politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Iain Dale predicts that the LDs will win 30-35 seats at GE2
Comments
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Paul Flynn @Paulflynnmp Jan 18
Alarming prescience in oh so many ways.
UKIP says gay marriage caused the recent floods. Batten down the hatches against a plague of boils and a locust attack.
LOL0 -
Petal, Sammy... You know how to hurt a manMick_Pork said:
If this is a spoof it's one of the best I've yet seen on PB. Which is saying something Sammy.isam said:what's your aim with all this nonsense?
no spoof, I didn't criticise the Guardian, or the Mail, or say that I think all Muslims should sign some form to show they they're not terrorists, yet you keep on implying that I did.
It is madness, especially as it is there for all to see that I didn't say it, hence you are making a fool of yourself0 -
Someone on UKPR says there are 455 days to the election and as such the Conservatives need to find 6,000 votes a day in order to secure a bare majority (mostly, but not entirely, from people who have never voted Conservative).
P.S. I have no idea if this calculation is in any way accurate.-1 -
In which case, you clearly accept that I am very unlikely to be a sockpuppet created by your apparent hero SeanT, and you will withdraw all insinuations thereto.Theuniondivvie said:
I'm confident that Seant, even by his potboilery standards, would be capable of creating a reasonably convincing and discrete persona rather than a pallid facsimile of his own florid presence.Gildas said:
No, from what I know of him, I don't think he would. But I will. As a new contributor, it is a pain for everyone to snidely assume you are someone else. And quite off putting. I suggest OGH applies his own rule.Theuniondivvie said:
Who was speculating?Gildas said:SeanT is quite capable of defending himself. He doesn't need me.
I also thought OGH had instituted a rule that commenters were not allowed to speculate on the identity of other posters? In which case I suggest he looks to the remarks by uniondivvie.
In any case I'm sure Seant wouldn't go snivelling to the moderators, would he?
I suggest we end the argument at this happy juncture, and talk instead about the eerie marital status of Alex Salmond.
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Radio 4's journalism on Dawlish is terrible.
They said the rail line's only been breached twice before in the 1850s: wrong. They also claimed that people are amazed it happened: well, they're obviously fairly ignorant.
Who cares about facts if it gets in the way of a good story?
See the recent collapse in the photo below:
http://www.devonheritage.org/Places/Dawlish/GWRSeawallcollapse1855.htm
And more occasions listed below (for just one stretch of the line, search for 'breaches'):
http://www.greatcliff.co.uk/pages/railway_history.php
Are their researchers on strike?
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Posturing for the moment but it's one of the few things that could help mitigate the damage of having Clegg in a leaders debate. Someone far more right wing to contrast against as well as diluting the impact of the debates by having that much less time for each of them.Now that is a surprise.Mick_Pork said:
Already has happened. Tentatively to be sure, but noises that will no doubt be most unwelcome at CCHQ.anotherDave said:
Not going to happen. The LDs are still trying to present themselves as the third party. The last thing they want to do is see UKIP on the stage.Mick_Pork said:
Clegg making yet more noise about having Farage in the leaders debates would be another telling sign of that.Nick Clegg: I'd relish meeting Nigel Farage in televised election debates
The Deputy Prime Minister says David Cameron should not use Ukip's possible involvement as an 'excuse' to avoid debating the top three parties
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/nick-clegg/10553553/Nick-Clegg-Id-relish-meeting-Nigel-Farage-in-televised-election-debates.html
I suppose the LDs think UKIP would eat into the Conservative vote, which would be good for the LDs. The LDs don't seem able to increase their own numbers, so hoping the Conservatives have a bad night is all that's left.
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Indeed. Entirely to be expected and unless I'm very much mistaken perfectly reasonable behaviour. The lib dems still have the know-how to mount a focused operation on the ground targeting those groups they identify as most likely to vote for them. I would think they still have much of the technical apparatus deployed at large scale elections. The question is boots on the ground. Well staffed phonebanks and mass emails are fairly unlikely to reach that group. That needs pavement pounding.Richard_Tyndall said:
The latest newsletter from the Lib Dems in the East Midlands makes it clear they are intending to target EU migrants in the region as a means of bolstering their Euro vote with the main argument being deployed being that their positions are at risk if UKIP win.0 -
Aidan Burley quitting at next election.0
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Big Madrid derby in the Copa Del Rey tonight with Real at home.
Ronaldo is banned for three games after tonight having been sent off at the weekend, he will want to sign off with a goal. He is as low as 1.57 to score anytime but inexplicably Spreadex have him at evens on their fixed odds. Too good to resist for me.0 -
AIDAN BURLEY TO STEP DOWN AT NEXT GENERAL ELECTION.0
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It was interesting that the overall tone of the letter was an appeal for support in getting the message out. Particularly if dealing with communities who may not believe they are entitled to vote or who may not know much about the relative merits of the various parties, a good ground game might make all the difference.Mick_Pork said:
Indeed. Entirely to be expected and unless I'm very much mistaken perfectly reasonable behaviour. The lib dems still have the know-how to mount a focused operation on the ground targeting those groups they identify as most likely to vote for them. I would think they still have much of the technical apparatus deployed at large scale elections. The question is boots on the ground. Well staffed phonebanks and mass emails are fairly unlikely to reach that group. That needs pavement pounding.Richard_Tyndall said:
The latest newsletter from the Lib Dems in the East Midlands makes it clear they are intending to target EU migrants in the region as a means of bolstering their Euro vote with the main argument being deployed being that their positions are at risk if UKIP win.0 -
Now that is a surprise.anotherDave said:
Posturing for the moment but it's one of the few things that could help mitigate the damage of having Clegg in a leaders debate. Someone far more right wing to contrast against as well as diluting the impact of the debates by having that much less time for each of them.Mick_Pork said:
Already has happened. Tentatively to be sure, but noises that will no doubt be most unwelcome at CCHQ.anotherDave said:
Not going to happen. The LDs are still trying to present themselves as the third party. The last thing they want to do is see UKIP on the stage.Mick_Pork said:
Clegg making yet more noise about having Farage in the leaders debates would be another telling sign of that.Nick Clegg: I'd relish meeting Nigel Farage in televised election debates
The Deputy Prime Minister says David Cameron should not use Ukip's possible involvement as an 'excuse' to avoid debating the top three parties
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/nick-clegg/10553553/Nick-Clegg-Id-relish-meeting-Nigel-Farage-in-televised-election-debates.html
I suppose the LDs think UKIP would eat into the Conservative vote, which would be good for the LDs. The LDs don't seem able to increase their own numbers, so hoping the Conservatives have a bad night is all that's left.
You have the crux of it. If you can't change your own vote - and flatlining at 10% since late 2010 tends to speak for itself - change the vote of someone else. Someone you dearly want to be as low as possible in marginals where you are fighting for every vote.0 -
Shame it's not Kay BurleyAndyJS said:AIDAN BURLEY TO STEP DOWN AT NEXT GENERAL ELECTION.
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Mr Gildas welcome to PB.Gildas said:
In which case, you clearly accept that I am very unlikely to be a sockpuppet created by your apparent hero SeanT, and you will withdraw all insinuations thereto.Theuniondivvie said:
I'm confident that Seant, even by his potboilery standards, would be capable of creating a reasonably convincing and discrete persona rather than a pallid facsimile of his own florid presence.Gildas said:
No, from what I know of him, I don't think he would. But I will. As a new contributor, it is a pain for everyone to snidely assume you are someone else. And quite off putting. I suggest OGH applies his own rule.Theuniondivvie said:
Who was speculating?Gildas said:SeanT is quite capable of defending himself. He doesn't need me.
I also thought OGH had instituted a rule that commenters were not allowed to speculate on the identity of other posters? In which case I suggest he looks to the remarks by uniondivvie.
In any case I'm sure Seant wouldn't go snivelling to the moderators, would he?
I suggest we end the argument at this happy juncture, and talk instead about the eerie marital status of Alex Salmond.
we have some pretty sharp cybernats on this board, may I suggest if you're going to debate Scotland you keep yourself informed of events; these sites may help
http://www.heraldscotland.com/
http://www.scotsman.com/
http://www.thewurzels.com/
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In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
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Carmichael warns of rising McCarthyism in Referendum debate;
http://www.scotsman.com/news/politics/top-stories/cybernats-scaring-pro-union-voters-carmichael-1-32955410 -
Awww that's so sweet. might I suggest a nice comfy pillow to further protect the poor dear.Alanbrooke said:
Mr Gildas welcome to PB.
we have some pretty sharp cybernats on this board
He seems so fragile and meek.0 -
Goose step down?AndyJS said:AIDAN BURLEY TO STEP DOWN AT NEXT GENERAL ELECTION.
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you're simply channelling divvie now, or is that Bristol channelling ?Mick_Pork said:
Awww that's so sweet. might I suggest a nice comfy pillow to further protect the poor dear.Alanbrooke said:
Mr Gildas welcome to PB.
we have some pretty sharp cybernats on this board
He seems so fragile and meek.0 -
Michael Crick @MichaelLCrick 1h
Crick's on the case. This might prove amusing.
@TimBouverie Tory rebels puzzled over who, anonymously, has sent them copies of last week's Spectator urging backbenchers not to rock boat0 -
Without reopening the argument with Charles from earlier today, in spite of my atheist position, this is a stupid waste of time and the magistrate should be hauled up by the authorities for issuing the summons.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/10619538/Head-of-Mormon-church-Thomas-Monson-summoned-by-British-magistrates-court-over-Adam-and-Eve-teaching.html0 -
Many thanks. It was of course described as the 'reconvened' parliament as the first item of business in 1998, and Scottish doctrine on sovereignty is not uniform with Westminster's, as you probably know in view of recent case law, but the basic conclusion is the same - no point in fouling things up unnecessarily.RichardNabavi said:
Oh, I'm sure a lot of the real nitty-gritty will be in statutory instruments and regulations rather than in the Act itself, but the overall point still remains, that parliament has to approve the package.Carnyx said:I was in fact wondering how far you saw the necessary agreements as being for legislative detail of Acts of Parliament, rather than administrative action by fiat.
However, the pre-1707 Scottish parliament wasn't 'reconvened' in 1998. The original parliament of Scotland ceased to exist as a separate body in 1707, and was subsumed (as was the English parliament) into what we now know as the UK parliament. The 1998 Scottish parliament is a completely new and unrelated body, which has been granted some delegated powers but is still subject to Westminster; the Westminster parliament could abolish it at any time in exactly the same way that it could abolish Brighton Council if it was pleased to do so. Scottish independence can legally only occur if parliament wills it, or I suppose if Soctland declares UDI and successfully seeks international recognition as an independent country.0 -
Why would Ed look at it ? These are rural communities, Chris Smith says let them flood.Hugh said:
From that sitedr_spyn said:JosiasJessop
Via another site.
http://www.southampton.ac.uk/~imw/Dawlish-Warren.htm
With global warming now causing a relatively rapid sea-level rise it is recognised that in within about 50 years this line may be doomed. There is at present (2008) consideration taking place of a scheme for the future of using a railway line from Okehampton to Plymouth
Happening quicker than expected. Better get building that alternative.
One for Ed to look at perhaps.0 -
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
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As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.0 -
Oh dear - what will the PB Tories do now that their cheerleader Aidan Burley will not be an MP post 2015?
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Time to put away that black Hugo Boss suit?Theuniondivvie said:
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I see that Lord Smith is stepping down as head of the Environment Agency this summer. Is this part of the Tory purge of Labour apparatchiki?0
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I believe a Mr Godfrey Bloom may be available.murali_s said:Oh dear - what will the PB Tories do now that their cheerleader Aidan Burley will not be an MP post 2015?
John Moss @John_J_C_Moss 2h
Is @GerardBattenMEP bidding to take of the official #UKIP position vacated by Godfrey Bloom? #jester? #embarassingelderlyrelative?
Barry Butler @barryjbutler
Dear #UKIP Godfrey Bloom at it again. Mocking disability. Time for a fruitcake "night of the long knives"? http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/ukips-godfrey-bloom-mocks-disability-at-oxford-union-asks-student-david-browne-are-you-richard-iii-9087751.html … #farage-1 -
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
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Can I suggest that the suggestions that a poster is really another poster under a different name are rather tiresome.
Best to take posters at their username, even if you do believe that they are not in actuality, a Llama/Morris Dancer/etc as their name suggests, or believed they previously called themselves that before undergoing an identity shift.
Or in short, no more thank you.0 -
Looks like Welsh Labour think devolution has gone far enough in Wales. Shadow Welsh Secretary Owen Smith told Welsh Grand Committee that, "the Welsh govt did not seek powers to vary income tax and will not do so in the future."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-26052652
Contrast to Welsh Tories who tonight announced they would abolish stamp duty on houses up to 250,000 if they were to win the next assembly election.
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/update/2014-02-05/stamp-duty-wales-conservatives-brain-drain/
Looks like Welsh Labour are running scared of accountability.0 -
Burley's seat is a marginal that will almost certainly go Labour next year, so he's probably making plans ahead, that's all. I suspect he thinks the seat is unwinnable.0
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I do so admire the blind faith you have in Ed.Hugh said:
From that sitedr_spyn said:JosiasJessop
Via another site.
http://www.southampton.ac.uk/~imw/Dawlish-Warren.htm
With global warming now causing a relatively rapid sea-level rise it is recognised that in within about 50 years this line may be doomed. There is at present (2008) consideration taking place of a scheme for the future of using a railway line from Okehampton to Plymouth
Happening quicker than expected. Better get building that alternative.
One for Ed to look at perhaps.
I fear you will be hugely disappointed.0 -
More likely he's stepping down before he's pushed. The EA have hardly covered themselves in glory recently, and neither has Smith.antifrank said:I see that Lord Smith is stepping down as head of the Environment Agency this summer. Is this part of the Tory purge of Labour apparatchiki?
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FPT
The main thing those stories do is advertise PC double standards so one possibility is the papers found this out via their comment sections - whether published or not - and dropped it quick before it helped Ukip too much.taffys said:At least someone's happy with Batten.
That story has disappeared off the news front pages completely. Genuinely curious.
A duller alternative would be legal issues.
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Looks like Welsh Labour are running scared of accountability.
The reason they are opposing it is that the government might actually expect Wales to start paying its way, as opposed to being essentially a vassal, handout state.
Funny if it wasn;t so sad.
Wales. Labour in action.0 -
I like you, you're very funny, or deluded, but either way you amuse me.Hugh said:
Tough one. They'll inherit dangerously unbalanced growth and high but falling unemployment and underemployment, I should think, but so did the Tories.saddened said:
Will they inherit a better or worse economy than the coalition?Hugh said:
I don't deny the Govt inherited an economy knackered by the global financial crisis (although it was growing, something Osborne promptly put an end to).Morris_Dancer said:Mr. Hugh, two points in response to 'salting the earth':
1) It was Labour that gave the Coalition the hospital pass of picking up the pieces after the longest, deepest and worst recession in British history. Complaining Osborne won't be handing over a sparkly economy is like complaining when a juvenile delinquent breaks a window in Dresden after it was bombed.
2) Labour had the policy to reduce the NHS' budget.
[As an aside, the archetypical 'salted earth' city, Carthage, was destroyed but made a pretty good comeback as a Romanised city].
Problem is, they haven't fixed it, and will hand over a mess. I don't envy the job Ed and Ed will face.
A lot hasn't changed much. The financial sector is still dangerously unreformed, the deficit is still a problem and a lot of tax rises / spending cuts need to be inflicted etc.
Elsewhere, the Tories have created a lot of unnecessary mess like the chaos in the NHS and IDS's Universal Credit disaster that Labour will have to clean up.
Economy - about the same inheritance as the Tories.
Overall - worse inheritance than the Tories.
It should give Tories cause for hope though, because if they modernise in opposition and Labour get it wrong in Government, they could walk 2020.
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Sadly you'll need someone to coddle and protect you against the vicious and deeply upsetting onslaught of mockery such a guise will inevitably bring.Theuniondivvie said:
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
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You shouldn't jest. Cybernats are viewed with ever growing suspicion by the SNP elite;Theuniondivvie said:
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/yes-campaign-distance-themselves-pro-independence-22668580 -
''The main thing those stories do is advertise PC double standards so one possibility is the papers found this out via their comment sections - whether published or not - and dropped it quick before it helped Ukip too much.''
Indeed.
The Express ran a story today about 'extreme right wingers' handing out booze and fags on predominantly muslim Brick Lane in response to the Choudhary nonsense there. The language the report was couched in was openly condemnatory in tone.
I know its the Express, but every comment I counted below this story was supportive of this mob. Every one. And there were a number.
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Curious that even Farage seems keen to dump it quick then?MrJones said:and dropped it quick before it helped Ukip too much.
Richard Murphy @RichardJMurphy 1h
Helping too much I take it. Just like with Bloom.
Farage distances himself from MEP http://gu.com/p/3mftc/tw via @guardian How many people can Farage distance himself from and remain in UKIP?0 -
What name does she post under on here I wonder?
Labour Councillor Found Guilty Of Reckless Racism Slurs
http://www.tottenhamjournal.co.uk/news/wood_green_councillor_found_guilty_of_reckless_racism_slur_pauline_gibson_labour_noel_park_1_3283935
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Scottish version of the LDs EU advert now up.
http://youtu.be/cqCtnKrTFV4
I wonder how LD councillor candidates feel about this 'party of in' campaign?0 -
I like you, you're very funny, or deluded, but either way you amuse me.
Particularly because, with the election little more than a year away, we haven't the faintest idea of what form the clean up operation will take
Indeed, its astonishing how much of the 'mess' labour inherits they intend...er....not to change.0 -
Andy_Cooke, welcome back, hope you hang around and start posting again more frequently.Andy_Cooke said:
I stick my head in for old times sake and see HurstLlama dangling a Diplomacy game in front of me ...HurstLlama said:
PB Diplmacy 2014 Death Match
A standard game with one exception, there can only be one winner alliances are not allowed. One player has to make 18 centres to win. Anyone can join but be aware this is going to be a devious, vicious, no holds barred, bring a gun to a knife fight sort of game. Not really for novices, the feint-hearted or anyone who likes their gaming fair and honest. To give a clue as to the type of game I expect, I am trying to tempt Andy Cooke back to play (and hopefully to comment on the site again).
Those who are interested in either game should email me at HurstLlama at gmail dot com for details.
Oh, I may be persuaded. Pencil me in, old chap.0 -
I linked to that site earlier. ;-)dr_spyn said:JosiasJessop
Via another site.
http://www.southampton.ac.uk/~imw/Dawlish-Warren.htm
He's a very nice chap - I've corresponded with him in the past. Knows his onions.0 -
Nah,. Ed won't do that - it's infrastructure. He'll announce it, work out the cost, then cancel it and put the money into a non-infrastructure project such as tax credits.Hugh said:
From that sitedr_spyn said:JosiasJessop
Via another site.
http://www.southampton.ac.uk/~imw/Dawlish-Warren.htm
With global warming now causing a relatively rapid sea-level rise it is recognised that in within about 50 years this line may be doomed. There is at present (2008) consideration taking place of a scheme for the future of using a railway line from Okehampton to Plymouth
Happening quicker than expected. Better get building that alternative.
One for Ed to look at perhaps.
Sorry, Nick.
The motto: don't trust Labour with the future.0 -
Not very relevant to the current government maybe but all the money wasted on carbon reduction could have been going into sea defenses and draining channels instead.currystar said:I have been reading a number of blogs where people are blaming the government for not protecting these seaside towns enough.
Why do people in this country always look to blame someone.
The seawall at Dawlish has been there for 150 years and if you look how the sea has destroyed it overnight it just demonstrates the enormous power of nature. How can people think that it is the governments fault?
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Why on earth would they be consulted? Clegg's ostrich faction know best. They're likely doing it to protect those lib dem marginals and areas where the tories are a threat by pushing IN and OUT to the centre of the EU election. That will just boost the kippers and they presumably think help them by pushing down the tory vote. If that hurts them elsewhere then tough. Hence the hilarity of seeing Rennie telling the scottish public to fear the tories will take us OUT of Europe when that's what the Yes campaign have been saying for months. Joined up thinking they probably call it.anotherDave said:Scottish version of the LDs EU advert now up.
I wonder how LD councillor candidates feel about this 'party of in' campaign?
They also appear to have one 'official' set of clothing for lib dem PPBs. Unfortunate that it just makes Rennie appear even more like a Clegg mini-me than usual.0 -
Still, I don't think there's any evidence of even the most crazed Nat issuing death threats yet. I'm sure you can point me to the statements issued by the various elements of Bettertogether distancing themselves from this type of thing (just the latest of many):MonikerDiCanio said:
You shouldn't jest. Cybernats are viewed with ever growing suspicion by the SNP elite;Theuniondivvie said:
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/yes-campaign-distance-themselves-pro-independence-2266858
http://tinyurl.com/q5m9ykp
Perhaps you'd like to take this opportunity to speak on their behalf?
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400 large for being useless at your job?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/10619513/Policeman-who-smashed-up-pensioners-car-receives-400000-compensation.html
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I wonder if I am KP or perhaps the new Gabble.... or just a sad old blue with an unfortunate footie team affliction.
wimmen, wimmen, wimmen = 35% voter target
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Helping too much I take it. Just like with Bloom.Mick_Pork said:
Curious that even Farage seems keen to dump it quick then?MrJones said:and dropped it quick before it helped Ukip too much.
Richard Murphy @RichardJMurphy 1h
Farage distances himself from MEP http://gu.com/p/3mftc/tw via @guardian How many people can Farage distance himself from and remain in UKIP?
Do carry on.
Ukip's response to all these kind of stories - which will be endless as the Europhile political class increasingly gang up against that part of the public they want rid of - is to spin them round and use them to point out how PC is just one big double standard.
For example, how would the Guardian react to a Christian denomination that said apostates should be executed?
Any PC-based attack is guaranteed to be a double-standard so ignore the attack and just turn it round.
imo
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Crick's on the case. This might prove amusing.Mick_Pork said:Michael Crick @MichaelLCrick 1h
@TimBouverie Tory rebels puzzled over who, anonymously, has sent them copies of last week's Spectator urging backbenchers not to rock boat
Crick's back. Cool. I've been looking forward to seeing him and Channel 4 giving Hancock the full Bloom treatment.0 -
I didn't know Ian Dale was still on the scene! :O
Nevertheless, the prediction seem's about right to me, a bad night for the Libs (losing half their seats) but probably not a meltdown.0 -
You're out of touch;Theuniondivvie said:
Still, I don't think there's any evidence of even the most crazed Nat issuing death threats yet. I'm sure you can point me to the statements issued by the various elements of Bettertogether distancing themselves from this type of thing (just the latest of many):MonikerDiCanio said:
You shouldn't jest. Cybernats are viewed with ever growing suspicion by the SNP elite;Theuniondivvie said:
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/yes-campaign-distance-themselves-pro-independence-2266858
http://tinyurl.com/q5m9ykp
Perhaps you'd like to take this opportunity to speak on their behalf?
"The phenomenon of the so-called Cybernats – SNP supporters who use the internet to attack anyone who disagrees with them – has been well aired before, but of late it has taken on a new viciousness. After appearing on the BBC’s Question Time, Kezia Dugdale, a Labour MSP for the Lothians and staunch defender of the United Kingdom, was subjected to a veritable barrage of hate mail via Twitter. One accused her of being a “blackshirt”, evoking memories of the Thirties fascists. Another tweet said the sender would like to see what she looked like “on the end of a bayonet”. When Ms Dugdale reported this to the police, she says she was told the tweet was “not directly threatening enough” and that too much police manpower would be required to track down the miscreant."0 -
Dare we ask as to how this dastardly conspiracy to get "rid of" part of the public will occur?MrJones said:which will be endless as the Europhile political class increasingly gang up against that part of the public they want rid of
Is the evil EUSSR octopus of doom going to eat them all again? Or was it a squid?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgfQwhKkVR8
Nope, that's an octopus. Can't see Farage using that again somehow.
Getting rid of huge parts of the population?? It's political correctness gone mad.
Well it's something gone mad, that's for sure.
Being a protest party at the EU elections is fine. It's also why the lib dems are reaching so desperately since they used to be a big protest party. However, pretending that UKIP being in receipt of that protest somehow means you personally speak for all those who are pissed off with the other parties is laughable hubris. Bloom certainly didn't. Nor did Batten. So there Farage would seem to have far more sense than you since his actions to distance himself and UKIP from them both speaks for itself. His actions to distance UKIP from and get rid of the extremists and BNP parasites who have tried to jump on the kipper bandwagon also speaks of someone who is at the very least in touching distance from becoming a more serious party.0 -
A good site for us pro-free-movement Europhiles, promoted by the former Wimbledon MP Roger Casale (nice guy - mild, intelligent, thoughtful):
https://www.facebook.com/pages/New-Europeans/266650933471113
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Isn't it now the time for Cameron to really take a torch to the quango's starting with the EA? The leftie tiny tears over Sally Morgan not being reappointed has exposed the vast army of Blair/Brown sleepers still around.
There is a risk that daddies boy Marxist Milli might get in next year. Why not return the Brown gift?0 -
The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.Mick_Pork said:
Dare we ask as to how this dastardly conspiracy to get "rid of" part of the public will occur?MrJones said:which will be endless as the Europhile political class increasingly gang up against that part of the public they want rid of
Is the evil EUSSR octopus of doom going to eat them all again? Or was it a squid?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgfQwhKkVR8
Nope, that's an octopus. Can't see Farage using that again somehow.
Getting rid of huge parts of the population?? It's political correctness gone mad.
Well it's something gone mad, that's for sure.
Being a protest party at the EU elections is fine. It's also why the lib dems are reaching so desperately since they used to be a big protest party. However, pretending that UKIP being in receipt of that protest somehow means you personally speak for all those who are pissed off with the other parties is laughable hubris. Bloom certainly didn't. Nor did Batten. So there Farage would seem to have far more sense than you since his actions to distance himself and UKIP from them both speaks for itself. His actions to distance UKIP from and get rid of the extremists and BNP parasites who have tried to jump on the kipper bandwagon also speaks of someone who is at the very least in touching distance from becoming a more serious party.
0 -
James Landale (@BBCJLandale)
05/02/2014 19:35
Owen Paterson had been having trouble with his eyes for some days. But doctors tonight said immediate surgery necessary to save his sight0 -
That Record article you cited was last September. And you don't give a source for the latest quotation. Checking shows that it was in fact from an article in the DT claiming that Scotland'd be in (metaphorical, I trust) civil war - and it is by Mr Alan Cochrane who has for a long time, let's say, not been a beacon of peace and respect where individual named persons he doesn't like are concerned. His personalisation of the indy debate is a classic deflective strategy - and I am being deliberately kind out of politeness.MonikerDiCanio said:
You're out of touch;Theuniondivvie said:
Still, I don't think there's any evidence of even the most crazed Nat issuing death threats yet. I'm sure you can point me to the statements issued by the various elements of Bettertogether distancing themselves from this type of thing (just the latest of many):MonikerDiCanio said:
You shouldn't jest. Cybernats are viewed with ever growing suspicion by the SNP elite;Theuniondivvie said:
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/yes-campaign-distance-themselves-pro-independence-2266858
http://tinyurl.com/q5m9ykp
Perhaps you'd like to take this opportunity to speak on their behalf?
"The phenomenon of the so-called Cybernats – SNP supporters who use the internet to attack anyone who disagrees with them – has been well aired before, but of late it has taken on a new viciousness. After appearing on the BBC’s Question Time, Kezia Dugdale, a Labour MSP for the Lothians and staunch defender of the United Kingdom, was subjected to a veritable barrage of hate mail via Twitter. One accused her of being a “blackshirt”, evoking memories of the Thirties fascists. Another tweet said the sender would like to see what she looked like “on the end of a bayonet”. When Ms Dugdale reported this to the police, she says she was told the tweet was “not directly threatening enough” and that too much police manpower would be required to track down the miscreant."0 -
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
0 -
This tweet you mean?MonikerDiCanio said:
You're out of touch;Theuniondivvie said:
Still, I don't think there's any evidence of even the most crazed Nat issuing death threats yet. I'm sure you can point me to the statements issued by the various elements of Bettertogether distancing themselves from this type of thing (just the latest of many):MonikerDiCanio said:
You shouldn't jest. Cybernats are viewed with ever growing suspicion by the SNP elite;Theuniondivvie said:
Only when I go Cybernat deep cover. My pearly king outfit appears to have gone unnoticed.Alanbrooke said:
As I thought you live in London. :-)Theuniondivvie said:
Gor blimey, that's put me in a right two & eight and no mistake.jayfdee said:
In the event of a "Yes" I would certainly change my bank account from RBS,and move my SIPP from a well known Edinburgh company,and divest from other Scottish investments.JohnO said:Great Uncle Vince wading into the independence debate
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/rbs-move-london-scots-vote-112703414.html
Has that been picked up before here?
Too uncertain to stay.
I may have to rethink my whole position on Scottish independence.
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/yes-campaign-distance-themselves-pro-independence-2266858
http://tinyurl.com/q5m9ykp
Perhaps you'd like to take this opportunity to speak on their behalf?
"The phenomenon of the so-called Cybernats – SNP supporters who use the internet to attack anyone who disagrees with them – has been well aired before, but of late it has taken on a new viciousness. After appearing on the BBC’s Question Time, Kezia Dugdale, a Labour MSP for the Lothians and staunch defender of the United Kingdom, was subjected to a veritable barrage of hate mail via Twitter. One accused her of being a “blackshirt”, evoking memories of the Thirties fascists. Another tweet said the sender would like to see what she looked like “on the end of a bayonet”. When Ms Dugdale reported this to the police, she says she was told the tweet was “not directly threatening enough” and that too much police manpower would be required to track down the miscreant."
@ThereWasACoo: '...dancing on the head of a pin'? I wish Kezia Dugdale would dance on the end of a bayonet! #scotnight”
Fifi is certainly right about being “not directly threatening enough” (said with a regretful tone no doubt), kind of on a par with Ian Davidson's 'bayonetting the wounded'. However for the record I deplore lazy, crappy 'killing' metaphors, and certainly direct death threats towards people with whose political views one disagrees. Your turn.
0 -
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
0 -
Detached retina sounds like the worst!0
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Farage seems to me a basically mainstream politician who is profoundly uncomfortable with leading a populist insurgency - what he wants to be is a sort of Boris, making unvarnished homespun comments but not really any kind of pitchfork-wielder. In that way, it's probably fair to say we have the least repellent of Europe's right-wing insurgencies - I'd be perfectly happy to have a drink with him, whereas Ms Le Pen or Mr Wilders would IMO be marginally less welcome company than Attila the Hun. But I wonder if he won't get fed up at some point, and UKIP minus Farage would be in deep trouble.Mick_Pork said:
Farage would seem to have far more sense than you since his actions to distance himself and UKIP from them both speaks for itself. His actions to distance UKIP from and get rid of the extremists and BNP parasites who have tried to jump on the kipper bandwagon also speaks of someone who is at the very least in touching distance from becoming a more serious party.
0 -
So Sven:NickPalmer said:A good site for us pro-free-movement Europhiles....
https://www.facebook.com/pages/New-Europeans/266650933471113
That excludes:- Moi,
- Junior,
- Richard Tyndeall
- Your future Norwegian self, and
- antifrank?*
* For the "challenged": The first three do not equate freedom-of-movement with Euro quasi-Socialism. Mr antifrank is very much a law [sic] to himself...
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PB Hodges look away now
vine.co/v/Mz3nAKXEtmt-1 -
To stick to the subject. I only bet every 5th year. Always on the most exciting election on the planet - the UK general election. It is a fantastic drama. Nationalists, insurgent 3rd parties, marginals, sectarian parties, four-way marginals. I can't wait for the next show. I love it. In 2005 I got the Lib Dem seats right. In 2010 I lost money on several seats where LibDem was favourite to gain seats. The lessons: Entrenched incumbents are hard to unseat. My projection is UKIP votes will as a minimum double, continued labour tactical voting will keep most Lib dems in the commons. Factor in that many southern LibDem voters are centre right and natural Cleggish. They will suffer in all the constituencies where they went from 5% to a respectable 20% in 2005 and 2010, but it will not matter seat wise. go for the 50-59 seats, where there is good money to be made. Danish elections are over after 2 hours-so boring0
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I agree, but doesn't "the polling" say he is less popular than his party?NickPalmer said:
Farage seems to me a basically mainstream politician who is profoundly uncomfortable with leading a populist insurgency - what he wants to be is a sort of Boris, making unvarnished homespun comments but not really any kind of pitchfork-wielder. In that way, it's probably fair to say we have the least repellent of Europe's right-wing insurgencies - I'd be perfectly happy to have a drink with him, whereas Ms Le Pen or Mr Wilders would IMO be marginally less welcome company than Attila the Hun. But I wonder if he won't get fed up at some point, and UKIP minus Farage would be in deep trouble.Mick_Pork said:
Farage would seem to have far more sense than you since his actions to distance himself and UKIP from them both speaks for itself. His actions to distance UKIP from and get rid of the extremists and BNP parasites who have tried to jump on the kipper bandwagon also speaks of someone who is at the very least in touching distance from becoming a more serious party.0 -
Welcome to pb.com, Mr. Dane.
0 -
I hope Patterson's follow up to his operation is not fouled up.0
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Since the next Scottish local elections are not until 2017, probably with indifference.anotherDave said:Scottish version of the LDs EU advert now up.
http://youtu.be/cqCtnKrTFV4
I wonder how LD councillor candidates feel about this 'party of in' campaign?0 -
On topic I think Iain Dale is being optimistic calling Leeds North-West a "DEAD CERT LIBDEM HOLD". Half of it is university territory and Greg Mulholland will do well to hang on there.0
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What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
0 -
0
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Do you think he is as angry with Batten?Mick_Pork said:
What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
0 -
I'm talking in general terms about tactics. You seem to be talking about a version of reality where those two specific Guardian headlines mean something.Mick_Pork said:
What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
0 -
Yeah, they don't spin out the evening properly. But Danish election *campaigns* rock though - I used to love the way the most obscure little parties would get exactly the same TV broadcast length as the big boys - is that still true? Anyway, Borgen is so much better than In the Thick of It...Great_Dane said:Danish elections are over after 2 hours-so boring
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I wouldn't say he's uncomfortable with the attention but the minutia of policy and the party management side is most definitely giving him headaches and sleepless nights. He has to have people he can trust to delegate to and given the kipper history of coups and infighting that won't come easy. However, he won't give up till he sees the fallout from 2015 and that could involve some of the most important decisions for his party in it's history. If the tories lose and pacts are being talked about he'll want to be there making those decisions.NickPalmer said:
Farage seems to me a basically mainstream politician who is profoundly uncomfortable with leading a populist insurgency - what he wants to be is a sort of Boris, making unvarnished homespun comments but not really any kind of pitchfork-wielder. In that way, it's probably fair to say we have the least repellent of Europe's right-wing insurgencies - I'd be perfectly happy to have a drink with him, whereas Ms Le Pen or Mr Wilders would IMO be marginally less welcome company than Attila the Hun. But I wonder if he won't get fed up at some point, and UKIP minus Farage would be in deep trouble.Mick_Pork said:
Farage would seem to have far more sense than you since his actions to distance himself and UKIP from them both speaks for itself. His actions to distance UKIP from and get rid of the extremists and BNP parasites who have tried to jump on the kipper bandwagon also speaks of someone who is at the very least in touching distance from becoming a more serious party.
I'm not quite so sure Farage is carrying the kippers any more though. I seem to recall some recent poll that showed the party was more popular then he.
0 -
Not too fond of this PB Hodges/Kinnocks nonsense. I dislike such things anyway, and it's better to play the man than the ball.0
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Nighthawks is now open0
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The ultra-Maoist tube strikers of the Bob Crow Rouge - who are not content with their £52,000 per year - should have custard squirted into their ears until they learn to appreciate the benefits of capitalism. Then they should have their toes bitten off by a smelly goat. Then they might learn to be reasonable.0
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Couldn't agree more... people have these names for others that surely only they find funnyMorris_Dancer said:Not too fond of this PB Hodges/Kinnocks nonsense. I dislike such things anyway, and it's better to play the man than the ball.
0 -
You're still talking about your tactics. You are not UKIP. Farage has just a touch more claim to that than you and pretending you always know best is amusing but in the real world Farage just isn't doing what you are pretending he is. Farage distancing himself from eccentrics and fruitcakes self-evidently means something or he wouldn't be doing it. Your bluster that you somehow have secret knowledge of what Farage thinks in private is about as telling as it gets.MrJones said:
I'm talking in general terms about tactics. You seem to be talking about a version of reality where those two specific Guardian headlines mean something.Mick_Pork said:
What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
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Tory MP Aidan Burley to stand down after controversy of Nazi stag party he organised in France0
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Not yet. He wasn't furious with Bloom to begin with either in case you have forgotten.isam said:
Do you think he is as angry with Batten?Mick_Pork said:
What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
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I don't think I've seen any comparable polling? There were polls showing him with a marginally negative rating from the electorate as a whole, but that's true of everyone except Mandela and Mother Teresa. I should think UKIP's rating (i.e. "Do you like UKIP?", asked of non-UKIP voters) from the whole electorate is lower.isam said:
I agree, but doesn't "the polling" say Farage is less popular than his party?
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isam said:
Couldn't agree more... people have these names for others that surely only they find funnyMorris_Dancer said:Not too fond of this PB Hodges/Kinnocks nonsense. I dislike such things anyway, and it's better to play the man than the ball.
isam said:Are you stark raving mental or did you have a Scottish breakfast?
Bit stonger than petal or sammy isn't it? Stop embarrassing yourself for god's sake. It's pitiful.isam said:You are crazy.
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Nick Palmer@ In the big televised debates all eligible parties (usually around 10) get equal time. They have however eliminated the stop watches of the 80's and 90's, when you had trotskyites and far right parties reading from manifestos. Now it is more like "Borgen". However we have much more drama between elections with three and four party minority governments scramble to survive. Most major reforms are made with the participation of all major mainstream parties lasting 10-20 years. (basically gentleman agreements)0
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"You're still talking about your tactics."Mick_Pork said:
You're still talking about your tactics. You are not UKIP. Farage has just a touch more claim to that than you and pretending you always know best is amusing but in the real world Farage just isn't doing what you are pretending he is. Farage distancing himself from eccentrics and fruitcakes self-evidently means something or he wouldn't be doing it. Your bluster that you somehow have secret knowledge of what Farage thinks in private is about as telling as it gets.MrJones said:
I'm talking in general terms about tactics. You seem to be talking about a version of reality where those two specific Guardian headlines mean something.Mick_Pork said:
What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
Duh.0 -
An apt summation of your entire contribution I'd say. You will tell us when Farage let's you in on any more of his 'secret' thinking won't you?MrJones said:
"You're still talking about your tactics."Mick_Pork said:
You're still talking about your tactics. You are not UKIP. Farage has just a touch more claim to that than you and pretending you always know best is amusing but in the real world Farage just isn't doing what you are pretending he is. Farage distancing himself from eccentrics and fruitcakes self-evidently means something or he wouldn't be doing it. Your bluster that you somehow have secret knowledge of what Farage thinks in private is about as telling as it gets.MrJones said:
I'm talking in general terms about tactics. You seem to be talking about a version of reality where those two specific Guardian headlines mean something.Mick_Pork said:
What on earth are you talking about now? Farage has made no secret of distancing himself from the biggest fruitcakes and if you have to reach for the excuse "but what he REALLY thinks" then you are actively damaging the kippers by implying he readily lies to the public and media. Again you're confusing what you think he should do with what actually happened. Farage was furious with Bloom. That wasn't an act. The jovial pint drinking persona vanished in anger at the kipper conference being totally derailed by Bloom.MrJones said:
What Farage does in private is a different matter. In public - when these attacks come - just spin them round and point out the double standards as they will always be there.Mick_Pork said:
Your tactics maybe but not Farage. At least he knows he has to distance himself from the most blatant fruitcakery. Nor is he going to stop now. He can't announce a slew of target seats where the kippers intend to mount a serious campaign operation at the General Election while still fighting against a bunch of eccentrics. If they don't understand that party unity and discipline are not optional extras then he'll either make them understand or pay a very heavy price. Some of the more sensible kippers on here understand that perfectly well and have welcomed moves towards it.MrJones said:The important point is - from a tactical point of view - when these attacks come just spin them round as they are 100% guaranteed to have a double standard buried in them somewhere.
Duh.
LOL
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Ian Dale does not like David Ward! But I would not write him off in Bradford East. He is well-entrenched in the community, his views on Palestine have gone down well amongst his Muslim constituents, and Labour have not yet chosen a candidate.0
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I am afraid Dale is kidding himself. Bermondsey will fall to Labour now that its two faced MP has got into bed with the Tories. and Slade's prophecy is doomed. I live next door to the seat and I can tell you the David Ward is out0