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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The Brexit betting moves closer and closer to no deal – now a

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  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Marginally, yes.

    I expect after a no deal Brexit sterling will go past parity and it will spike marginally again.
    er, not marginally. Significantly.
  • anothernickanothernick Posts: 3,591
    felix said:

    I know that HYUFD can be irritating for his over-reliance on polls as predictors of the future. However, it's amusing to see numbers of his harshest critics citing polling evidence from a local by-election in Worcester as evidence that can be instantly translated to a GE LD landslide not only there but throughout the nation. They may be right but really, is this the level of psephological analysis Brexititis has driven us to?

    But HYUFD relies on opinion polls, usually ones asking hypothetical questions. The Worcester by-election is a real poll with real votes. Obviously tkaing the Worcester swings and implying they represent UNS is absurd but taken with other recent by-elections they do suggest that there is a trend toward tactical voting by remainers which is helping the Lib Dems and damaging the Tories particularly, though Labour also suffers in some seats.
  • TOPPING said:

    er, not marginally. Significantly.
    How significantly and for how long was inflation above the BoEs upper target threshold?
  • PendduPenddu Posts: 265
    Speaking as someone whose salary is set in usd and then transfers into GBP I am quite happy.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited August 2019

    How significantly and for how long was inflation above the BoEs upper target threshold?
    You tell me.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,451
    148grss said:


    The other thing people forget about Warren is she was a registered Republican until she started studying these issues. Her ideological move started when presented with the reality of what happened when certain things were left for the market to decide. She can sell to soft republicans / working republicans the idea of being left behind and that government can help.

    https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2019/04/12/elizabeth-warren-profile-young-republican-2020-president-226613

    From a DNC pov, she is much better placed to unify Biden and Bernie voters, as well. Biden is the establishment candidate, Bernie is still the renegade, and she is perfectly placed (better than Harris, IMHO) to capitalise on that.

    I wouldn't disagree, and she's rightly joint favourite, I think - though anything can happen during a primary campaign.

    As for that vaunted Republican messaging which HYUFD and friends put so much faith in...

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/theyre-afraid-suburban-voters-in-red-states-threaten-gops-grip-on-power/2019/08/08/86b12410-b868-11e9-bad6-609f75bfd97f_story.html
    McBath reminded the nation this week what led her to run for office and of her fight for stricter gun control.

    On Wednesday, a staffer for the National Republican Congressional Committee, the House GOP’s campaign arm, accused McBath of “fundraising off the mass shootings” and doing “anything for a quick buck” — drawing scorn for using dismissive language about the mother of a black teenager who was shot and killed by a white man for playing his music too loudly at a Florida gas station in 2012....
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    Devaluing currency never did Zimbabwe or Venezuela any harm.

    Only additional cost to the people was the need to purchase a larger wheelbarrow.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    But HYUFD relies on opinion polls, usually ones asking hypothetical questions. The Worcester by-election is a real poll with real votes. Obviously tkaing the Worcester swings and implying they represent UNS is absurd but taken with other recent by-elections they do suggest that there is a trend toward tactical voting by remainers which is helping the Lib Dems and damaging the Tories particularly, though Labour also suffers in some seats.
    And you must know that local elections are very poor predictors historically of GE results. You must also be aware that in B&R the result was a lower majority than expected and may be entirely untypical of other parts of the country. HYUFD is often wrong and wild in his assertions but equally absurd is to overly excited about a few local by-election results.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    edited August 2019

    But HYUFD relies on opinion polls, usually ones asking hypothetical questions. The Worcester by-election is a real poll with real votes. Obviously tkaing the Worcester swings and implying they represent UNS is absurd but taken with other recent by-elections they do suggest that there is a trend toward tactical voting by remainers which is helping the Lib Dems and damaging the Tories particularly, though Labour also suffers in some seats.
    The problem is, no one has a clue as to how this would play out in a GE. Worcester? This is a Tory-Labour marginal. What was the turnout yesterday? I doubt it was close to the 70% that turned out to vote in Worcester in 2017. And could the Lib Dems convince all those red rosette on a donkey types to vote Lib Dem?
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    Boris is putting the country first and causing a massive upset in the party - which is why TSE, Herdson, Nabavi and BigG have left - because they're upset with what he is doing.

    Boris pushing ahead with Brexit is a modern day repeal of the corn laws. People like the quad I mentioned who liked the old laws are not happy.
    If May or Boris had done a Peel, then they would have rejected the Derbyite ERG and pushed the WA through with Labour/LD support.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    Penddu said:

    Speaking as someone whose salary is set in usd and then transfers into GBP I am quite happy.

    Speaking as someone whose pension is set in £s and transfers to €s I am not. However, I am well enough off to survive - many of my fellow English immigrants to the EU are not. If they al have to head back to the UK God help you.
  • Anorak said:

    Devaluing currency never did Zimbabwe or Venezuela any harm.

    Only additional cost to the people was the need to purchase a larger wheelbarrow.

    Absolutely. Just look how Germany has bounced back from its Weimar days. Sure, there will be a period of painful transitions but we'll recover, just like the Germans did!
  • felix said:

    Speaking as someone whose pension is set in £s and transfers to €s I am not. However, I am well enough off to survive - many of my fellow English immigrants to the EU are not. If they al have to head back to the UK God help you.
    Felix, who exactly is the 'you' that you have in mind there?
  • Oh yes - the country is gagging for No Deal Brexit.....

    TSE et al can answer for themselves, but the flight of Tories like them just hands the entryist kippers and nationalists more control.

    The Conservative Party is dead, the corpse has just not stopped twitching yet.
    I thought YouGov had debunked the theory of entryist Kippers?
  • TOPPING said:

    You tell me.
    Considering the banks target is 2% but then there is a +/ 1% tolerance around that [as it will never be exactly 2% all the time] I see inflation exceeding the 3% tolerated by about 0.1% for 2 months.

    0.1% excess inflation for 2 month. That is what you consider significant?
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300

    https://www.conservativehome.com/parliament/2016/05/boris-johnsons-speech-on-the-eu-referendum-full-text.html
    Thanks -- though that probably leaves enough wiggle-room.
  • People complacently bragging/sulking about being paid in USD/EUR.

    Just think of poor Scots who are going to be paid in Scottish Groats in a few years time if Nicola and her cohorts get their way.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Considering the banks target is 2% but then there is a +/ 1% tolerance around that [as it will never be exactly 2% all the time] I see inflation exceeding the 3% tolerated by about 0.1% for 2 months.

    0.1% excess inflation for 2 month. That is what you consider significant?
    Inflation went up after sterling weakness following the vote. That was the measure you were lecturing @Chris about.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621

    Absolutely. Just look how Germany has bounced back from its Weimar days. Sure, there will be a period of painful transitions but we'll recover, just like the Germans did!
    In all seriousness though, it may "only" turn out to have a minor impact on shop stuff, and a moderate impact on overseas travel.

    Trouble is, there are millions of people with very little disposable income at the end of the month, so a small rise in living costs pretty much wipes out the ability to save.

    Still, all worth it, I'm sure.
  • anothernickanothernick Posts: 3,591
    felix said:

    And you must know that local elections are very poor predictors historically of GE results. You must also be aware that in B&R the result was a lower majority than expected and may be entirely untypical of other parts of the country. HYUFD is often wrong and wild in his assertions but equally absurd is to overly excited about a few local by-election results.
    Certainly but it's instructive to note that the last three parliamentary by-elections, all in constituencies that voted leave, have been won by candidates that supported remain and are opposed to no deal.
  • TOPPING said:

    Inflation went up after sterling weakness following the vote. That was the measure you were lecturing @Chris about.
    Yes it did, I always said it did. I said marginally.

    I consider 0.1% excess inflation for 2 months to be marginal. If you have some other definition of marginal for me to use I'd love to know what that is.
  • Anorak said:

    In all seriousness though, it may "only" turn out to have a minor impact on shop stuff, and a moderate impact on overseas travel.

    Trouble is, there are millions of people with very little disposable income at the end of the month, so a small rise in living costs pretty much wipes out the ability to save.

    Still, all worth it, I'm sure.
    In all seriousness, the most sinful aspect of Labour's attitude on Brexit is that it those people, the ones Labour is supposed to protect, who will be hit first and hardest.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited August 2019

    Yes it did, I always said it did. I said marginally.

    I consider 0.1% excess inflation for 2 months to be marginal. If you have some other definition of marginal for me to use I'd love to know what that is.
    It was 0.1% above the BoE target but at the beginning of the period (2016) it was running at a SIGNIFICANTLY lower level than that. Look at the graph.

    Edit: here it is again
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    O/T Farting politician shuts down Kenyan parliament: Emergency air fresheners are brought in while MPs accuse each other of being responsible for smell:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7340823/Farting-politician-shuts-Kenyan-parliament.html
  • If May or Boris had done a Peel, then they would have rejected the Derbyite ERG and pushed the WA through with Labour/LD support.
    I'm sorry but in my analogy you, TSE, May etc are the Derbyites.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,780

    In all seriousness, the most sinful aspect of Labour's attitude on Brexit is that it those people, the ones Labour is supposed to protect, who will be hit first and hardest.
    Labour gave up on that under Blair, these days its just window dressing
  • TOPPING said:

    It was 0.1% above the BoE target but at the beginning of the period (2016) it was running at a SIGNIFICANTLY lower level than that. Look at the graph.

    Edit: here it is again
    Yes it was and that was dangerous, not positive and the BoE had a duty to increase inflation regardless of Brexit from that dangerously low and deflationary out of bounds.

    We Brexited and we remained within target bounds only exceeding it on 2 months and only by 0.1%.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192

    I thought YouGov had debunked the theory of entryist Kippers?
    Maybe they did - I do not follow every utterance from YouGov, but I am being polite calling the ex-Tory party Kippers.

    They have come from somewhere.

    "...Nearly 80 percent of those who joined since 2017 support a no-deal Brexit, compared with 60 percent from before 2015, according to research by Tim Bale, a politics professor at Queen Mary University of London..."

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/19/world/europe/brexit-conservative-party.html
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214
    kjh said:

    David, I could be misrepresenting what he said, but it didn't sound ambiguous. Did you hear him?

    I think the key point was they (the EU) from their point of view delays the leaving date if we wish to take advantage of that i.e stop the clock.
    I didn't hear him but the EU cannot 'stop the clock' unilaterally or retrospectively. Article 50 is clear on the process for extending A50 and it needs the consent of all current member states, including the departing one.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    edited August 2019

    Felix, who exactly is the 'you' that you have in mind there?
    He means those living in the UK as penniless ex immigrants return from EU countries. Many of whom are of retirement age with medical conditions and will strain the NHS and who won’t have any capital to buy property because the housing market herme may collapse because too many properties go on the market at the same time. Like Felix I have a good cushion but many who came out on just the state pension when it was 1.5 will be struggling now.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Yes it was and that was dangerous, not positive and the BoE had a duty to increase inflation regardless of Brexit from that dangerously low and deflationary out of bounds.

    We Brexited and we remained within target bounds only exceeding it on 2 months and only by 0.1%.
    ie inflation rose significantly after the 2016 vote.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148

    Yes it has halved one of my pension plans, but I do not depend on it. It would be nice to have the full amount but I have:

    - No debts
    - No mortgages
    - No loan agreements
    - No credit card bills
    - Savings (apart from pensions) tucked away in various places

    Average UK debt per adult is £31,000 but Brexit will not affect me or my family or my property, car or other possessions.
    thats not efficient. If you believe a prolonged period of currency weakness - and by extension higher inflation - is incoming then you should purchase debt and gain a physical asset (eg remortgage your house). The rationale being that inflation will eat away at the interest payments and the asset will gain in value as the currency depreciates. Although it's obviously better to check with somebody else first... :)

  • OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143

    It will, that's how it works. Show me the massive spike we got in inflation last time the pound fell please?

    Sterling has lost about 40% of its value in the last decade, but we have had consistently under control and low inflation over that decade. Because sterling is not a measure of inflation you idiot.
    Pretty sure inflation has been quite high at times over the last decade. Many letters written by the Bank of England Governor on the subject if you care to read them.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Absolutely. Just look how Germany has bounced back from its Weimar days. Sure, there will be a period of painful transitions but we'll recover, just like the Germans did!

    I hope we don’t have to go the whole way with the German analogy!
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,430

    Maybe they did - I do not follow every utterance from YouGov, but I am being polite calling the ex-Tory party Kippers.

    They have come from somewhere.

    "...Nearly 80 percent of those who joined since 2017 support a no-deal Brexit, compared with 60 percent from before 2015, according to research by Tim Bale, a politics professor at Queen Mary University of London..."

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/19/world/europe/brexit-conservative-party.html
    I suspect 80 percent of those who joined before 2017 support a no-deal Brexit too.

    If 38% of the population supports No Deal (equating to at least 40% in England) and they turn out and vote Tory at the upcoming election, it will be a bloodbath for Labour MPs.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited August 2019

    In all seriousness, the most sinful aspect of Labour's attitude on Brexit is that it those people, the ones Labour is supposed to protect, who will be hit first and hardest.
    Unforgivable, and it's why they're on 20% in the polls, with no sign of recovery.

    20%, after *years* of the current shit-show. They'd be on a higher number if they were led by a tailor's dummy, and I'm not sure I'm even joking.

    The cowardice of the PLP has been appalling.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    Anorak said:

    Unforgivable, and it's why they're on 20% in the polls, with no sign of recovery.

    20%, after *years* of the current shit-show. They'd be on a higher number if they were led by a tailor's dummy, and I'm not sure I'm even joking.

    The cowardice of the PLP has been appalling.
    I thought they were led by a tailors dummy!
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    I'm sorry but in my analogy you, TSE, May etc are the Derbyites.
    And how do you work that out when Peel went against his own party to deliver his change, in alliance with opposition forces?

    The only way in which your claim possibly works is that both Peel and Boris are in government and trying to deliver something - but that's a slim parallel.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,971
    Scott_P said:
    Elements of the Tories must be starting to feel queasy. Remember, this No Deal lark was originally framed as a mere stand-off: strong, sturdy Boris forcing the Europeans to make the capitulation that was always likely (if only Theresa hadn't been so clueless). No one actually thought he'd go through with it. Now, under Cummings's influence, Boris is positively relishing No Deal. This is heavy stuff!
  • Pretty sure inflation has been quite high at times over the last decade. Many letters written by the Bank of England Governor on the subject if you care to read them.
    11 letters by my count-

    https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/news?NewsTypes=09f8960ebc384e3589da5349744916ae&Taxonomies=7af03071367c4a5d80cfb86f9c954759&InfiniteScrolling=False&Direction=Latest
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    nichomar said:

    I thought they were led by a tailors dummy!
    Too scruffy to grace the window of anything other than a Sunderland charity shop.
  • nichomar said:

    He means those living in the UK as penniless ex immigrants return from EU countries. Many of whom are of retirement age with medical conditions and will strain the NHS and who won’t have any capital to buy property because the housing market herme may collapse because too many properties go on the market at the same time. Like Felix I have a good cushion but many who came out on just the state pension when it was 1.5 will be struggling now.
    Well, we'll be out of the EU and free to make our own laws then. We can simply bar from entry any such potential returnees who do not have the means to support themselves.

    Serves them right, no?
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,650
    I get paid in GBP...


    ...My wife spends in GBP
  • I get paid in GBP...


    ...My wife spends in GBP

    LOL!

    Got it in one :smiley:
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,958

    The SLDs totally dominate that sector now. The next election could be great for them. They’re only in the running to win 5 seats, but they could have a surprisingly long list of decent 2nd places.
    I think you're right. SLAB stand to be squashed flat with pro-Union voters switching to LibDems, with their new Scottish UK leader, and, of course, Ruth who still has cross-over appeal. An interesting straw in the lead was the (relatively - in May) recent Haddington council by-election which is located in East Lothian and which, almost uniquely, has a Labour MP and Labour constituency MSP. Despite that huge institutional advantage Labour fell from 1st place to 3rd. Since then things have only got worse.

    East Lothian, Haddington & Lammermuir - Conservative hold
    based on first preference votes


    Conservative
    2,212
    35.0%
    +6.0%
    SNP
    1,866
    29.5%
    +3.5%
    Labour
    1,359
    21.5%
    -12.2%
    Liberal Democrat
    774
    12.2%
    +5.0%
    UKIP
    108
    1.7%

    Total votes
    6,319

    81%

    Swing Labour to Conservative ~ 9% since 2017 with SNP to Conservative 1¼% also since 2017

  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906

    Well, we'll be out of the EU and free to make our own laws then. We can simply bar from entry any such potential returnees who do not have the means to support themselves.

    Serves them right, no?
    I think we should at least ask them to bring their own stockpiles.
  • TOPPING said:

    ie inflation rose significantly after the 2016 vote.
    No inflation rising significantly would be inflation significantly above the 3% threshold, which hasn't happened.

    Inflation trending within bounds consistently is not a significant rise.
  • Maybe they did - I do not follow every utterance from YouGov, but I am being polite calling the ex-Tory party Kippers.

    They have come from somewhere.

    "...Nearly 80 percent of those who joined since 2017 support a no-deal Brexit, compared with 60 percent from before 2015, according to research by Tim Bale, a politics professor at Queen Mary University of London..."

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/19/world/europe/brexit-conservative-party.html
    They have come from the tens of thousands who left the party under Cameron and have now gone back. The Tory party lost almost half its membership - 129,000 members - between 2005 and 2018. They have since gained about half of that back up to May 2019.

    So the answer is simple. They are not entryists. They are just Tory party members coming back to the party now it has changed.
  • Pretty sure inflation has been quite high at times over the last decade. Many letters written by the Bank of England Governor on the subject if you care to read them.
    Define "quite high".

    Look at a 50-year graph of inflation from the seventies to today and tell me that inflation has been quite high over this last decade.

    There have been letters written because inflation was marginally outside the [quite narrow by historic standards] thresholds.
  • nichomar said:


    I hope we don’t have to go the whole way with the German analogy!
    Vorsprung durch Brexit!
  • Well, we'll be out of the EU and free to make our own laws then. We can simply bar from entry any such potential returnees who do not have the means to support themselves.

    Serves them right, no?
    I know you are being ironic Peter but - just for the record - no. :)
  • Anorak said:

    Unforgivable, and it's why they're on 20% in the polls, with no sign of recovery.

    20%, after *years* of the current shit-show. They'd be on a higher number if they were led by a tailor's dummy, and I'm not sure I'm even joking.

    The cowardice of the PLP has been appalling.
    Is there any sign that the dam might break very suddenly and they would dump Corbyn overnight or does the whole process mitigate against that?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    No inflation rising significantly would be inflation significantly above the 3% threshold, which hasn't happened.

    Inflation trending within bounds consistently is not a significant rise.

    It rose significantly from where it had been. I mean I know you are an economist an' all so you know these things but take a long, hard look at the chart again and tell me the difference. Plus to be accurate, letters only go in above 3%. It is not a "3% threshold". The target was and is 2%. So it was 1.1% above target.
  • Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Elements of the Tories must be starting to feel queasy. Remember, this No Deal lark was originally framed as a mere stand-off: strong, sturdy Boris forcing the Europeans to make the capitulation that was always likely (if only Theresa hadn't been so clueless). No one actually thought he'd go through with it. Now, under Cummings's influence, Boris is positively relishing No Deal. This is heavy stuff!

    I wonder how many letters have gone in already...
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    OT regulation (or not) of political advertising on social media platforms

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-49278999
  • Is there any sign that the dam might break very suddenly and they would dump Corbyn overnight or does the whole process mitigate against that?
    The process mitigates against it, Richard. It's unlikely to happen, imo, but would grind exceeding slow even if it did.

    It's all too late anyway.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,222
    edited August 2019
    nichomar said:


    I hope we don’t have to go the whole way with the German analogy!
    Tbf the roads are in a shocking state, and as for train punctuality..
  • I know you are being ironic Peter but - just for the record - no. :)
    Lol! Just for the record, I was being ironic and no I wouldn't contemplate it for a moment. But in a fantasy world, the Schadenfreude would be exquisite!
  • TOPPING said:

    It rose significantly from where it had been. I mean I know you are an economist an' all so you know these things but take a long, hard look at the chart again and tell me the difference. Plus to be accurate, letters only go in above 3%. It is not a "3% threshold". The target was and is 2%. So it was 1.1% above target.
    Indeed 1.1% over target when the bounds we expect is +/- 1% of target.

    1.1% over target, or 0.1% over the threshold for writing a letter is not significant.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited August 2019

    Is there any sign that the dam might break very suddenly and they would dump Corbyn overnight or does the whole process mitigate against that?
    Thanks to EdM's change to the rules (thanks Ed!) it's in the hands of the members, who remain fiercely loyal, and in extremis would only replace him with an MP from the same wing of the party. Exacerbated by moderate Labour members leaving (e.g. Southam)

    Hence the noise around Long-Bailey who wouldn't have a snowballs chance under the old rules.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Indeed 1.1% over target when the bounds we expect is +/- 1% of target.

    1.1% over target, or 0.1% over the threshold for writing a letter is not significant.
    It went to 3.1% from below 1% (below 0.5% at the beginning of that year). That is a significant move.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Lol! Just for the record, I was being ironic and no I wouldn't contemplate it for a moment. But in a fantasy world, the Schadenfreude would be exquisite!
    I wouldn’t expect sympathy but it was amusing seeing the language that our host country uses to allow you residency turned on its head. In truth the main worry is health care guaranteed by Spain until the end of 2020 after which it depends on how Spaniards are treated in the UK.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906

    Pretty sure inflation has been quite high at times over the last decade. Many letters written by the Bank of England Governor on the subject if you care to read them.
    As a matter of fact sterling has lost only about 27% of its value against the dollar in the last decade (and only about 12% of its value since its low point at January 2019 - about the same as the amount it's lost since April 2018).

    The CPI has risen by about 24% over the last decade.

    It's probably best to check the "facts" coming from the extreme Brexit lot.
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited August 2019
    Anorak said:

    Thanks to EdM's change to the rules (thanks Ed!) it's in the hands of the members, who remain fiercely loyal, and in extremis would only replace him with an MP from the same wing of the party. Exacerbated by moderate Labour members leaving (e.g. Southam)

    Hence the noise around Long-Bailey who wouldn't have a snowballs chance under the old rules.
    Moderate MPs are also shit-scared of reselection and so the increasing chance of a GE mean that they've hunkered down to save their own hide.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390

    LOL!

    Got it in one :smiley:
    You are Harold Wilson and I demand my pound in my pocket.
  • Indeed 1.1% over target when the bounds we expect is +/- 1% of target.

    1.1% over target, or 0.1% over the threshold for writing a letter is not significant.
    Some of the letters were because of it being below target-

    https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/-/media/boe/files/letter/2015/governor-letter-120215.pdf?la=en&hash=E209D9ED2F85E6101DA6A8AF0BF5725B83B94689
  • AnorakAnorak Posts: 6,621
    edited August 2019
    Now that's a funny photoshop. Childish, but funny.
    https://twitter.com/GuidoFawkes/status/1159833571218952193
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,708
    Committee chairman Olivier Lepretre said: “If there is a hard Brexit, I can assure you that not a single kilo of seafood or fish from Britain will get into France.

    “We would set up barricades. All the fishermen along the northern French coast will tell you the same thing.


    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/french-fishermen-threaten-to-block-uk-so-no-fish-can-get-in-after-nodeal-brexit-115151448.html
  • It's a great system though isn't it-

    You have failed. Your punishment is to write a letter.

    Carney - Grrrrr, I hate writing letters, plus it's a symbol of my failure.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    IanB2 said:

    The Northants by-election saw the Tories drop from 1040 to 542 and Labour from 670 to 478, with no BNP candidate this time.

    Relatively not a bad result for Labour, although clearly no excitement without the LibDems

    Apparently a circa 7% swing from Con to Lab.
  • surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469
    Scott_P said:
    This is what the UK has come to . Being rescued by Turkey. Is this the start of the 88m Turks coming over here ? Johnson and Gove should answer this.
  • surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469

    Well, we'll be out of the EU and free to make our own laws then. We can simply bar from entry any such potential returnees who do not have the means to support themselves.

    Serves them right, no?
    Yes. Like Shamima Begum.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,708
    nichomar said:


    I hope we don’t have to go the whole way with the German analogy!
    Let's hope we don't get a nationalist leader born in another English-speaking country who's keen to unite the English-speaking world. Oh...
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,708

    This is what the UK has come to . Being rescued by Turkey. Is this the start of the 88m Turks coming over here ? Johnson and Gove should answer this.
    The poster should have said 88m Turkish Lira.
  • I don't think it is wise to assume that most Party members who voted for Boris and who back this new approach are assuming that the EU will give in. I would estimate that the people I talk to in London are about 50% happy with no deal and outside the M25 much higher. Most of us would like the EU to give in but it cannot be predicted what they will do. They have already shown that they are driven more by political and "solidarity" motives than by economic analysis (the euro being Exhibit 1). We shall see. But in the meantime I am amazed at the level of certainly being mouthed on both sides of the debate. All we know is what we can do. We don't know what the other side will do for certain in any negotiation.
  • and there will be a lot of conflicting information for sure in the next 83 days. For example we all saw the BBC on NI dairy cattle culls, quoting the expert who believes Brexit is catastrophic. Here is what the Ulster Farmers Union is quoted as replying today:
    https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/business/brexit/ulster-farmers-union-rubbishes-claims-of-nodeal-brexit-cattle-cull-38385998.html
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited August 2019
    The "37-40% support no-deal" figures are coming out to play again, I see.

    A mountain of more extensive sub-polls over the last three years, as has been discussed almost ad nauseam on here, has found that the no-deal figure always clusters closer to 30%, or indeed less, when it is again explained to a subsection of about 10% that "no deal" does not in fact mean "no substantial change". A key uninformed 10% think that there are no need for new deals with the EU to maintain our roughly current in and outgoing trading relationships while leaving.

    What is going is that the government and its outriders are in fact crucially relying on this uninformed ten per cent to derive legitimacy for a no-deal Brexit.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454

    Committee chairman Olivier Lepretre said: “If there is a hard Brexit, I can assure you that not a single kilo of seafood or fish from Britain will get into France.

    “We would set up barricades. All the fishermen along the northern French coast will tell you the same thing.


    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/french-fishermen-threaten-to-block-uk-so-no-fish-can-get-in-after-nodeal-brexit-115151448.html

    LOL
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,780

    and there will be a lot of conflicting information for sure in the next 83 days. For example we all saw the BBC on NI dairy cattle culls, quoting the expert who believes Brexit is catastrophic. Here is what the Ulster Farmers Union is quoted as replying today:
    https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/business/brexit/ulster-farmers-union-rubbishes-claims-of-nodeal-brexit-cattle-cull-38385998.html

    yes, we had quotes saying we would run out of milk\dairy earlier this week and then apparently we were going to slaughter all the cattle.

  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,780

    Committee chairman Olivier Lepretre said: “If there is a hard Brexit, I can assure you that not a single kilo of seafood or fish from Britain will get into France.

    “We would set up barricades. All the fishermen along the northern French coast will tell you the same thing.


    https://uk.news.yahoo.com/french-fishermen-threaten-to-block-uk-so-no-fish-can-get-in-after-nodeal-brexit-115151448.html

    whats new ?
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,771
    Interesting comments from Chuka:

    However, on Friday the Lib Dem Chuka Umunna, a former Labour MP, claimed a “substantial minority” of his former colleagues would not support Corbyn being prime minister.

    “The problem there is with the prospect of Jeremy Corbyn taking up the role of leading an emergency government is he cannot command a majority among his own MPs, never mind others like Conservative rebels who would refuse to give him confidence,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    “I know, because I have spoken to them. There is a substantial minority of Labour MPs at the very least who simply would not countenance Jeremy Corbyn being the prime minister of this country. So the question is, is there a figure who, as an alternative, could command a majority?”

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/09/no-10-cancels-staff-leave-raising-possibility-of-snap-election

    Does this also beg the question what might happen if Labour had most seats (so could govern with the SNP) post a GE?
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    Worcester is a Tory v Labour marginal which saw a Labour to Tory swing last night yes
    Not true of that ward though!
  • They have come from the tens of thousands who left the party under Cameron and have now gone back. The Tory party lost almost half its membership - 129,000 members - between 2005 and 2018. They have since gained about half of that back up to May 2019.

    So the answer is simple. They are not entryists. They are just Tory party members coming back to the party now it has changed.
    It does look that way.

    The YouGov article was before the leadership election. It suggested that 21% of eligible members had joined since the 2017 election. YouGov found that the vast majority of them voted for the party in 2017 (92%) and in 2015 (71%), and that 77% of those who joined between 2015 and 2017 said they would vote for Boris, compared with 63% of those who joined before 2015.

    Those percentages are very similar to the no-deal percentages above.

    So perhaps Boris support approximates to No Deal support?

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2019/07/11/does-conservative-party-have-problem-entryism
  • surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469
    The Lib Dem surge is becoming quite something. Another 2 wins last night. The swings are unbelievable.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906

    Possible about 90 cents to the dollar, about 80 cents to the Euro.
    What on earth does that mean?
  • DecrepitJohnLDecrepitJohnL Posts: 13,300
    MikeL said:

    Interesting comments from Chuka:

    However, on Friday the Lib Dem Chuka Umunna, a former Labour MP, claimed a “substantial minority” of his former colleagues would not support Corbyn being prime minister.

    “The problem there is with the prospect of Jeremy Corbyn taking up the role of leading an emergency government is he cannot command a majority among his own MPs, never mind others like Conservative rebels who would refuse to give him confidence,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    “I know, because I have spoken to them. There is a substantial minority of Labour MPs at the very least who simply would not countenance Jeremy Corbyn being the prime minister of this country. So the question is, is there a figure who, as an alternative, could command a majority?”

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/09/no-10-cancels-staff-leave-raising-possibility-of-snap-election

    Does this also beg the question what might happen if Labour had most seats (so could govern with the SNP) post a GE?

    This is the problem. There is not an unlimited set of choices. At some point MPs need to grow up, hold their noses and vote for the least unpalatable option.
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    MikeL said:

    Interesting comments from Chuka:

    However, on Friday the Lib Dem Chuka Umunna, a former Labour MP, claimed a “substantial minority” of his former colleagues would not support Corbyn being prime minister.

    “The problem there is with the prospect of Jeremy Corbyn taking up the role of leading an emergency government is he cannot command a majority among his own MPs, never mind others like Conservative rebels who would refuse to give him confidence,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    “I know, because I have spoken to them. There is a substantial minority of Labour MPs at the very least who simply would not countenance Jeremy Corbyn being the prime minister of this country. So the question is, is there a figure who, as an alternative, could command a majority?”

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/aug/09/no-10-cancels-staff-leave-raising-possibility-of-snap-election

    Does this also beg the question what might happen if Labour had most seats (so could govern with the SNP) post a GE?

    If Labour need the support of another party to form a government, then unless Jeremy Corbyn's approval ratings change dramatically, that other party is going to make his replacement as candidate for Prime Minister a precondition of support.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906

    If Labour need the support of another party to form a government, then unless Jeremy Corbyn's approval ratings change dramatically, that other party is going to make his replacement as candidate for Prime Minister a precondition of support.
    In other words, as expected, the next attempt by MPs to "take control" is going to be even more shambolic than the previous ones.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180

    Felix, who exactly is the 'you' that you have in mind there?
    Oh - the UK health and social services - the vast majority of those who'd have to return are older and often in poor health. I have 'friends who became resident 2 years ago and have clogged up the Spanish health system on an almost daily basis since. They voted leave! They are typical of those who may have to return.
  • Chris said:

    As a matter of fact sterling has lost only about 27% of its value against the dollar in the last decade (and only about 12% of its value since its low point at January 2019 - about the same as the amount it's lost since April 2018).

    The CPI has risen by about 24% over the last decade.

    It's probably best to check the "facts" coming from the extreme Brexit lot.

    You do realise CPI is supposed to rise over a decade?

    Target CPI is 2% per annum. That compounded is 22% over a decade.

    CPI has risen by a compound average of about 2.1% per annum over the past decade.

    So your numbers show Sterling has fallen 27% over a decade and during the decade the average is to be 0.1% away from target. Not 0.1% more than the 3% letter threshold the average is to be 0.1% off target!
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906
    Scott_P said:
    Tory MP totally supports absolute disaster for the UK.

    Nothing has changed.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,451
    Good afternoon, everyone.
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,771
    edited August 2019

    If Labour need the support of another party to form a government, then unless Jeremy Corbyn's approval ratings change dramatically, that other party is going to make his replacement as candidate for Prime Minister a precondition of support.
    Even the SNP?

    I'm sure the Lib Dems would 100% insist on his replacement.

    But I would have thought the SNP would allow him to be PM - especially as he would likely allow an Indy referendum - whereas a replacement like Starmer might well not.

    But coming back to Chuka's comments - are there 20, 30 or 40 Lab MPs who would suddenly finally come out of the woodwork and block him? They have gone along with him as Leader of Opposition - but might they draw the line at him becoming PM?
  • AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Chris said:

    In other words, as expected, the next attempt by MPs to "take control" is going to be even more shambolic than the previous ones.
    There is already precedent for this. Gordon Brown's head was the price the Lib Dems demanded for negotiating with Labour in 2010. They got it (and still chose to go with the Tories - though in fairness that was always the much more stable option numerically).
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906

    You do realise CPI is supposed to rise over a decade?

    Target CPI is 2% per annum. That compounded is 22% over a decade.

    CPI has risen by a compound average of about 2.1% per annum over the past decade.

    So your numbers show Sterling has fallen 27% over a decade and during the decade the average is to be 0.1% away from target. Not 0.1% more than the 3% letter threshold the average is to be 0.1% off target!
    First, can you correct your bizarre misstatement about sterling having lost 40% of its value over a decade?

    That was completely untrue. Sorry, but you can't just dance on to the next round of misinformation and diversionary nonsense.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    If Labour need the support of another party to form a government, then unless Jeremy Corbyn's approval ratings change dramatically, that other party is going to make his replacement as candidate for Prime Minister a precondition of support.
    And how is that to be achieved?

    Either you end up with the Labour party machinery and the government in two different pairs of hands; or you require the Labour party to dump someone who's just led them back to government and select someone else as leader - with that person being chosen (completely against Labour processes), not by the membership but by a different party.

    After an election, Corbyn can almost certainly play the same game as he's playing re a VoNC - back me or else the Tories / No Deal becomes the outcome.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,180
    nichomar said:

    He means those living in the UK as penniless ex immigrants return from EU countries. Many of whom are of retirement age with medical conditions and will strain the NHS and who won’t have any capital to buy property because the housing market herme may collapse because too many properties go on the market at the same time. Like Felix I have a good cushion but many who came out on just the state pension when it was 1.5 will be struggling now.
    Quite - and cheap as the living can be over here - it would be very difficult indeed to survive on a typical OAP.
This discussion has been closed.