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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » How strong is Trump’s Senate firewall?

SystemSystem Posts: 12,126
edited September 2019 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » How strong is Trump’s Senate firewall?

Almost three years ago, a few days after Trump was elected, I wrote a thread on this site saying that

Read the full story here


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Comments

  • surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469

    nico67 said:

    Hilarious reading the text under the Bozo and Arcurri pic in the DM .

    He visited her flat for technology lessons !

    Apparently they were quick !
  • surbiton19surbiton19 Posts: 1,469
    On topic, I cannot believe Trump can be removed particularly with Senate primaries [ reselection in this country ] yet to come. People like Susan Collins will be in trouble. Does she support the Republican Primary nutters but lose the senate election supporting Trump.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,637
    3rd like SNP
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,637
    4th like LDs
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    edited September 2019
    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,637
    Is this thread only for Socialists
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,637

    Is this thread only for Socialists

    And HYUFD
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
  • Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,578

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,467

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    I think that’s right. Most people don’t seem to give a toss about it.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    Poor tribal Labour voters are not going to suddenly back an Eton schooled Tory, who believes the rich do not have enough money and the poor should pay for tax cuts for those with too much money...
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,774
    edited September 2019
    The right wing talk stations here continue to churn out pro-Trump stuff and dismiss the whole thing as part of the never-ending witch hunt. Meanwhile the view of experts on NPR is that it still needs one piece of killer evidence to swing public opinion against Trump, as happened with Nixon in just a few days back with Watergate.

    The problem is that people are much more sceptical nowadays and willing to dismiss as ‘fake’ findings that would have been treated as conclusive in earlier decades.

    The Dem analysis seems to be that, even if it fails (as appears likely), the saga will hit Trump sufficiently with the independents to reduce his chance of re-election. Meanwhile there is talk of someone taking him on kamikaze through the republican primaries with the same object in mind.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,578

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    I think that’s right. Most people don’t seem to give a toss about it.
    +1 It's just us geeks and the political journos who care much.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    The end of November
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,541
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    The end of November
    Thanks.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,578
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    The end of November
    Like I said ;-)
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,774

    4th like LDs

    Worse still, like Labour
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,774
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    What happened to your predictions of:

    - a pre-Oct 31 election?
    - a NI referendum?
    - declaring war on Iran?
    - sending troops to occupy Scotland?

    It’s just that I am losing track.
  • Danny565Danny565 Posts: 8,091
    I swear HYUFD used to be vaguely sane...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 52,344

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
  • I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    Poor tribal Labour voters are not going to suddenly back an Eton schooled Tory, who believes the rich do not have enough money and the poor should pay for tax cuts for those with too much money...
    5% of 2017 Labour voters are now voting Tory and 7% of 2017 Labour voters are now voting Brexit Party, only 1% of 2017 Tory voters are now voting Labour

    https://d25d2506sfb94s.cloudfront.net/cumulus_uploads/document/0g33aqxx5k/TheTimes_190925_VI_w.pdf
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    On topic:
    "No evidence has yet come to light that Trump obstructed justice"
    In terms of the phone call, right. But there is ample evidence in the Mueller Report that he did.
  • Gabs2Gabs2 Posts: 1,268
    I don't know how you can say no quid pro quo. He pointed out to the Ukrainian president how much the US had done for Ukraine and then immediately requested a favour in those terms. This on a phone call a couple days after Trump had personally stopped the aid.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.

    Most people on here don't read anything longer than 2 lines.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    edited September 2019

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    I think that’s right. Most people don’t seem to give a toss about it.
    +1 It's just us geeks and the political journos who care much.
    In my experience, people who aren't into politics barely ever talk about politics at all, but when they do its about Brexit.

    That is to say, my crowd of friends barely talk about politics, hence I talk about it on here, but the only political issue they do talk about is Brexit

  • glwglw Posts: 9,871
    edited September 2019
    IanB2 said:

    The right wing talk stations here continue to churn out pro-Trump stuff and dismiss the whole thing as part of the never-ending witch hunt. Meanwhile the view of experts on NPR is that it still needs one piece of killer evidence to swing public opinion against Trump, as happened with Nixon in just a few days back with Watergate.

    The problem is that people are much more sceptical nowadays and willing to dismiss as ‘fake’ findings that would have been treated as conclusive in earlier decades.

    The Dem analysis seems to be that, even if it fails (as appears likely), the saga will hit Trump sufficiently with the independents to reduce his chance of re-election. Meanwhile there is talk of someone taking him on kamikaze through the republican primaries with the same object in mind.

    If the allegation is true that transcriptions of Trump's conversations are being held on a classified system, in order to ensure few people get to see what Trump has said, then Ukraine may only be the tip of the iceberg. Trump's conversations with Russia and Saudi Arabia might be far more damaging to him. Of course the Whitehouse will fight like hell to keep those conversations out of the hands of any investigatory committee.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    IanB2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    What happened to your predictions of:

    - a pre-Oct 31 election?
    - a NI referendum?
    - declaring war on Iran?
    - sending troops to occupy Scotland?

    It’s just that I am losing track.
    Most of them were not predictions but possibilities and if Boris wins a majority a NI referendum could certainly take place on a NI only backstop
  • The_TaxmanThe_Taxman Posts: 2,979

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
    True but also the Tories with all those older voters!

    What have you done to your ass by the way? :smirk: :
  • IanB2 said:

    The right wing talk stations here continue to churn out pro-Trump stuff and dismiss the whole thing as part of the never-ending witch hunt. Meanwhile the view of experts on NPR is that it still needs one piece of killer evidence to swing public opinion against Trump, as happened with Nixon in just a few days back with Watergate.

    The problem is that people are much more sceptical nowadays and willing to dismiss as ‘fake’ findings that would have been treated as conclusive in earlier decades.

    The Dem analysis seems to be that, even if it fails (as appears likely), the saga will hit Trump sufficiently with the independents to reduce his chance of re-election. Meanwhile there is talk of someone taking him on kamikaze through the republican primaries with the same object in mind.

    I think that's right (the bit I've bolded). I think Trump could stand up in a press conference, at a podium next to the leader of another country, and say that military support for that country was conditional on them doing a favour to help Trump personally, and he would retain his core support, and consequently the support of the vast majority of Republican legislators who are dependent on Trump's core support for victory in their primary campaigns.

    People's ability to rationalise things as okay if someone on their side does something is tremendous, and we have become very much more divided into sides since the time of Nixon and Watergate. This makes the comparisons with the way in which public opinion changed during Watergate pointless. We live in a different time.

    In a similar vein, I've been listening to Rory Stewart talk about seriousness, and why he isn't joining the Lib Dems, and it's challenging me to rethink my support for the Lib Dem policy of revoke. I still think that the policy is right in an abstract intellectual way: holding the referendum when the government opposed the change proposed was wrong, revoking would correct that mistake, winning a majority for that policy would provide a mandate for it.

    I'm no longer sure that being right in an abstract way is good enough. There is a hysteresis which means that now that something has been done it cannot be simply undone. Even though the referendum was wrongheaded, perhaps we do have to see it through, in as reasonable and consensual a way as possible. I just don't know.
  • HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I hope not!
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    Gabs2 said:

    I don't know how you can say no quid pro quo. He pointed out to the Ukrainian president how much the US had done for Ukraine and then immediately requested a favour in those terms. This on a phone call a couple days after Trump had personally stopped the aid.

    You're right... there is evidence. Whether it's damning or not is questionable. You and I know that 2 + 2 = 4, but in the court of public opinion, people can make it equal 5 if they really want to believe it's 5.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    edited September 2019
    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    I think impeachment is risky for the Democrats but recent events have made it impossible to avoid this now .

    There’s no chance of Rep Senators voting for that . This is more about using that against them in the next election .

    The Rep are defending 23 seats v the Dems who are defending just 12.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,151
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    The end of November
    Thursday 28th November?
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    IanB2 said:

    The right wing talk stations here continue to churn out pro-Trump stuff and dismiss the whole thing as part of the never-ending witch hunt. Meanwhile the view of experts on NPR is that it still needs one piece of killer evidence to swing public opinion against Trump, as happened with Nixon in just a few days back with Watergate.

    The problem is that people are much more sceptical nowadays and willing to dismiss as ‘fake’ findings that would have been treated as conclusive in earlier decades.

    The Dem analysis seems to be that, even if it fails (as appears likely), the saga will hit Trump sufficiently with the independents to reduce his chance of re-election. Meanwhile there is talk of someone taking him on kamikaze through the republican primaries with the same object in mind.

    I think that's right (the bit I've bolded). I think Trump could stand up in a press conference, at a podium next to the leader of another country, and say that military support for that country was conditional on them doing a favour to help Trump personally, and he would retain his core support, and consequently the support of the vast majority of Republican legislators who are dependent on Trump's core support for victory in their primary campaigns.

    People's ability to rationalise things as okay if someone on their side does something is tremendous, and we have become very much more divided into sides since the time of Nixon and Watergate. This makes the comparisons with the way in which public opinion changed during Watergate pointless. We live in a different time.

    In a similar vein, I've been listening to Rory Stewart talk about seriousness, and why he isn't joining the Lib Dems, and it's challenging me to rethink my support for the Lib Dem policy of revoke. I still think that the policy is right in an abstract intellectual way: holding the referendum when the government opposed the change proposed was wrong, revoking would correct that mistake, winning a majority for that policy would provide a mandate for it.

    I'm no longer sure that being right in an abstract way is good enough. There is a hysteresis which means that now that something has been done it cannot be simply undone. Even though the referendum was wrongheaded, perhaps we do have to see it through, in as reasonable and consensual a way as possible. I just don't know.
    Just look upon revoke as reopening the Overton window. Most revokers will be content with a referendum. But you have to be willing to go a step farther than necessary, when you're dealing with Brexists: fight fire with fire.
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    Wisdom of crowds. The EU constitutes a trivial proportion of UK government spending. The areas where it has competence are important, but not ones which are controversial. Virtually everything it does would be done anyway via agreements between the individual states in a more ad hoc fashion anyway. The extra networking and co-operation opportunities give some real benefits, but you'd only notice them if you were in particular types of business. So it really isn't that big a deal to most people.
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380

    IanB2 said:

    The right wing talk stations here continue to churn out pro-Trump stuff and dismiss the whole thing as part of the never-ending witch hunt. Meanwhile the view of experts on NPR is that it still needs one piece of killer evidence to swing public opinion against Trump, as happened with Nixon in just a few days back with Watergate.

    The problem is that people are much more sceptical nowadays and willing to dismiss as ‘fake’ findings that would have been treated as conclusive in earlier decades.

    The Dem analysis seems to be that, even if it fails (as appears likely), the saga will hit Trump sufficiently with the independents to reduce his chance of re-election. Meanwhile there is talk of someone taking him on kamikaze through the republican primaries with the same object in mind.

    I think that's right (the bit I've bolded). I think Trump could stand up in a press conference, at a podium next to the leader of another country, and say that military support for that country was conditional on them doing a favour to help Trump personally, and he would retain his core support, and consequently the support of the vast majority of Republican legislators who are dependent on Trump's core support for victory in their primary campaigns.

    People's ability to rationalise things as okay if someone on their side does something is tremendous, and we have become very much more divided into sides since the time of Nixon and Watergate. This makes the comparisons with the way in which public opinion changed during Watergate pointless. We live in a different time.

    In a similar vein, I've been listening to Rory Stewart talk about seriousness, and why he isn't joining the Lib Dems, and it's challenging me to rethink my support for the Lib Dem policy of revoke. I still think that the policy is right in an abstract intellectual way: holding the referendum when the government opposed the change proposed was wrong, revoking would correct that mistake, winning a majority for that policy would provide a mandate for it.

    I'm no longer sure that being right in an abstract way is good enough. There is a hysteresis which means that now that something has been done it cannot be simply undone. Even though the referendum was wrongheaded, perhaps we do have to see it through, in as reasonable and consensual a way as possible. I just don't know.
    +1 for "hysteresis" by the way.
  • HYUFD said:

    IanB2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    What happened to your predictions of:

    - a pre-Oct 31 election?
    - a NI referendum?
    - declaring war on Iran?
    - sending troops to occupy Scotland?

    It’s just that I am losing track.
    Most of them were not predictions but possibilities and if Boris wins a majority a NI referendum could certainly take place on a NI only backstop
    Which were predictions and which were possibilities?

    It would be helpful if you could distinguish between the two in future pronouncements.

    Thanks.
  • Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    I think that’s right. Most people don’t seem to give a toss about it.
    I think that's completely wrong.

    Just take a step back and look at the massive changes in public support during this Parliament and compare it to the much more modest changes in public support during the 2001-5 Parliament. I bet everyone in the country could tell you the cause of the difference.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    GIN1138 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    The end of November
    Thursday 28th November?
    Quite probably assuming a GE is likely to be called around 19th October and that gives a 6 week campaign
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,637
    GIN1138 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    The end of November
    Thursday 28th November?
    Tuesday 12th November
  • I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.

    I thought all headers were ignored unless they were about Brexit. I dic submit one to TSE but it obviously did not make the grade, which is a pity as it would likely have been on topic for all comments
  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    There won't be any conservatives standing in the presidential election. There will be a liberal or social democrat versus Trump. Trump is not a conservative, and he's not going to win.
  • RecidivistRecidivist Posts: 4,679
    isam said:

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    I think that’s right. Most people don’t seem to give a toss about it.
    +1 It's just us geeks and the political journos who care much.
    In my experience, people who aren't into politics barely ever talk about politics at all, but when they do its about Brexit.

    That is to say, my crowd of friends barely talk about politics, hence I talk about it on here, but the only political issue they do talk about is Brexit

    Totally opposite in my family. We talk politics quite a bit but avoid Brexit. Nobody wants to set my father in law off about fishing. And my Dad frowns when the subject comes up. I haven't dared ask him why.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    edited September 2019
    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    There won't be any conservatives standing in the presidential election. There will be a liberal or social democrat versus Trump. Trump is not a conservative, and he's not going to win.
    Trump is a conservative, just a populist one
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    Dominic Grieve and Alistair Burt tell ITV news they will not vote to make Corbyn PM as he is not responsible enough for the post despite both losing the Tory whip for voting for extension over No Deal
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    The problem with an election in December is the big variable the weather .

    You just never know what might turn up . What if there’s snow or some storm , this could really effect turnout in some areas .

  • NooNoo Posts: 2,380
    HYUFD said:

    Noo said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    There won't be any conservatives standing in the presidential election. There will be a liberal or social democrat versus Trump. Trump is not a conservative, and he's not going to win.
    Trump is a conservative, just a populist one
    Hmmm, I'm looking at a summary here:
    (Wikipedia, I know, but the summary seems fair)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservatism#Characteristics_of_conservatism_in_France,_Italy,_Russia,_Poland,_United_Kingdom,_United_States,_and_Israel

    Trump certainly ticks some of those boxes, but misses on an alarming (for conservatives) number of them. It's fair to say he is a semidetatched conservative.
  • Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    Normal people don't care about any political individual issue. The concrete experience of my 21 years grass roots political activism is normal people are tightly focused on a personal zone of house, car, job, family and annual package holiday. Core public services ( Police, NHS, Schools ) only register if they are personally failing them in some way.

    Anyone with interests beyond that is in the minority " selectorate ". Even contacting your local councillor about the Bins/Planning/Pot holes puts you into the elite activist catergory.

    In retrospect it's why the Leave campaign was so lethal and a work of genius.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,118
    I see the use of "firewall" makes a return.... what was the context it was used before in thread headers pre 2015 GE? A Lib Dem firewall perhaps?
  • AndrewAndrew Posts: 2,900
    HYUFD said:

    Trump is a conservative, just a populist one

    He was a registered Democrat 10 years ago.
  • Good peace by fishing. I agree with all of that. Is the predictit market about the senate convicting specifically? (It's blocked from Japan.) Because there's also potential health issues, looking like he's going to lose and giving up, etc.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,509

    I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.

    Churlish is a bit harsh, Richard, though it’s certainly worth discussion.

    The first Senate firewall is actually Senate majority leader McConnell - he might give any vote to impeach the Merrick Garland treatment, and simply refuse to bring it to trial in the Senate. What happens then is unclear, since the Constitution. doesn’t state explicitly the Senate must do so, and precedent doesn’t provide much of a guide, either.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
    Not in Richmond Park!

    On 1st December 2016 the LibDems overturned a 23,000 Tory majority to elect Sarah Olney. We are waterproof and have torches. Bring it on!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Richmond_Park_by-election

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,135
    Barnesian said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
    Not in Richmond Park!

    On 1st December 2016 the LibDems overturned a 23,000 Tory majority to elect Sarah Olney. We are waterproof and have torches. Bring it on!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Richmond_Park_by-election

    The mystery is how the Tories managed to win the seat in 2017 by 45 votes.
  • HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    Johnson has certainly rescued the Tories polling meltdown to a point where it is in the balance whether the Tories can avoid a net loss of seats, but Major actually delivered a victory against expectations rather than just the hope of one.

    But Trump? Oh come on! Trump's lousy disapproval rating at this stage in his presidency is the worst of any postwar president bar Carter, whose lousy rating he equals. Moreover that lousy rating is sticky - i.e. it has been remarkably stable whereas others had their peaks and troughs over time, so there's less chance of the volatility he needs to stage a recovery. If the Democrats somehow manage to cock up things in 2020 it will be in spite of Trump rather than because of him.
  • Noo said:

    SunnyJim said:

    Noo said:

    There's been a lot of talk about the SNP these last few days, so this is an opportune moment to consider a potential turn of events.

    Say the Conservative & Unionist drop a "give us a majority and we leave without a deal, no referendum" manifesto, and the Liberal Demcrats drop a "give us a majority and we revoke, no referendum" manifesto.
    If the SNP put "give us a majority in Scotland and we negotiate independence, no referendum" in their manifesto, how do the Conservative & Unionists and the Liberal Democrats counter it?
    There is a real chance that the equivocation and doublespeak needed to say "our mandate will count but yours won't" will seriously weaken Tory and Lib Dem messaging.
    I could see both the SNP and Labour doing quite well out of such a situation. Don't know whether it's a card the SNP are considering pulling out of their sleeve, but given the negative noises about an indyref2 (despite a Holyrood mandate), it could be seen as a necessary escalation on their part.

    I don't know if there has ever been polling but I reckon there would be strong support in England for Scottish independence.

    Personally I would love to see the back of them.
    Yes, there has been such polling. You are far from alone.
    And what percentage of English people want to "see the back of" the Scots? I'd quite like to see the back of nationalism as a creed, but I see no reason to encourage the Scots to take a decision that would be even worse for them and us than Brexit. Though if English nationalists cause no-deal I can see why the Scots will want independence within the EU, as how could things be much worse? I suspect there will be quite few English based "mock-Jocks" lining up for Scottish nationality, and who could blame them.
    I think England is more nationalistic than Scotland.
    Indeed.

    Exhibit A:
    David Cameron’s Project Fear worked on the Scots.
    David Cameron’s Project Fear failed with the English.
  • rpjsrpjs Posts: 3,787
    Nigelb said:

    I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.

    Churlish is a bit harsh, Richard, though it’s certainly worth discussion.

    The first Senate firewall is actually Senate majority leader McConnell - he might give any vote to impeach the Merrick Garland treatment, and simply refuse to bring it to trial in the Senate. What happens then is unclear, since the Constitution. doesn’t state explicitly the Senate must do so, and precedent doesn’t provide much of a guide, either.
    The Constitution states that the Chief Justice “presides” over Senate trials of the President, which implies to me that the CJ has the power to schedule the trial if no-one else will.
  • Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551
    Andy_JS said:

    Barnesian said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
    Not in Richmond Park!

    On 1st December 2016 the LibDems overturned a 23,000 Tory majority to elect Sarah Olney. We are waterproof and have torches. Bring it on!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Richmond_Park_by-election

    The mystery is how the Tories managed to win the seat in 2017 by 45 votes.
    The Labour vote went up from 1,500 in 2016 to 5,800 in 2017.

    The LibDems took the Labour vote for granted and LibDem HQ sent a letter to all known Labour supporters dissing Corbyn. That alone probably cost the LibDems the extra 45 tactical Labour votes (out of 5,800 Labour votes) that were needed. The same mistakes won't be made again.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226
    edited September 2019

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    Johnson has certainly rescued the Tories polling meltdown to a point where it is in the balance whether the Tories can avoid a net loss of seats, but Major actually delivered a victory against expectations rather than just the hope of one.

    But Trump? Oh come on! Trump's lousy disapproval rating at this stage in his presidency is the worst of any postwar president bar Carter, whose lousy rating he equals. Moreover that lousy rating is sticky - i.e. it has been remarkably stable whereas others had their peaks and troughs over time, so there's less chance of the volatility he needs to stage a recovery. If the Democrats somehow manage to cock up things in 2020 it will be in spite of Trump rather than because of him.
    Major also led the Tories to their worst defeat since 1832 in 1997 though.

    Trump also won 304 EC votes in 2016, the highest for any GOP candidate since Bush Snr in 1988 and Bush Snr failed to be re elected in 1992.

    Of course my point relies on both Boris and Trump being re elected but I expect they will be (even now Trump actually has a higher approval rating than Obama had in 2011 before his re election)
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,119
    Top, top thread from Fishing. Largely wasted on the likes of us, who skip over and shout about Brexit for the ten thousandth thread in a row.

    If the House impeached and the Senate got a majority, but not the supermajority needed for conviction, would Trump run in 2020? Could it happen swiftly enough for the GOP to switch to Pence, and would they? He's 80/1 next POTUS, which seems like value for a guy with two ways of getting there.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,509
    rpjs said:

    Nigelb said:

    I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.

    Churlish is a bit harsh, Richard, though it’s certainly worth discussion.

    The first Senate firewall is actually Senate majority leader McConnell - he might give any vote to impeach the Merrick Garland treatment, and simply refuse to bring it to trial in the Senate. What happens then is unclear, since the Constitution. doesn’t state explicitly the Senate must do so, and precedent doesn’t provide much of a guide, either.
    The Constitution states that the Chief Justice “presides” over Senate trials of the President, which implies to me that the CJ has the power to schedule the trial if no-one else will.
    No, the Senate has ‘sole power’, according to the constitution. The CJ merely presides over the impeachment proceedings. The possibility is being discussed already:
    https://www.politico.com/news/2019/09/28/mitch-mcconnell-trump-impeachment-007689

    One possible wrinkle is Congress voting to impeach both Trump and Pence. Is it possible there might be a handful of Republican Senators who might then fancy their chances for the nomination ? Seems unlikely, but we live in strange times.
  • isam said:

    Been in town, in pubs ,shops and on trams a lot this weekend, the locals are discussing what's happening in the city .

    Repeatedly more than any thing else, I've heard comments about how dull and boring Brexit is and aren't the people who care so much to protest strange

    It's my strong suspicion that Brexit isn't going to be the deciding factor as to which way many normal people vote at a forthcoming election as many political anoraks on here seem to imagine.

    I'm not expecting areas with strong historical reluctance to voting Tory suddenly changing, Brexit simply isn't the top major issue for many people who have real normal lives with other greater concerns as they see them.

    I think that’s right. Most people don’t seem to give a toss about it.
    +1 It's just us geeks and the political journos who care much.
    In my experience, people who aren't into politics barely ever talk about politics at all, but when they do its about Brexit.

    That is to say, my crowd of friends barely talk about politics, hence I talk about it on here, but the only political issue they do talk about is Brexit
    There are some guys in my office who, for the last couple of months of the last football season were constantly joshing with each other about the respective merits (or otherwise) of Liverpool and Machester United. If United had done badly the one of them would make a special effort to spend more time over our end of the office to tease about it.

    Maybe the start of the football season is less interesting, but I've never heard so much chat about politics in an office before, and it's all about the Supreme Court, or votes in the Commons, Brexit all the time. The office is in a Remain part of Remain London, so no-one has broken cover to admit to supporting the damn thing, but I would be surprised if there weren't workplaces (or bridge clubs, or wherever it is that retired people congregate) where the talk often turns to politics, by which I mean Brexit, and their shared exasperation that we haven't left yet.

    My experience is certainly not ManchesterKurt's experience.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551
    I've just watched Lord Sumption deliver his lectures on Law and the Fall of Politics on the Parliament channel.

    Riveting stuff. Although he is a conservative (small c) he actually persuaded me to change my mind on the desirability of a written constitution and go instead for a piece meal improvement by legislation in parliament.

    He is also in favour of proportional representation to encourage more participation in politics, more equality of votes and foster more collaboration in parliament. I didn't need persuading of that.

    Excellent persuasive piece by Fishing. Well researched. Well done.
  • isam said:

    I see the use of "firewall" makes a return.... what was the context it was used before in thread headers pre 2015 GE? A Lib Dem firewall perhaps?

    I seem to recall it being used very often in the context of Hilary Clinton's Electoral College firewall.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,774
    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    What’s the technical term for taking a profit now that you know will screw you for years thereafter?
  • DruttDrutt Posts: 1,119
    Drutt said:

    Top, top thread from Fishing. Largely wasted on the likes of us, who skip over and shout about Brexit for the ten thousandth thread in a row.

    If the House impeached and the Senate got a majority, but not the supermajority needed for conviction, would Trump run in 2020? Could it happen swiftly enough for the GOP to switch to Pence, and would they? He's 80/1 next POTUS, which seems like value for a guy with two ways of getting there.

    Boh. That's Pence's 2020 odds, not his next POTUS odds.
  • There must be plenty of Remain Tories in realtively safe seats feeling a little edgy over the prospect of Brexit Party candidates hoovering up enough brexiteer votes to give the Lib Dems a fighting chance. That's certainly the approach the local LD party will be doing - highlighting the Remain Tory's opposition to no deal and his anti-Boris tweets and leaving the Brexit Party well alone.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,774
    Drutt said:

    Drutt said:

    Top, top thread from Fishing. Largely wasted on the likes of us, who skip over and shout about Brexit for the ten thousandth thread in a row.

    If the House impeached and the Senate got a majority, but not the supermajority needed for conviction, would Trump run in 2020? Could it happen swiftly enough for the GOP to switch to Pence, and would they? He's 80/1 next POTUS, which seems like value for a guy with two ways of getting there.

    Boh. That's Pence's 2020 odds, not his next POTUS odds.
    Word is Trump is looking for a woman to replace Pence
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    My model for Portsmouth South gives:
    LibDem 14,117
    Con 11,655
    Lab 11,650
    BXP 6,299
  • Barnesian said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Barnesian said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
    Not in Richmond Park!

    On 1st December 2016 the LibDems overturned a 23,000 Tory majority to elect Sarah Olney. We are waterproof and have torches. Bring it on!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Richmond_Park_by-election

    The mystery is how the Tories managed to win the seat in 2017 by 45 votes.
    The Labour vote went up from 1,500 in 2016 to 5,800 in 2017.

    The LibDems took the Labour vote for granted and LibDem HQ sent a letter to all known Labour supporters dissing Corbyn. That alone probably cost the LibDems the extra 45 tactical Labour votes (out of 5,800 Labour votes) that were needed. The same mistakes won't be made again.
    Richmond Park (Shadsy)

    LD 1/10
    Con 5/1
    Lab 100/1
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,420

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    Why LD there? I don’t know anything about the constituency but they came 3rd in 2017 and it voted Leave?
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551
    IanB2 said:

    Drutt said:

    Drutt said:

    Top, top thread from Fishing. Largely wasted on the likes of us, who skip over and shout about Brexit for the ten thousandth thread in a row.

    If the House impeached and the Senate got a majority, but not the supermajority needed for conviction, would Trump run in 2020? Could it happen swiftly enough for the GOP to switch to Pence, and would they? He's 80/1 next POTUS, which seems like value for a guy with two ways of getting there.

    Boh. That's Pence's 2020 odds, not his next POTUS odds.
    Word is Trump is looking for a woman to replace Pence
    Melania? Ivanka?

    I see PaddyPower is offer 8/1 on Melania revealed to be living with another man during Trump's first term. So perhaps not Melania.
  • eggegg Posts: 1,749
    Noo said:

    I'm surprised by the churlish response to Fishing's excellent article, which seems to be being largely ignored. It deserves better.

    Most people on here don't read anything longer than 2 lines.
    I read it and I liked it. Just the thing for this site.

    We need more Fishing. 🙂 just ideas for your knowledge and research skills: Which senate seats could change hands in the election? How is the electoral college shaping up if election tomorrow?
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    Why LD there? I don’t know anything about the constituency but they came 3rd in 2017 and it voted Leave?
    It is based on the relative swings. They won the seat in 2010.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,551
    edited September 2019

    Barnesian said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Barnesian said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Given any Republican Senator who voted to impeach Trump would likely lose a primary challenge when next up for re election they are not going to commit political suicide by doing so, so the Republican majority in the Senate would ensure Trump is not convicted

    I think Trump will last longer than Boris! :smiley:
    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November
    At what time frame would you expect a November election? At the start, the middle or end? I am genuinely interested from your perspective as a Conservative foot soldier.
    31st November :wink:
    Glad I won't be out in all weather delivering leaflets! Just imagine the turnout if we had a cold snap to rival November/December 2010...
    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....
    Not in Richmond Park!

    On 1st December 2016 the LibDems overturned a 23,000 Tory majority to elect Sarah Olney. We are waterproof and have torches. Bring it on!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Richmond_Park_by-election

    The mystery is how the Tories managed to win the seat in 2017 by 45 votes.
    The Labour vote went up from 1,500 in 2016 to 5,800 in 2017.

    The LibDems took the Labour vote for granted and LibDem HQ sent a letter to all known Labour supporters dissing Corbyn. That alone probably cost the LibDems the extra 45 tactical Labour votes (out of 5,800 Labour votes) that were needed. The same mistakes won't be made again.
    Richmond Park (Shadsy)

    LD 1/10
    Con 5/1
    Lab 100/1
    That's free money. A 10% tax free return in a few months.

    I'm on LibDems winning Richmond Park at 7/10 with Ladbrokes. That was placed some time ago.
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,780
    edited September 2019
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:



    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November

    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    Johnson has certainly rescued the Tories polling meltdown to a point where it is in the balance whether the Tories can avoid a net loss of seats, but Major actually delivered a victory against expectations rather than just the hope of one.

    But Trump? Oh come on! Trump's lousy disapproval rating at this stage in his presidency is the worst of any postwar president bar Carter, whose lousy rating he equals. Moreover that lousy rating is sticky - i.e. it has been remarkably stable whereas others had their peaks and troughs over time, so there's less chance of the volatility he needs to stage a recovery. If the Democrats somehow manage to cock up things in 2020 it will be in spite of Trump rather than because of him.
    Major also led the Tories to their worst defeat since 1832 in 1997 though.

    Trump also won 304 EC votes in 2016, the highest for any GOP candidate since Bush Snr in 1988 and Bush Snr failed to be re elected in 1992.

    Of course my point relies on both Boris and Trump being re elected but I expect they will be (even now Trump has a higher approval rating than Obama had in 2011 before his re election)
    I am judging Major and Johnson by the first election they contested. If Johnson wins and then pulls off another victory in 2024 after 14 years of Conservative government (1997 was 18 for Major) you can come back here and claim bragging rights, even though I was not contesting your point but rather the degree of certainty in your assertion.

    On your chosen measure of approval, Trump is currently 0.1 ahead of where Obama was (at the very nadir of Obama's ratings), but 2.1 behind on disapproval and so 2.0 behind on net approval. He is at broadly the same level as Carter who lost badly and behind Bush Snr and Ford who were the others to lose. He is behind all the others who won. He is a liability.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,135
    Barnesian said:

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    My model for Portsmouth South gives:
    LibDem 14,117
    Con 11,655
    Lab 11,650
    BXP 6,299
    Looks about right.
  • OblitusSumMeOblitusSumMe Posts: 9,143
    edited September 2019

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    Why LD there? I don’t know anything about the constituency but they came 3rd in 2017 and it voted Leave?
    They held it from 1997 - 2015 and (as the SDP) from 1984-7. 2017 was the first time that Labour had ever won the seat. Portsmouth South voted by 51.8% for Brexit, marginally lower than the UK total, and a bit lower than the average for England.

    A quick google suggests that the Labour MP, Stephen Morgan, has had some grief from local Momentum activists, no doubt entirely unconnected to his membership of Labour Friends of Israel. A resurgence here is certainly not out of the question for the Lib Dems.

    EDIT - The Lib Dems also became the largest party on Portsmouth City Council in May 2019. Although local election results don't carry over exactly to general elections, it will mean they will have activists to campaign to convince people that they have a chance.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    Barnesian said:

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    My model for Portsmouth South gives:
    LibDem 14,117
    Con 11,655
    Lab 11,650
    BXP 6,299
    Labour hold - having won from third place in 2017. Anti-Tory vote will swing behind new Labour MP who will also enjoy first term incumbency.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,135
    justin124 said:

    Barnesian said:

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    My model for Portsmouth South gives:
    LibDem 14,117
    Con 11,655
    Lab 11,650
    BXP 6,299
    Labour hold - having won from third place in 2017. Anti-Tory vote will swing behind new Labour MP who will also enjoy first term incumbency.
    It depends whether Labour stages another miraculous recovery during the election campaign.
  • PaulMPaulM Posts: 613
    IanB2 said:

    The right wing talk stations here continue to churn out pro-Trump stuff and dismiss the whole thing as part of the never-ending witch hunt. Meanwhile the view of experts on NPR is that it still needs one piece of killer evidence to swing public opinion against Trump, as happened with Nixon in just a few days back with Watergate.

    The problem is that people are much more sceptical nowadays and willing to dismiss as ‘fake’ findings that would have been treated as conclusive in earlier decades.

    The Dem analysis seems to be that, even if it fails (as appears likely), the saga will hit Trump sufficiently with the independents to reduce his chance of re-election. Meanwhile there is talk of someone taking him on kamikaze through the republican primaries with the same object in mind.

    Don't confuse independents for floating voters though. I suspect most independents made their minds up about Trump pro or anti years ago. There's really very few people who are on the fence about him, including the news media.
  • SunnyJimSunnyJim Posts: 1,106



    Worth bearing in mind that a very late election reduces the effectiveness of the Labour and LibDem field operations....

    I've joined my local party and have volunteered to help during any forthcoming election.

    Really looking forward to it.
  • Barnesian said:

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    My model for Portsmouth South gives:
    LibDem 14,117
    Con 11,655
    Lab 11,650
    BXP 6,299
    An interesting one. With the constituency voting 52% Leave in 2016 the combined vote for the Remain parties (+Greens also?) looks far too high in an election likely to be dominated more by Brexit than that in 2017. Also, with a sitting Labour MP there is a great deal of tactical risk for Remainers in switching to the Libs in a fairly distant 3rd place, so the Lib resurgence might do no more than take enough votes off Labour to allow the Cons to take the seat from a close 2nd place currently. I think the Cons should be slight favorites here.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    Barnesian said:

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    My model for Portsmouth South gives:
    LibDem 14,117
    Con 11,655
    Lab 11,650
    BXP 6,299
    An interesting one. With the constituency voting 52% Leave in 2016 the combined vote for the Remain parties (+Greens also?) looks far too high in an election likely to be dominated more by Brexit than that in 2017. Also, with a sitting Labour MP there is a great deal of tactical risk for Remainers in switching to the Libs in a fairly distant 3rd place, so the Lib resurgence might do no more than take enough votes off Labour to allow the Cons to take the seat from a close 2nd place currently. I think the Cons should be slight favorites here.
    If Labour loses here, it is likely to be to the Tories. I suspect that the 2017 result somewhat understates Labour strength here because many Labour voters will have become accustomed to supporting Mike Hancock on a tactical basis and continued to vote that way in the mistaken belief that Labour was not competitive. Labour's success removes the need for such voting next time - and there is the first term incumbency bonus.
  • IanB2 said:

    Drutt said:

    Drutt said:

    Top, top thread from Fishing. Largely wasted on the likes of us, who skip over and shout about Brexit for the ten thousandth thread in a row.

    If the House impeached and the Senate got a majority, but not the supermajority needed for conviction, would Trump run in 2020? Could it happen swiftly enough for the GOP to switch to Pence, and would they? He's 80/1 next POTUS, which seems like value for a guy with two ways of getting there.

    Boh. That's Pence's 2020 odds, not his next POTUS odds.
    Word is Trump is looking for a woman to replace Pence
    Tulsi Gabbard! He'd take a decent chunk of the Bernie bros.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,226

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    HYUFD said:



    I expect Boris to win the November general election in the UK this year and Trump to be re elected after the US presidential election next November

    You surprise me. Having read your previous posts I have often been struck by your pessimism as to the electoral prospects of the Conservative and Republican Parties.
    I think after the likely Conservative election victories on both sides of the Atlantic this year and next both the Tories and Republicans may fail to win an election for a while, like them or loathe them Boris and Trump are probably the most charismatic and best vote winners for the Tories and GOP respectively since Thatcher and Reagan
    Johnson has certainly rescued the Tories polling meltdown to a point where it is in the balance whether the Tories can avoid a net loss of seats, but Major actually delivered a victory against expectations rather than just the hope of one.

    But Trump? Oh come on! Trump's lousy disapproval rating at this stage in his 2020 it will be in spite of Trump rather than because of him.
    Major also led the Tories to their worst defeat since 1832 in 1997 though.

    Trump also won 304 EC votes in 2016, the highest for any GOP candidate since Bush Snr in 1988 and Bush Snr failed to be re elected in 1992.

    Of course my point relies on both Boris and Trump being re elected but I expect they will be (even now Trump has a higher approval rating than Obama had in 2011 before his re election)
    I am judging Major and Johnson by the first election they contested. If Johnson wins and then pulls off another victory in 2024 after 14 years of Conservative government (1997 was 18 for Major) you can come back here and claim bragging rights, even though I was not contesting your point but rather the degree of certainty in your assertion.

    On your chosen measure of approval, Trump is currently 0.1 ahead of where Obama was (at the very nadir of Obama's ratings), but 2.1 behind on disapproval and so 2.0 behind on net approval. He is at broadly the same level as Carter who lost badly and behind Bush Snr and Ford who were the others to lose. He is behind all the others who won. He is a liability.
    I expect Boris to win the biggest Tory majority since Thatcher in 1987, bigger than Cameron's in 2015 and bigger than Major's in 1992 (like Major's it would be a 4th consecutive Tory term for Boris).

    Trump's approval rating with Gallup is 43% at this stage, higher than the 41% for Obama at this stage of his presidency and far higher than the 33% Carter had at this stage of his presidency

    https://news.gallup.com/interactives/185273/r.aspx?g_campaign=tiles
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,774

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    Why LD there? I don’t know anything about the constituency but they came 3rd in 2017 and it voted Leave?
    They held it from 1997 - 2015 and (as the SDP) from 1984-7. 2017 was the first time that Labour had ever won the seat. Portsmouth South voted by 51.8% for Brexit, marginally lower than the UK total, and a bit lower than the average for England.

    A quick google suggests that the Labour MP, Stephen Morgan, has had some grief from local Momentum activists, no doubt entirely unconnected to his membership of Labour Friends of Israel. A resurgence here is certainly not out of the question for the Lib Dems.

    EDIT - The Lib Dems also became the largest party on Portsmouth City Council in May 2019. Although local election results don't carry over exactly to general elections, it will mean they will have activists to campaign to convince people that they have a chance.
    More to the point, the local LibDems are very active and well organised, with a solid track record at local government level even during the coalition.
  • PaulMPaulM Posts: 613
    IanB2 said:

    Portsmouth South (Shadsy)

    LD Evs
    Con 7/4
    Lab 3/1
    Bxp 20/1

    Why LD there? I don’t know anything about the constituency but they came 3rd in 2017 and it voted Leave?
    They held it from 1997 - 2015 and (as the SDP) from 1984-7. 2017 was the first time that Labour had ever won the seat. Portsmouth South voted by 51.8% for Brexit, marginally lower than the UK total, and a bit lower than the average for England.

    A quick google suggests that the Labour MP, Stephen Morgan, has had some grief from local Momentum activists, no doubt entirely unconnected to his membership of Labour Friends of Israel. A resurgence here is certainly not out of the question for the Lib Dems.

    EDIT - The Lib Dems also became the largest party on Portsmouth City Council in May 2019. Although local election results don't carry over exactly to general elections, it will mean they will have activists to campaign to convince people that they have a chance.
    More to the point, the local LibDems are very active and well organised, with a solid track record at local government level even during the coalition.
    Fwiw I just looked up the 2019 council results in the 7 Portsmouth City wards making up the Portsmouth South constituency.
    4 Lib Dem councillors, 2 Labour, 1 Tory

    Aggregate vote
    Lib Dem 8,621
    Labour 6,958
    Tory 4,246
    UKIP 2,585
    Green 1,776


This discussion has been closed.