Options
2022 for Johnson’s departure looks good value at up to 9/1 – politicalbetting.com
2022 for Johnson’s departure looks good value at up to 9/1 – politicalbetting.com
Johnson visiting Northampton on Thursday while Sunak was making his big Commons announcement pic.twitter.com/5CH7lTeLP5
0
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
Unfortunately, on this occasion we are seriously at odds. When you consider the never ending ineptitude demonstrated by this Government since its election victory last December, it's remarkable, to me at least, that Boris has lasted this long,
I see it as being very unlikely that he will be able to survive for a further 15 months or more, i.e. until after 31/12/21 as Prime Minister and frankly I doubt whether he believes he can himself.
Somehow or other, he will struggle along vainly attempting to cope with Covid-19 until we have an effective Vaccine in place, hopefully by the Spring of 2021, but the real killer blow as I see it will prove to be his total failure in concluding a deal with the EU before the end of this year which looks ever more likely to be the case. The total chaos which will result will, I believe, force him to quit during the first half of 2021 and that's where my money is invested.
DYOR.
Mind you my first ever political bet was following OGH in the belief that Brown would go in 2009. Things change, but not as soon as you think they will.
An "effective" vaccine is 50% effective or better. That is not going to feel miraculous. Either it'll be introduced in spring/summer when things have improved anyway, or when things are bad - and we'll be assured that without the vaccine they'd be even worse. Not a PM-career-saving miracle either way.
The best bookie's odds available are Ladbrokes' 15/2, boosted from 7/1. On reflection, these look like fair odds if by some miracle Boris manages to remain in office throughout 2021. I agree with David Herdson that betting on him leaving this year is a total waste of money.
Conversely I am now somewhat concerned about how the vaccine is going to play out. I had naively thought that all we needed was a vaccine to be “good enough”, halving infection and mortality to tolerable levels, which is overwhelmingly likely to be achieved within the coming weeks. But from recent days’ comments, it seems this won’t be good enough for the zero covid purists making the decisions.
For the sake of this bet, it does somewhat tantalisingly open up an opportunity for the PM doesn’t it? A very public sacking of those that stand in the way of a risk based post vaccine return to normalcy. Hancock, Witty.... and Cummings. I suggest this bet is far more about the PM’s appetite for the job than anything else, very tricky to bet on indeed.
Personally I am on Q3 2021 for a new PM, at next years Party Conference, at good odds from earlier in the year.
I missed the good odds on Sunak, and he is way too short on next PM now. I have good positions on Gove, Patel and Hunt instead.
I also have a smidgen on Angela Rayner at very long odds, in case Starmer falls under a bus.
Traffic jams in Kent are inevitable, Deal or No Deal, as unless we are in Customs Union there will need to be customs, and we simply have not organised any.
And Good Morning, one and all.
On topic unless there's some good news on either the virus or Europe, I can't see the Conservative party putting up with Johnson much beyond the 2021 Conference.
There must also be a question over his long-term health.
A decent betting tip but I'm not sold. If Johnson stands down this Parliament it's more likely to be next year than later, using a pretext of ill-health. Otherwise, as you say, by 2022 we may out of the woods on Covid and possibly Brexit.
Off-topic, any recommendations for a good cheap laser printer?
Speaking to ITV News’ Tom Bradby, the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said it’s projected a safe and effective vaccine could be available by November and December this year.'
It was the dramatic lead on ITN at 10.30 last night, but it's somewhat played down. comparatively, this morning.
It may happen. It may not. Dr Fauci thinks it's 'conceivable' and that we won't know until at least the end of October.
It's not a non-story but it's not much of a story either.
There are plenty of fall guys on hand should the going get tough. Hancock, Sunak, Whitty, Vallance, and there is always Barnier and the EU to throw mud at. Johnson's allies will not be exempt either, if Johnson decides he is to be the last man standing. Cummings, Didi Harding be warned.
For Johnson, comfort can be found in selective opinion polling. The Conservatives are still ahead after months of bad news. With his health and his private life, all seemingly at a low ebb he retreats daily to his happy place, campaigning. Boris loves a campaign, which is why I think he could be there all the way to 2024. Despite all the carnage around him, one couldn't rule him out to win against the odds.
Doctors seem to be afraid that an effective vaccine will put them out of work. Whitty seems to go out of his way to be sceptical about the chances of a vaccine. The misery of living without a vaccine will probably eventually force through a decision to licence one, but after many avoidable deaths and suffering. We have the technology to beat COVID but we are still too scared to use it.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/25/france-covid-cases-hit-record-high-as-anger-grows-over-restrictions
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/medics-of-madrid-grapple-with-worst-coronavirus-caseload-in-europe-z8wl8zbgg
I think the value in this market is laying this year as an exit date.
I was sceptical about betting on 2022, but i think i like it as a trading bet.
Those odds will shorten, next year and it should be possible to secure an easy profit - without risking money for too long.
The only downside is the pathetically mean £150, 000 a year.
Boris will want to be opening pubs and making jokes about how orgies are now allowed etc.
https://twitter.com/kenklippenstein/status/1309640500077625344?s=19
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/26/escape-country-covid-exodus-britain-cities-pandemic-urban-green-space
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8774005/Wholl-bail-Boris-Johnson-taken-vast-pay-cut-PM.html
...in Victoria, Australia.
https://twitter.com/jonlis1/status/1309511347135275009
I really don't think we care anymore. Johnson has debased the moral code expected of politicians, and he gets away scot-free. It will never be the same again. John Profumo and Cecil Parkinson must be spinning!
On the Labour side Gordon Brown stayed right through until the 2010 election despite some wanting to replace him with David Miliband.
So it is just as possible Sunak ends up Portillo or David Miiband as he does John Major
'sharing 10 pound notes'
https://twitter.com/DailyMirror/status/1309719346869018625
Angela Merkel, the German chancellor is paid £320,000, the New Zealand premier Jacinda Ardern receives £240,000, and even the prime minister of tiny land-locked Liechtenstein gets £195,000.'
The UK PM's salary does not even put him in the top 1% of UK earners for which you need to earn at least £160,000 a year, so raise it to £200,000 a year given all the responsibilities of the role
Betting against Boris for the last decade and longer has been almost exclusively a losing proposition; perhaps that will change in this decade, but perhaps not.
The combined epochal crises of Brexit and Covid (the latter affecting him both personally and politically) mean that Boris' period of maximum vulnerability is within the next 6-9 months. But if his adversaries don't dislodge him within that time, I expect he will bounce back stronger than ever. And then let them beware
“By the time you get enough people vaccinated so that you can feel you've had an impact enough on the outbreak, so that you can start thinking about maybe getting a little bit more towards normality, that very likely, as I and others have said, will be maybe the third quarter or so of 2021. Maybe even into the fourth quarter," Fauci told Dr. Howard Bauchner, the editor-in-chief of the Journal of the American Medical Association, in an online conversation.
The prime minister’s decision not to be at his chancellor’s side in the Commons at a politically perilous moment raised eyebrows, including in the Treasury.
The mundane explanation that Downing Street was caught in a diary clash does not address deeper questions: is this an administration that knows what it is doing and where it is going? Mr Sunak’s message, at least, was clear: the trade-offs between the economy, health and education were “awful” but must be faced since the virus is not going away.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/decisive-rishi-sunak-wins-over-mps-with-coherence-and-leadership-zjslctmll
If he is short of cash, maybe he should stop treating Chequers and its staff as if it is there for him to host jollies for his mates? Or any passing female musicians.
"We risk forsaking liberties so many died to preserve"
"Suddenly we were "flattening the curve" instead. Now we have moved from "flattening the second hump of the camel" to "suppressing the virus until we have a vaccine" within a week. All of this has been decided behind closed doors without parliamentary debate or approval."
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/2020/09/26/risk-forsaking-liberties-many-died-preserve/
Parliaments must debate these restrictions on our lives.
Everything on paper, and nothing at all in practice...
And I have liked a Scott's post.
The world is standing on it's head
If you were a bright, ambitious politician, when would be your optimal time to take over? (Me? I'd let Gove burn himself out first. But I'm not ambitious like that.)
I agree with 2021 being likeliest departure date - unless he manages to dress up whatever the EU agrees to as a "great victory" and is believed - which given his back benches is unlikely.
https://twitter.com/beckymbarrow/status/1309496777863766021?s=20
It did leave the impression that he was slightly detached from his own government. Things are not normal in the Commons at the moment but this was a budget in all but name. I struggle to think what else could have been more important.
https://twitter.com/guardianopinion/status/1308806092445511680
It was never a choice. He even tried a Churchillian stare...
Democrats will rightly oppose her for her judicial philosophy, but should not go down this kind of rabbit hole:
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/09/judge-cant-be-handmaid/616494/
So not really very odd.
The shit is about to come Sunaks way, time is not on his side. He has about 6 months to become pm. After that he is in the manure.
Johnson will have to dump him in the end. It is Bannon all over again.
Take a look at any US county on wikipedia and you'll likely see featured an impressive building - the county courthouse.
For example this is where Atticus Finch would have worked:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Monroe_County_Courthouse#/media/File:Alabama-Monroe_County_Courthouse_retired.jpg
in a town of six thousand which looks like:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroeville,_Alabama#/media/File:Historic_buildings_in_Monroeville,_Alabama_LCCN2010639931.tif
Now some of these buildings might also contain government offices - but even that suggests an entwinning of law and government irrespective of claims about the separation of powers.
By contrast in the UK the grand buildings tend to be town halls, railway stations and banks.
https://twitter.com/TrumpJew/status/1309577060839501824
I'm curious as to whether it will be men or women or both making the claims.
Johnson will be lucky to get into 2021. He will get brexit done. Then....?
The photo of him in the cop car as Rishi delivered his speech showed he knows it.
Is there any data yet of number of infections and number of hospitalisations ?