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  • isamisam Posts: 41,329
    edited September 2020

    Gramsci was precisely the name that sprang to mind while reading it - the right has finally cottoned on to the concept of cultural hegemony, and its originators don't like to share!
    "Chief among these fantasists are unelected advisors. Many criticisms can be made of our MPs, but some of the main instigators of instability in British politics since 2010 have had no electoral mandate at all - Steve Hilton, Matthew Elliott, Fiona Hill, Nick Timothy, and Cummings himself. "

    Did this unelected advisor business only start in 2010? I can think of one from before then who could be called an instigator of instability - to the British Labour market, our relationship with the EU, and to the Middle East for starters

  • Back me or sack me, but nothing in between or you are out.
  • Wow those are fantastic polling numbers in Scotland Gallowgate. Hope they can be sustained to the election.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Back me or sack me, but nothing in between or you are out.
    Probably
  • Interesting that the Tories lead Labour for Holyrood votes but trail for Westminster ones. That may tell us something about the toxicity of both Leonard and Johnson in Scotland.

  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Back me or sack me, but nothing in between or you are out.
    Probably right.
    But without the "Or sack me" bit.
  • What would this do for seat make up?

    The SNP would hoover up so maybe only Ian Murray and a couple of LDs left standing, I reckon, as non-SNP MPs. However, it may indicate some potential for tactical voting.

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,650

    It is obvious that some people and politicians in the EU want that. But its far from a clear majority across the board and even further from a clear majority in every state.

    Forgetting the UK and its place in the EU, my suggestion would give the EU more cohesion, success and longevity by allowing space for dissenting countries. If the benefits from being closer to a super state eventually are clear cut, then most countries would eventually choose that. If the more federalist independent nation state option is better, then most countries would end up there instead.
    I think rejection of that option was institutionalised 15 or 30 years ago.
  • Or announcing he is walking away from the talks and will no deal
    Possibly.

    Or giving the EU an ultimatum to compromise or we walk away next week.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,132

    Back me or sack me, but nothing in between or you are out.

    Commit to joining me in breaking the law...

    Dip your hands in this pool of blood.
  • Johnson playing 4D chess.

    Become unpopular, call snap election, hope to lose and let Labour deal with Brexit

    Classic Dom.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,079
    nichomar said:

    Probably
    Betfair money going on Johnson leaving this year.


    I grabbed this picture of Johnson when he was listening to Starmer's 3rd question at PMQs on Wednesday.
  • This result is at the high end of expectations for Biden, but is just as likely as Trump managing to eek out a win. Biden's chances continue to be vastly understated on here IMHO.

    The other important aspect for November is what happens in the Senate, given teh high likelihood of there being one, possibly two liberal Supreme Court justices retiring in the next two years (Ginsburg and Breyer)
    My guess on the Senate right now is that the Democrats will fall one short, the Republicans will have 51 Senators.

    The polling in IA, MT and GA seems to have turned against them over the last month. The margins have narrowed in NC and ME, so it wouldn't surprise me if they were split.

    It will make life very hard for Biden if he does win the Presidency.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884

    Interesting that the Tories lead Labour for Holyrood votes but trail for Westminster ones. That may tell us something about the toxicity of both Leonard and Johnson in Scotland.

    The constituency vote is what matters for the SNP and the list vote for the other parties as the SNP will max out on the constituencies while other parties will top up on the list.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    edited September 2020
    Barnesian said:

    Betfair money going on Johnson leaving this year.


    I grabbed this picture of Johnson when he was listening to Starmer's 3rd question at PMQs on Wednesday.
    Had to edit this, to protect the easily frightened, but what a dreadful sight to click back on to! Please don't do that again.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234

    What would this do for seat make up?
    Labour keep Edinburgh South, Lib Dems lose Fife and Caithness.
    Tories likely lose WAK, Moray and Dumfries.

    BRS, Edinburgh West, Banff and DCT are tight Tory marginals (Yellow Tories in the case of Edinburgh West).

    The only stone cold certain unionist hold is Edi South.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Scott_xP said:
    Doesn't matter. The person who is being told what to do was elected PM. It's all on Boris. He could choose to ignore Dom if he wanted.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,079

    Had to edit this, to protect the easily frightened, but what a dreadful sight to click back on to! Please don't do that again.
    :)
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    TOPPING said:

    Doesn't matter. The person who is being told what to do was elected PM. It's all on Boris. He could choose to ignore Dom if he wanted.
    Are you sure about that?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    It will be to try to reconcile the MPs of a freedom loving party to the deeply illiberal measures he has brought in.

    As for being also supposedly the party of Laura Norder, he won't mention it.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,132
    TOPPING said:

    Doesn't matter. The person who is being told what to do was elected PM. It's all on Boris. He could choose to ignore Dom if he wanted.

    Indeed, but when Dom persuaded BoZo to run on a camapign of "Take Back Control" it wasn't clear Dom meant he would take back control from politicians
  • Future PM. How much better we would be with him in Number 10
  • F1: looking hot in Italy.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Or announcing he is walking away from the talks and will no deal
    Might make Mr Speaker very slightly tetchy.
  • Are you sure about that?
    Unless Dom actually has the negatives, he could. He won't, because he is weak and lazy, but even now, he could.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,132
    TOPPING said:

    It will be to try to reconcile the MPs of a freedom loving party to the deeply illiberal measures he has brought in.

    As for being also supposedly the party of Laura Norder, he won't mention it.

    When this is all over, it would be great if Tissue Price wrote a header explaining what is what like being a backbencher under these fuqwits, and how close it came to his expectations
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    TOPPING said:

    It will be to try to reconcile the MPs of a freedom loving party to the deeply illiberal measures he has brought in.

    As for being also supposedly the party of Laura Norder, he won't mention it.

    OK I got that pretty wrong!!
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307
    Mind the (polling) gap.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    Are you sure about that?
    100%.
  • LadyGLadyG Posts: 2,221
    edited September 2020
    lol

    Meeks, an hour ago:

    "The damage to Britain’s reputation is already done. Who is going to sign a trade deal with such a faithless negotiating party, unless the terms are tighter than a cat’s bum?"

    BBC, half an hour ago:

    "UK signs first major post-Brexit trade deal with Japan"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-54116606
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Scott_xP said:

    Indeed, but when Dom persuaded BoZo to run on a camapign of "Take Back Control" it wasn't clear Dom meant he would take back control from politicians
    Boris wasn't paying attention. Comme d'habitude.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Scott_xP said:

    When this is all over, it would be great if Tissue Price wrote a header explaining what is what like being a backbencher under these fuqwits, and how close it came to his expectations
    God yes.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    TOPPING said:

    100%.
    You means as sure as Boris was about the Withdrawal Agreement?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    You means as sure as Boris was about the Withdrawal Agreement?
    Boris is PM. It is his fault. Whoever is whispering sweet nothings into his ear is immaterial.

    He is the PM and in charge.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    TOPPING said:

    It will be to try to reconcile the MPs of a freedom loving party to the deeply illiberal measures he has brought in.

    As for being also supposedly the party of Laura Norder, he won't mention it.

    The point is, surely, that conservative principles, or socialist principles, or Liberal principles, or any principles, are principles for all seasons.

    Otherwise, what are they worth?

    Johnson has junked every single conservative principle in the book in the last eight months.

    What's left? not very much.
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,012
    isam said:

    "Chief among these fantasists are unelected advisors. Many criticisms can be made of our MPs, but some of the main instigators of instability in British politics since 2010 have had no electoral mandate at all - Steve Hilton, Matthew Elliott, Fiona Hill, Nick Timothy, and Cummings himself. "

    Did this unelected advisor business only start in 2010? I can think of one from before then who could be called an instigator of instability - to the British Labour market, our relationship with the EU, and to the Middle East for starters

    I think the point is, advisers were generally his masters' voice, rather than supposed visionaries. Campbell, for all his power, never pursued a course of action that wasn't sanctioned from the top (his own politics are arguably to the left of Blair). Other key advisers, were likewise, sellers of the message or pollsters, or traditional youngish policy wonks. Cummings is arguably the apogee of a process the Tories landed upon with Hilton (but then abandoned) where politicians were the salespeople for gurus, or philosopher kings who determine the politics and tactics of the government - who also happen to have been believers in the benefits of creative destruction and flouting past norms.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    edited September 2020
    TOPPING said:

    Boris is PM. It is his fault. Whoever is whispering sweet nothings into his ear is immaterial.

    He is the PM and in charge.
    I think you mean he is 'responsible'. Not 'in charge'.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    LadyG said:

    lol

    Meeks, an hour ago:

    "The damage to Britain’s reputation is already done. Who is going to sign a trade deal with such a faithless negotiating party, unless the terms are tighter than a cat’s bum?"

    BBC, half an hour ago:

    "UK signs first major post-Brexit trade deal with Japan"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-54116606

    Agreement in principle, subject to approval by the National Diet in January. Which gives the ND a bit longer to think about it than the 48 hours they have had so far.
  • The point is, surely, that conservative principles, or socialist principles, or Liberal principles, or any principles, are principles for all seasons.

    Otherwise, what are they worth?

    Johnson has junked every single conservative principle in the book in the last eight months.

    What's left? not very much.
    Brexit. Which would go to if we agreed a deal, hence the theatre.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    The point is, surely, that conservative principles, or socialist principles, or Liberal principles, or any principles, are principles for all seasons.

    Otherwise, what are they worth?

    Johnson has junked every single conservative principle in the book in the last eight months.

    What's left? not very much.
    Don't disagree.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    I think you mean he is 'responsible'. Not 'in charge'.
    He is nominally in charge but I of course take your point.
  • dr_spyn said:
    Explain how much they'll be able to steal once they can give out taxpayer's money as state aid to whoever they like, and tell each individual Tory MP what their cut will be.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    ONS survey update

    image

  • Is he still kneeling? It's hard to see from that photo.
  • IshmaelZ said:

    Agreement in principle, subject to approval by the National Diet in January. Which gives the ND a bit longer to think about it than the 48 hours they have had so far.
    I wouldn't have thought they'd cause any trouble over it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    ONS survey update

    image

    Yes I get all the don't hug your granny, overwhelm the NHS, etc but really look at the measures restricting freedom we have for what looks like a 0.1% infection rate.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,176

    Is he still kneeling? It's hard to see from that photo.
    Obviously not mate.
  • @Casino_Royale can I ask you a question please - notwithstanding the "international law" elements which I can understand being a concern on their own right . . . you seem very keen on the idea of compromising to get a deal, even if it means compromising on the LPF.

    Would you be OK with the EU telling the UK's Chancellor of the Exchequer that a tax cut that Parliament had passed in the Budget was unacceptable "state aid"? Is that in your view an acceptable price worth paying in order to get a deal, or does the idea of that disturb you?

    It disturbs me but I don't think that qualifies as State Aid.

    To be State Aid it has to be an advantage conferred on a particular organisation using state resources on a selective basis. So a general tax cut or wouldn't apply - it'd need to be a specific tax break to a company with enhanced capital allowances, for example.

    We (as well as the EU) already sometimes do a bit of that in agriculture, R&D and energy in times of economic crisis so I don't think it's that controversial. It's a question of whether you're taking the piss or not (like cutting Rolls Royce corporation tax to zero and subsidising their exports for 5 years for example versus bailing them out with cash to keep them from going under in a time of crisis).

    I really struggle to see how something sensible can't be negotiated on this with a sensible co-enforcement mechanism.
  • TOPPING said:

    Yes I get all the don't hug your granny, overwhelm the NHS, etc but really look at the measures restricting freedom we have for what looks like a 0.1% infection rate.
    If it stays at 0.1% and doesn't go back into exponential growth as has happened in France then I think that is the idea.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508

    I wouldn't have thought they'd cause any trouble over it.
    Yes, why would they, as they don't give a monkey's whether the border is in the Irish Sea or not? They care far more about trade for their constituents. I think the same will be true of the Americans eventually.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    TOPPING said:

    Yes I get all the don't hug your granny, overwhelm the NHS, etc but really look at the measures restricting freedom we have for what looks like a 0.1% infection rate.
    All that is keeping Johnson in his job is the MPs don't want to change horses before Brexit is done, in my view.

    Notably the cabinet briefed the Mail they were against the rule of six, letting Johnson and Hancock twist in the wind.

    Listen to tory leaning phone ins and threads, anger is close to boiling point.
  • TOPPING said:

    Boris is PM. It is his fault. Whoever is whispering sweet nothings into his ear is immaterial.

    He is the PM and in charge.
    It is interesting how Johnson lurch to the right has pushed you into almost the mainstream :D
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    I wouldn't have thought they'd cause any trouble over it.
    But what would someone called edmundintokyo know about that? Anyway, the point stands that an announcement made today was obviously oven ready, as it were, before this latest carry on started on Tuesday.
  • Fishing said:

    Yes, why would they, as they don't give a monkey's whether the border is in the Irish Sea or not? They care far more about trade for their constituents. I think the same will be true of the Americans eventually.
    The Irish lobby votes and politicians pander to them.

    But if we don't ever get a deal with the Americans we are no worse off since the EU hasn't got one either.
  • It is interesting how Johnson lurch to the right has pushed you into almost the mainstream :D
    Not sure it's a lurch to the right so much as a lurch into the void.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,329
    edited September 2020
    MJW said:

    I think the point is, advisers were generally his masters' voice, rather than supposed visionaries. Campbell, for all his power, never pursued a course of action that wasn't sanctioned from the top (his own politics are arguably to the left of Blair). Other key advisers, were likewise, sellers of the message or pollsters, or traditional youngish policy wonks. Cummings is arguably the apogee of a process the Tories landed upon with Hilton (but then abandoned) where politicians were the salespeople for gurus, or philosopher kings who determine the politics and tactics of the government - who also happen to have been believers in the benefits of creative destruction and flouting past norms.
    I'd say it was pretty stupid to expect anyone but the most partisan to swallow a line about 'unelected advisors' with 'no electoral mandate' with a list that starts at 2010, inferring it didnt happen before then. I reckon most people would namecheck Cummings and Campbell if asked to name some.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Explain how much they'll be able to steal once they can give out taxpayer's money as state aid to whoever they like, and tell each individual Tory MP what their cut will be.
    Yes. This bill basically legalises corruption without Parliamentary or Judicial oversight. It's an absolutely shocking bill that the Commons should throw out at first reading. The constant references to the impact on Brexit and the peace process are hiding its true implications in plain sight.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    Boomers for Biden

    https://leantossup.ca/florida-is-not-a-tossup/

    Joe Biden is doing extraordinarily well with Boomers, of which there are a ton in Florida
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    LadyG said:

    lol

    Meeks, an hour ago:

    "The damage to Britain’s reputation is already done. Who is going to sign a trade deal with such a faithless negotiating party, unless the terms are tighter than a cat’s bum?"

    BBC, half an hour ago:

    "UK signs first major post-Brexit trade deal with Japan"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-54116606

    Analysis by the UK government still expects the net benefit of its Japan trade deal to amount to...drum roll....

    0.07% of GDP

  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,359

    ONS survey update

    image

    There's the uptick.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    edited September 2020

    All that is keeping Johnson in his job is the MPs don't want to change horses before Brexit is done, in my view.

    Notably the cabinet briefed the Mail they were against the rule of six, letting Johnson and Hancock twist in the wind.

    Listen to tory leaning phone ins and threads, anger is close to boiling point.
    As someone else pointed out there'll be some cross Tories, especially from the North East, hanging about Westminster until 7 or so on a Friday night.
    What time's the last train to Newcastle on a Friday night?
  • It disturbs me but I don't think that qualifies as State Aid.

    To be State Aid it has to be an advantage conferred on a particular organisation using state resources on a selective basis. So a general tax cut or wouldn't apply - it'd need to be a specific tax break to a company with enhanced capital allowances, for example.

    We (as well as the EU) already sometimes do a bit of that in agriculture, R&D and energy in times of economic crisis so I don't think it's that controversial. It's a question of whether you're taking the piss or not (like cutting Rolls Royce corporation tax to zero and subsidising their exports for 5 years for example versus bailing them out with cash to keep them from going under in a time of crisis).

    I really struggle to see how something sensible can't be negotiated on this with a sensible co-enforcement mechanism.
    Thanks.

    I agree what you say is reasonable. Unfortunately as it stands the EU does not and want a far wider scope.

    I agree with your distinction between selective and non selective. The state should have no role in picking winners or losers, but setting a tax environment that is competitive and then having winners or losers arise from fair competition is reasonable. If only all parties could agree to that but we can't make them agree.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Not sure it's a lurch to the right so much as a lurch into the void.
    Quite. its a a lurch into a sort of nether world.

    Getting brexit done is the only thing keeping Johnson afloat right now.

    When its done, the backlash from the party is going to be huge, in my view. Johnson might make it to December, but after that? toast.
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    edited September 2020
    alex_ said:

    Yes. This bill basically legalises corruption without Parliamentary or Judicial oversight. It's an absolutely shocking bill that the Commons should throw out at first reading. The constant references to the impact on Brexit and the peace process are hiding its true implications in plain sight.
    Can you throw a bill out at first reading? I thought it was just a procedure to introduce the bill.
  • Analysis by the UK government still expects the net benefit of its Japan trade deal to amount to...drum roll....

    0.07% of GDP

    Lolz suddenly trade deals don't matter when we sign one.

    It was a disaster we were losing our Japanese trade deals yesterday.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    MJW said:

    I think the point is, advisers were generally his masters' voice, rather than supposed visionaries. Campbell, for all his power, never pursued a course of action that wasn't sanctioned from the top (his own politics are arguably to the left of Blair). Other key advisers, were likewise, sellers of the message or pollsters, or traditional youngish policy wonks. Cummings is arguably the apogee of a process the Tories landed upon with Hilton (but then abandoned) where politicians were the salespeople for gurus, or philosopher kings who determine the politics and tactics of the government - who also happen to have been believers in the benefits of creative destruction and flouting past norms.
    Yes, Campbell was messaging and party management only. No comparison with Cummings.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    It disturbs me but I don't think that qualifies as State Aid.

    To be State Aid it has to be an advantage conferred on a particular organisation using state resources on a selective basis. So a general tax cut or wouldn't apply - it'd need to be a specific tax break to a company with enhanced capital allowances, for example.

    We (as well as the EU) already sometimes do a bit of that in agriculture, R&D and energy in times of economic crisis so I don't think it's that controversial. It's a question of whether you're taking the piss or not (like cutting Rolls Royce corporation tax to zero and subsidising their exports for 5 years for example versus bailing them out with cash to keep them from going under in a time of crisis).

    I really struggle to see how something sensible can't be negotiated on this with a sensible co-enforcement mechanism.
    Quite, and frankly this sounds far more like somebody on the UK side misrepresenting/twisting something for domestic consumption. It's one thing to complain that the EU are seeking to tie the UK into the existing EU State Aid regime. It's absolutely nonsensical to argue that the EU are seeking to apply a definition of state aid that doesn't even apply at the moment! Not least because if they did then the UK could actually take EU countries to court, and win, for applying existing EU standards on the issue.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    It is interesting how Johnson lurch to the right has pushed you into almost the mainstream :D
    I've stayed where I have always been (too tiring to chop and change).

    It is the Conservative Party that has moved so naturally I am looking for a party that most closely resembles my views.

    Several years ago a Dutch colleague realised he had to vote in his home elections and asked, rhetorically, who he should vote for.

    To which I answered the Party which advocated a smaller rather than larger state and individual responsibility. And it's how I vote.

    If as you say that is the mainstream, it does leave those there as near enough orphans these days.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,132
    LadyG said:

    BBC, half an hour ago:

    "UK signs first major post-Brexit trade deal with Japan"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-54116606

    Is it legally binding?
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    nichomar said:

    Can you throw a bill out at first reading? I thought it was just a procedure to introduce the bill.
    Technically i think yes. Although obviously normally the vote is a complete formality. I was however using a bit of creative licence.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,569
    edited September 2020
    TOPPING said:

    I've stayed where I have always been (too tiring to chop and change).

    It is the Conservative Party that has moved so naturally I am looking for a party that most closely resembles my views.

    Several years ago a Dutch colleague realised he had to vote in his home elections and asked, rhetorically, who he should vote for.

    To which I answered the Party which advocated a smaller rather than larger state and individual responsibility. And it's how I vote.

    If as you say that is the mainstream, it does leave those there as near enough orphans these days.
    Hmmm. Why I used to vote Liberal. Though I needed a touch of social consciousness as well. And internationalism.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,738

    As someone else pointed out there'll be some cross Tories, especially from the North East, hanging about Westminster until 7 or so on a Friday night.
    What time's the last train to Newcastle on a Friday night?
    20:00
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    TOPPING said:

    Yes I get all the don't hug your granny, overwhelm the NHS, etc but really look at the measures restricting freedom we have for what looks like a 0.1% infection rate.
    What might be driving this - the notion that it's too noisy and confusing to keep chopping and changing the advice, so - with winter coming and a second wave thought almost inevitable - just get this "Rule of Six" and "Hands, Face, Space" stuff out there and understood as the core of the regime for the next few months.
  • Pulpstar said:

    Boomers for Biden

    https://leantossup.ca/florida-is-not-a-tossup/

    Joe Biden is doing extraordinarily well with Boomers, of which there are a ton in Florida

    Interesting analysis, well worth listening to.

    Leantossup have a fantastic track record too. They have called in recent years the Canadian election, the US midterms and the UK General Election all pretty much spot on.
  • NEW THREAD

  • Interesting analysis, well worth listening to.

    Leantossup have a fantastic track record too. They have called in recent years the Canadian election, the US midterms and the UK General Election all pretty much spot on.
    This is excellent stuff and top-class ranting.
    I’d be okay with a Marist based freakout if it was also accompanied by a call for Likely D Pennsylvania after their Biden +9 poll, but of course there was no such call because this isn’t an argument based in logic or math. This is an argument based in needless conservatism and a whole lot of people thinking they’re so much smarter than everybody else. “Look at me, I can see a poll with a Hispanic crosstab that is laughably good for Trump that still only has a tossup and overreact” isn’t a thing I expected most of Elections Twitter – and apparently Cook, because why not – to advertise on main, but apparently I’m not as smart as them. This isn’t about data analysis, this is about a whole lot of Democrats being scared because Rick Scott is now in the Senate and looking to not get hurt again.
  • Quite. its a a lurch into a sort of nether world.

    Getting brexit done is the only thing keeping Johnson afloat right now.

    When its done, the backlash from the party is going to be huge, in my view. Johnson might make it to December, but after that? toast.
    Except you need a new face (Gove? Surely too strange. Sunak? Surely too green.) and a new direction. Thanks to the loyalty purges, the new direction will be difficult to discern. Gove, especially, will be Johnson with less brio and worse jokes.

    You also need a odd combination of attitudes, ambitious enough to want the top job, but not so ambitious as to think "the next few years will be terrible; let someone else take the beatings."

    Whatever his weaknesses, BoJo is good at Mafia management.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    kinabalu said:

    What might be driving this - the notion that it's too noisy and confusing to keep chopping and changing the advice, so - with winter coming and a second wave thought almost inevitable - just get this "Rule of Six" and "Hands, Face, Space" stuff out there and understood as the core of the regime for the next few months.
    It is a significant curtailment of liberty if it's been done "to keep things simple".
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    Lolz suddenly trade deals don't matter when we sign one.

    It was a disaster we were losing our Japanese trade deals yesterday.
    We had a trade deal with Japan via the EU. So to go from this to not having one at all would have been a major regression. But now we do have one, therefore we are flat as regards Japan. And given 'flat' is the most wildly optimistic of all possible Brexit economic outcomes this is, as you say, a cause for celebration.
  • FlannerFlanner Posts: 437
    Scott_xP said:

    Is it legally binding?
    Not yet. Japan's Parliament needs to ratify it. Usually, such things are a formality - but until local lobbyists fail to rise up in revolt, you never know that for certain.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,636
    Scott_xP said:
    In all honesty- Cummings could well be better at tech investing than the geniuses who pour money into Uber, WeWork et al.
This discussion has been closed.