of-voters-say-they-would-vote-for-new-party-in-election
For reference, Holyrood uses a ratio of 1.3:1 If Wales used that same ratio, then there'd be 31 top-up MPs rather than 20, few of which would go to Labour.
I am not sure even TSE would wear it!!!
Jan Vertoghen is worse than Mark Reckless to me for his assault on Bobby Firmino.
We’ve both got easy matches on Tuesday.
F1: still only 11 markets up on Ladbrokes. May end up posting the pre-race stuff tomorrow.
How would this mythical centre party materialise in practice and win under FPTP? A similar poll a few weeks ago said something like 27 per cent of voters would back a hard right anti immigration party too in theory but UKIP are on around 4 per cent?
I'll get my coat.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/102489d2-b85e-11e8-9605-b6ff09b482a1
Every adult should be given a cash handout to mark Britain’s exit from the EU, Chris Grayling suggested at a special cabinet meeting.
That remark is unfair to berks.
It is even unfair to Berkeley Hunts.
If I felt malicious and/or paranoid I would wonder whether Labour had designed it that way...
Good evening, everybody.
https://twitter.com/BootstrapCook/status/1041007160765894658
https://twitter.com/BootstrapCook/status/1041007558457217024
https://twitter.com/BootstrapCook/status/1041009271226421248
https://twitter.com/AbiWilks/status/1040994630647640066
https://twitter.com/jessphillips/status/1041003531795423233
Top class spat between Brummy Labour MP actually doing work for constituents and Corbynista purist.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_election_in_Texas,_2018
Indeed the Democrats could fail to win in Texas and still take the Senate if they win Nevada, Arizona and Tennessee where they are currently closer to the GOP than in Texas or even ahead and lose only 1 of the currently Democratic held seats
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/voting-intention-1979-1983
I think a lot of the South however will gradually swing blue as African American and Hispanic voters make themselves felt. Plus Texas with its high number of well-paid international and government jobs is less Trump-friendly than the rustbelt.
Perhaps Virginia in 2008 was a straw in the wind we should have paid more attention to.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/sep/15/almost-half-of-voters-say-they-would-vote-for-new-party-in-election
With the exception of Selmayr who of course owes his career to licking Juncker's back side...