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  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    Sri Lanka clearly concluded that they will be able to make more progress after lunch. Don’t recall such slow scoring in an ODI for years
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    Pulpstar said:

    Times and Telegraph report Saj is Boris pick. I tipped it up here at 7-4 last night

    Nice one. Shorter now.

    And do we think he has picked him because he is a Muslim?
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    DavidL said:

    Sri Lanka clearly concluded that they will be able to make more progress after lunch. Don’t recall such slow scoring in an ODI for years

    NZ were 94/5 off 30 overs the other day.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533

    First you get a Tardis, then you go back and redraw State lines ...
    That was what I thought. Only Mr kamski said it had been.

    Many of the electoral arrangements in the House seem to have been drawn using guidelines supplied by the N.Irish Orange Order but the Senate seems, more or less, OK.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    edited June 2019
    DavidL said:

    Sri Lanka clearly concluded that they will be able to make more progress after lunch. Don’t recall such slow scoring in an ODI for years

    Pacing an innings with four wickets down so early on is quite difficult - as England recently discovered...

    Edit, five...
  • macisbackmacisback Posts: 382

    The difference is that Grieve has a brain, whereas most of the ERG share one or two cells between them, though Mark Francois gives the impression one brain cell would be an improvement.
    Well he may have a brain but doesn't use it very well. Kowtowing to the Euro elite and drawing attention to yourself doing so does your cause no good at all. The elite we voted to leave. Tactically if you wanted to change the majority view over a period of time I can't think of much more wrongheaded myself.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Liberal democracy is the bulwark against evil despots like Putin. It is shame 52% of our population thought it was good to advance his objectives. 28% of the population might just as well take roubles from him, because if they get their way he will be chuffed to bits. And they claim to be patriots!

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-48795764
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156

    Anyone who refers to remainers as "sane" has a strong bias.

    The only sane way to negotiate is to be prepared to walk away empty handed. Anything else isn't negotiating it is grovelling.
    1) @Barnesian was stating that (some) sane Tories were Remainers, not that all Remainers were sane.
    2) The only way to be prepared to walk away empty handed is to be prepared to walk away empty handed. In all the kerfuffle surrounding this [REDACTED] situation, the one thing that is actually certain is that we are not prepared.

  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,771
    Boris tightening significantly.

    Last night 1.16.

    A few mins ago 1.13.

    Now just gone 1.12.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    Liberal democracy is the bulwark against evil despots like Putin. It is shame 52% of our population thought it was good to advance his objectives. 28% of the population might just as well take roubles from him, because if they get their way he will be chuffed to bits. And they claim to be patriots!

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-48795764

    Liberal Democracy 4 - 0 Populist Despots
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    kamski said:

    well no, the State lines were gerrymandered when they were drawn, so no need for a Tardis. Interesting article:
    https://thinkprogress.org/how-abraham-lincoln-rigged-the-senate-for-republicans/
    While unquestionably interesting, and providing food for thought, you are making Mr Thompson's point.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    macisback said:

    Well he may have a brain but doesn't use it very well. Kowtowing to the Euro elite and drawing attention to yourself doing so does your cause no good at all. The elite we voted to leave. Tactically if you wanted to change the majority view over a period of time I can't think of much more wrongheaded myself.
    So-called kowtowing to the Euro-elite (which he is not) is massively more defensible than sucking up to Vladimir Putin and doing his bidding either intentionally or by default.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    Nigelb said:

    Pacing an innings with four wickets down so early on is quite difficult - as England recently discovered...

    Edit, five...
    They got off to a flyer but their run rate over the last 15 overs is barely 3. 230 looking quite a long way off atm.
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    MikeL said:

    Boris tightening significantly.

    Last night 1.16.

    A few mins ago 1.13.

    Now just gone 1.12.

    He's gone more than 24 hours without some PR blunder so he will move closer and closer to his 'true' odds of 1.01

    The rest of his price is percentage chance of him accidentally withdrawing his nomination.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690
    macisback said:

    The May/Merkel deal muddies the waters as regards a second referendum, straight leave/remain I don't think too many politicians on the ground would expect a different result.
    The difference is that it won't be unicorn leave - it's leave with this deal or remain - take it or leave it - and I suspect a lot of people won't like an actual defined version of leave...

  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319

    That was what I thought. Only Mr kamski said it had been.

    Many of the electoral arrangements in the House seem to have been drawn using guidelines supplied by the N.Irish Orange Order but the Senate seems, more or less, OK.
    https://thinkprogress.org/how-abraham-lincoln-rigged-the-senate-for-republicans/
    if you're interested. it goes back a bit. 19th century.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    macisback said:

    Kowtowing to the Euro elite and drawing attention to yourself doing so does your cause no good at all. The elite we voted to leave.

    What he is actually doing is allowing Parliament to Take Back Control.

    Restoring Sovereignty.

    All the things Brexiteers claim they wanted, and are now whining about.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    Alistair said:

    He's gone more than 24 hours without some PR blunder so he will move closer and closer to his 'true' odds of 1.01

    The rest of his price is percentage chance of him accidentally withdrawing his nomination.
    Boris layers crying into their cornflakes.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Scott_P said:

    What he is actually doing is allowing Parliament to Take Back Control.

    Restoring Sovereignty.

    All the things Brexiteers claim they wanted, and are now whining about.
    Indeed, though most brexiters are too thick to understand irony or the out and out hypocrisy of their position, let alone have the capability to grasp how our parliamentary system is meant to work. That said, I think some of our MPs don't really understand its principles either. Step forward, Mark Francois!
  • macisbackmacisback Posts: 382


    Trump has very high approval ratings with Republicans partly because former Republicans dislike Trump so much that they no longer identify as Republicans. In any case only a quarter of American voters identify as Republican - it's probably not enough to win.

    If you're confident it's a sure thing and willing to tie up the money you can back Trump to win at evens or better, but I'm not sure that represents value (I'm not sure laying at those odds is value either).

    I backed him long ago when he was much longer than evens, from when the Mueller hysteria was at it's height. It was easy to see early that wasn't going to go the way planned. The problem looking at American politics is the MSM here led by the BBC merely regurgitates the biased big USA outlets. You have to look deeper to get a more realistic picture, if you do there is some easy money to be taken off the bookies.

    That 25% becomes 40% of voters if they all vote and Trump gets them out. Dem tactics ensure they will be out again in 2020 for sure.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156

    This is the odd thing - my experience here in deepest true-blue Sussex is quite similar to yours. As I think I've mentioned before, I've been surprised by how many Tory members have gone out of their way to criticise Boris, even in meetings which were discussing local matters completely unrelated to national politics or the leadership.

    Now, to be fair, I haven't been to any party events in the last few weeks, and it is possible that opinions have changed recently. The sentiment that 'yes, Boris will be an awful PM but we have to choose him to see off Farage' is one which gets reported quite a lot, and it may explain what is happening. If that is right, the Boris honeymoon within the party could be reversed very quickly.
    Neither of you are one of the recent influx of entryists and I would hazard that you are unlikely to socialise with them. And much as I would like to believe that the Conservative Party will come to its senses and stop acting like an influencer on crack, it is this lump of entryists, unheard and uncounted, which will vote en masses for Boris and ensure his election.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319
    macisback said:

    who said it was what was campaigned for? i just find it interesting and relevant to an analysis of who won/might win and how. of course the analogy isn't exact, but it is annoying that anyone daring to mention the national vote margin in 2016 (which people have talked about extensively in every single US presidential election that I can remember, and I'm getting on a bit) always seems to trigger some people, whereas people are able to take about national vote share in the UK vs number of MPs for example without the same reaction.

    And I don't really understand why.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454
    DavidL said:

    They got off to a flyer but their run rate over the last 15 overs is barely 3. 230 looking quite a long way off atm.
    England prefer an SA win I assume?
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319

    While unquestionably interesting, and providing food for thought, you are making Mr Thompson's point.
    well maybe we are talking at cross-purposes, I am trying to say the Senate was gerrymandered in the 19th century, as argued in that article. Hence "gerrymandered Senate"

    The article also suggests the Democrats should split big Dem states into smaller states to redress the balance, which you also wouldn't need a time-machine to do.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,319
    macisback said:



    Trump has very high approval ratings with Republicans partly because former Republicans dislike Trump so much that they no longer identify as Republicans. In any case only a quarter of American voters identify as Republican - it's probably not enough to win.

    If you're confident it's a sure thing and willing to tie up the money you can back Trump to win at evens or better, but I'm not sure that represents value (I'm not sure laying at those odds is value either).

    I backed him long ago when he was much longer than evens, from when the Mueller hysteria was at it's height. It was easy to see early that wasn't going to go the way planned. The problem looking at American politics is the MSM here led by the BBC merely regurgitates the biased big USA outlets. You have to look deeper to get a more realistic picture, if you do there is some easy money to be taken off the bookies.

    That 25% becomes 40% of voters if they all vote and Trump gets them out. Dem tactics ensure they will be out again in 2020 for sure.


    True, but on the other hand Trump does seem to motivate the voters who don't like him to vote, and probably more so than in 2016, so not sure if that will help him much.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    England prefer an SA win I assume?
    Oh yes. With the Windies screwing up yesterday the risks are getting lower. Pakistan the real threat.
  • macisbackmacisback Posts: 382
    eek said:

    The difference is that it won't be unicorn leave - it's leave with this deal or remain - take it or leave it - and I suspect a lot of people won't like an actual defined version of leave...

    It isn't leave with this deal or remain at all. If this deal does not get amended it gets consigned to the dustbins of history and soon. All rational analysis suggests the EU rather needs our coin, so amendment is inevitable.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204

    England prefer an SA win I assume?
    Everyone else does.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Scott_P said:

    What he is actually doing is allowing Parliament to Take Back Control.

    Restoring Sovereignty.

    All the things Brexiteers claim they wanted, and are now whining about.
    Actually he's trying to exercise control Parliament already has, to prevent Parliament getting control over the issues we voted to take back control over.

    If we were to prorogue Parliament now until 1 November then when Parliament reconvenes it would have a lot more control over our laws.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156
    Before I go back to my desk, I need to do a few questions. Can anybody point me to the sportsbook odds for the 1983 general election (eg Ladbrokes, Coral or William hill) and/or the Betfair odds for the 2001 and 2005 general elections? I would be ever so grateful if you could.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    DavidL said:

    Oh yes. With the Windies screwing up yesterday the risks are getting lower. Pakistan the real threat.
    And Bangladesh surprisingly enough.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487

    Actually he's trying to exercise control Parliament already has, to prevent Parliament getting control over the issues we voted to take back control over.

    If we were to prorogue Parliament now until 1 November then when Parliament reconvenes it would have a lot more control over our laws.
    A recall a few dictators using similar arguments.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,280
    macisback said:

    All rational analysis suggests the EU rather needs our coin, so amendment is inevitable.

    We've heard that one before.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,156

    Actually he's trying to exercise control Parliament already has, to prevent Parliament getting control over the issues we voted to take back control over.

    If we were to prorogue Parliament now until 1 November then when Parliament reconvenes it would have a lot more control over our laws.
    So in order to help them take control, you will take control away from them.

    Thinks.

    I'll remember that technique: it'll come in handy in future... :)
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited June 2019
    viewcode said:

    So in order to help them take control, you will take control away from them.

    Thinks.

    I'll remember that technique: it'll come in handy in future... :)
    The purpose of leaving isn't so that Dominic Grieve can prevent us from doing so.

    The purpose of leaving is so that the voters can hold to account the people who set our laws going forwards.

    It is for the voters that we need to take back control. Even if that means forcing Parliament to allow itself to take control, by preventing Parliament from preventing itself from doing so.

    Irony is great.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Actually he's trying to exercise control Parliament already has, to prevent Parliament getting control over the issues we voted to take back control over.

    If we were to prorogue Parliament now until 1 November then when Parliament reconvenes it would have a lot more control over our laws.

    Spectacularly and explicitly wrong. Again.

    What the amendment says is our Sovereign parliament can vote for a deal.

    Or our Sovereign Parliament can vote for No deal.

    If it does neither of those things, it has forfeited the right to govern...
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734
    macisback said:

    It isn't leave with this deal or remain at all. If this deal does not get amended it gets consigned to the dustbins of history and soon. All rational analysis suggests the EU rather needs our coin, so amendment is inevitable.

    All rational analysis of No Deal suggests the EU will inevitably get what is owed regardless.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    viewcode said:

    So in order to help them take control, you will take control away from them.

    In order to save the village...
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,080
    kamski said:

    well maybe we are talking at cross-purposes, I am trying to say the Senate was gerrymandered in the 19th century, as argued in that article. Hence "gerrymandered Senate"

    The article also suggests the Democrats should split big Dem states into smaller states to redress the balance, which you also wouldn't need a time-machine to do.
    Southern California is adamant about its distinctness from the rest of the state, so there’s one split for a start. And New York City could easily be separated from the rest of the state.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    All rational analysis of No Deal suggests the EU will inevitably get what is owed regardless.
    If you define "rational" as the same old irrational nonsense that suggested we'd never dare to leave in the first place.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    eek said:

    On the other hand it only requires 1 more by-election and Boris's majority moves to 0 from 2. And any delay will result in Nigel at full throttle throughout the election.

    Not quite - the current majority is 4 and will fall to 3 if Brecon & Radnor is lost.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    edited June 2019
    kamski said:

    I'm not at all confident Trump will lose against whoever his opponent is. Even if he does, it's very unlikely the Democrats will gain control of the gerrymandered Senate (if they do, it will only be with "Democrats" like Joe Manchin, who will still block sane policies), so the future of the planet still looks pretty shit.

    I would not be confident with Sanders - but otherwise I am.

    Funny you should mention "shit" because that figures strongly in my idea of what it will be like after he has lost in November next year.

    It will be like emerging from a long period of having one's head immersed in a bucket of exactly that.

    The overwhelming sensation will not be pleasure but relief. And the stink will linger long in the nostrils.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    viewcode said:

    Neither of you are one of the recent influx of entryists and I would hazard that you are unlikely to socialise with them. And much as I would like to believe that the Conservative Party will come to its senses and stop acting like an influencer on crack, it is this lump of entryists, unheard and uncounted, which will vote en masses for Boris and ensure his election.

    Yes, that's probably fair. Certainly there has been a big increase in party membership over the last year. I don't think they are 'entryists' as such, except in the particular constituencies Aaron Banks is targeting, but I think they are predominantly keen Leavers including quite a lot of former members who had previously drifted Kipperwards.

    Quite what they see in Boris is unfathomable: in general positioning and on immigration he's slightly to the left of Cameron, and on Brexit as in his personal relationships he's hardly the most reliable of partners.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    viewcode said:

    Neither of you are one of the recent influx of entryists and I would hazard that you are unlikely to socialise with them. And much as I would like to believe that the Conservative Party will come to its senses and stop acting like an influencer on crack, it is this lump of entryists, unheard and uncounted, which will vote en masses for Boris and ensure his election.
    That is of course possible.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734

    If you define "rational" as the same old irrational nonsense that suggested we'd never dare to leave in the first place.
    So far, we haven't...
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited June 2019

    Yes, that's probably fair. Certainly there has been a big increase in party membership over the last year. I don't think they are 'entryists' as such, except in the particular constituencies Aaron Banks is targeting, but I think they are predominantly keen Leavers including quite a lot of former members who had previously drifted Kipperwards.

    Quite what they see in Boris is unfathomable: in general positioning and on immigration he's slightly to the left of Cameron, and on Brexit as in his personal relationships he's hardly the most reliable of partners.
    Indeed, I know [long-term] members who were very keen on Raab because they didn't trust Gove or Boris.

    I don't know anyone who has joined recently who wasn't a longtime member, but I know many who had drifted away who have rejoined. Personally I drifted away [because May was too authoritarian for me, not Brexit] and was tempted to rejoin but never did. Boris being very liberal is an attraction to me not repellant.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243
    viewcode said:

    Neither of you are one of the recent influx of entryists and I would hazard that you are unlikely to socialise with them. And much as I would like to believe that the Conservative Party will come to its senses and stop acting like an influencer on crack, it is this lump of entryists, unheard and uncounted, which will vote en masses for Boris and ensure his election.
    The entryist myth again...
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690
    justin124 said:

    Not quite - the current majority is 4 and will fall to 3 if Brecon & Radnor is lost.
    I thought it was 3 falling to 2 when the Tories lose the by-election.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734

    The entryist myth again...
    Myth?

    https://twitter.com/LeaveEUOfficial/status/1029715605115547648
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    So far, we haven't...
    So far, we haven't had a Leaver as PM.

    Hunt, like May, being in charge of Brexit is like putting the fox in charge of a chicken coop. Or Fox in charge of any department.
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    IanB2 said:

    Southern California is adamant about its distinctness from the rest of the state, so there’s one split for a start. And New York City could easily be separated from the rest of the state.
    Isn't the danger with splitting your party's safe states that in doing so, you end up with one safe state and one marginal state, which helps your opponents?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Myth?

    https://twitter.com/LeaveEUOfficial/status/1029715605115547648
    No sources for those figures. How believable is it? Leave.EU is an incredible egotrip, I wouldn't trust anything they say.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734

    No sources for those figures. How believable is it? Leave.EU is an incredible egotrip, I wouldn't trust anything they say.

    You don't have to trust their figures to note that there's been a concerted campaign to encourage Brexiteers to join in order to influence the leadership election.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    New thread.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    edited June 2019
    eek said:

    I thought it was 3 falling to 2 when the Tories lose the by-election.
    The Tories have 312 MPs plus 10 DUP gives a total of 322. 8 MPs - SF and Speaker - don't vote. I vacant - B&R . Thay would give the Opposition 319 MPs - but Labour also supplies 2 Deputy Speakers with just 1 from Tories so effective majority now 4.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,103
    edited June 2019
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,080
    If you want an answer to a question, rather than a general impression, you do need to listen harder with Boris as he rambles about the place and interjects unnecessarily convoluted phrases.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,771
    eek said:

    I thought it was 3 falling to 2 when the Tories lose the by-election.
    No, it's 4 falling to 3.

    I've lost count of the number of times people get this wrong on here - normally because people don't understand Deputy Speakers.

    The simplest way of looking at it is as follows:

    1) Do what the BBC do on GE night - count Bercow as Conservative - because Lab supply an extra Deputy Speaker. So Con + DUP maj on GE night = 13 (328-315)

    2) Three defections to TIG. Reduces maj to 7.

    3) Boles leaves. Reduces maj to 5.

    4) Lose Brecon. Reduces maj to 3.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    TOPPING said:

    haha no this is amongst Tory members. The conversation is actually quite funny, not quite AA type enquiry but at some point, someone, sotto voce, will ask "do you have a vote?".

    So exactly yes, I am talking about Tory members.

    Edit: I do though have friends who are not Tory members also. I should have used an asterisk after "normal"
    Yougov this week has Boris leading Hunt 74% to 26%, ConHome had a Tory members poll yesterday with Boris leading Hunt 66% to 30% so clearly the only Tory members you mix with live in Brussels
  • MangoMango Posts: 1,031


    I don't know anyone who has joined recently who wasn't a longtime member, but I know many who had drifted away who have rejoined. Personally I drifted away [because May was too authoritarian for me, not Brexit] and was tempted to rejoin but never did. Boris being very liberal is an attraction to me not repellant.

    Johnson is an ally of Steve Bannon. The words "very liberal" are about as badly chosen as it's possible to be.

    Unless you assume he's just lying his arse off as usual, and will pivot to those liberal core principles he's concealing so well.
  • macisbackmacisback Posts: 382
    HYUFD said:

    Yougov this week has Boris leading Hunt 74% to 26%, ConHome had a Tory members poll yesterday with Boris leading Hunt 66% to 30% so clearly the only Tory members you mix with live in Brussels
    Yougov not the best barometer but Boris will win easy.
This discussion has been closed.