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The money shifts back to Biden on Betfair’s £240m next President market – politicalbetting.com

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  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410
    His point being?

    There was always going to be a second wave. Maybe even a third. Spanish flu told us that. We have saved lives, saved jobs in the first wave. We'll do the same in the second. What's the alternative - just let it rip?
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Is that Kate Bingham, wife of Conservative MP Jesse Norman?
    It’s Kate Bingham, the doyen of the U.K. life sciences industry and the most experienced investor in development stage drugs the country has
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    It's just madness. A huge number of those will have zero impact on containing spread of the virus. It's the Government just not wanting to pick winners and losers.
  • His point being?

    There was always going to be a second wave. Maybe even a third. Spanish flu told us that. We have saved lives, saved jobs in the first wave. We'll do the same in the second. What's the alternative - just let it rip?
    Funny how they have shut up about Germany now....they certainly done much better than UK, France, Italy, but over 500k cases now and record daily totals.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,444
    IshmaelZ said:

    In the trolley problem the outcomes are equally immediate. If it is actual death now vs hypothetical deaths later people will always give all the weight to the immediate and concrete.
    But, not an option that is available to people in positions of civil or military leadership.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    They've shut the zoos again. That could destroy them for ever, at huge long term cost for the conservation projects they fund/support/maintain around the world.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    "Botanical Gardens". Why???
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195
    Charles said:

    If it is illegal then the votes are invalid. No ifs or buts.

    But the electoral authorities should make all the efforts possible to contact the individuals to give them the opportunity to cast their vote again
    Charles this is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. The method was ruled legal by the Texas Supreme Court. Take it to a Federal court to prevent more drive in voting, sure. But invalidating cast votes is preposterous.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited October 2020
    alex_ said:

    It's just madness. A huge number of those will have zero impact on containing spread of the virus. It's the Government just not wanting to pick winners and losers.
    Golf has to be the safest sport to.play. its outside, you only play in max groups of 4, never need to be near one another, don't share kit and the only thing you could possibly touch is the flag (which can be avoided).

    Its safer to do that for 4hrs than going anywhere near a shop or even going to the park.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    alex_ said:

    Keep up Charles. The Republican dominated State Supreme Court ruled it legal. The GOP have appealed to the Federal Courts. The judge assigned is a very well known partisan Republican. The Right wing judges on SCOTUS have recently hinted that they believe that electoral law is set by State legislatures and cannot be over-ruled by State courts, however reasonable the actions taken. This interpretation of the constitution like this may well result in these ballots being declared illegal. At a hearing on Monday. The day before the election

    Furthermore these types of ballots are cast all over the state. But the GOP are only seeking their disqualification in heavily Democrat voting Harris County. In strong Republican areas... not a peep.

    The way that Harris’s actions were described do seem to stretch the definitions permitted and come close to facilitating something which is explicitly illegal

    If the GOP are permitted to appeal they should be allowed to do so

    And they don’t have some public service obligation to undertake legal cases that are not to their benefit. Presumably the Dems could easily use the result to get emergency injunctions in other counties
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,394

    His point being?

    There was always going to be a second wave. Maybe even a third. Spanish flu told us that. We have saved lives, saved jobs in the first wave. We'll do the same in the second. What's the alternative - just let it rip?

    Spanish flu is different type of virus.


    "Making absolute statements of certainty about ‘ second waves’ is unwise, given the current substantial uncertainties and novelty of the evidence."

    https://www.cebm.net/covid-19/covid-19-epidemic-waves/#:~:text=The second or third waves,or probable by modelling studies.&text=History is littered with references to respiratory virus pandemics or serious epidemics.&text=These ten outbreaks start with,end with the current pandemic.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195
    Charles said:

    The way that Harris’s actions were described do seem to stretch the definitions permitted and come close to facilitating something which is explicitly illegal

    If the GOP are permitted to appeal they should be allowed to do so

    And they don’t have some public service obligation to undertake legal cases that are not to their benefit. Presumably the Dems could easily use the result to get emergency injunctions in other counties
    Charles you are being preposterous.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518



    IF there is an EV tie, then the lame duck House - not the newly elected House - will make the decision. Provided they do it before Jan 2 when the new House is sworn in.
    I read that the new House is sworn in prior to the role call of the Electoral College.
  • Doubly pleased i got all that gym kit in last week....
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307
    Kate Bingham, First class degree, Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Harvard MBA, has been involved in Biotech for 27 years, on the face of it, a good background for this taskforce.

    https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expert-reaction-to-reports-of-kate-bingham-head-of-governments-vaccine-taskforce-saying-that-not-everyone-will-be-vaccinated/

    The Sunday Times article mentions that she had been talking to venture capitalists, investors about CV19 vaccines. How far should eyebrows be raised, but it might have been wiser if she had turned down the invitation given her new role.
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,780
    The first relaxation of the previous lockdown affecting recreation came I believe with this announcement: “From Wednesday May 13, the government will also allow outdoor sports facilities – such as tennis and basketball courts, golf courses and bowling greens – to open, but you should only use these alone, with members of your household, or with one other person from outside your household, while keeping two metres apart at all times.”

    So if they are back to banning all outdoor sports it really is back to the situation in March/April. 8 months of going around in circles and getting nowhere.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    So why not have all northern cities in tier 3 on 80% furlough ?

    What has changed now that means that what was offered to Manchester is not the right approach for the whole country ?

    The ONLY difference is London is now in severe lockdown and the government will therefore be more interested in protecting the businesses and population.
    Because the other cities had agreed the lower amount was sufficient. So why would a prudent government spend more?
  • alex_ said:

    I read that the new House is sworn in prior to the role call of the Electoral College.
    YOU ARE CORRECT, YOURS TRULY WAS WRONG.

    Source I just checked says House receives and tallies EVs for 2020 Presidential on January 6, 2021.

    https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/IF/IF11641#:~:text=December 14, 2020: Electors Vote,meeting is on December 14.
  • Pulpstar said:

    Charles you are being preposterous.
    No he isn't. If the Republicans get a Republican judge to rule 1 day before the election that all the votes cast for the Democrats were illegal, then thats the law. Absolutely nothing dodgy about that...
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Sean_F said:

    But, not an option that is available to people in positions of civil or military leadership.
    It's about focus. Old person allowed to die in hospital on cost-benefit grounds is not usually news, but it is now if there's a potential story about how they were triaged out under heartless government guidelines. That constrains the government from taking what might be a tough but correct decision because governments are not immune from public opinion, not even with 80 seat majorities.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129

    His point being?

    There was always going to be a second wave. Maybe even a third. Spanish flu told us that. We have saved lives, saved jobs in the first wave. We'll do the same in the second. What's the alternative - just let it rip?
    His point is to sardonically attack the Tories.

    It's all he ever does.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,622
    alex_ said:

    "Botanical Gardens". Why???

    And riding stables. For crying out loud. There are risks riding a horse on a beach or up a hillside but Covid is not one of them.
  • Numbers to a decimal point seem a bit whiffy
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,263
    Just been for a swim. Was expecting it to be busy given the news, but it wasn't.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,263
    Just been for a swim. Was expecting it to be busy given the news, but it wasn't.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    The first relaxation of the previous lockdown affecting recreation came I believe with this announcement: “From Wednesday May 13, the government will also allow outdoor sports facilities – such as tennis and basketball courts, golf courses and bowling greens – to open, but you should only use these alone, with members of your household, or with one other person from outside your household, while keeping two metres apart at all times.”

    So if they are back to banning all outdoor sports it really is back to the situation in March/April. 8 months of going around in circles and getting nowhere.
    No nuance. No focussing on activities that are actually potentially dangerous. Shut everything. F*ck everything. No matter the long term cost.
  • LadyGLadyG Posts: 2,221
    INGERLUND, INGERLUND
  • Mal557Mal557 Posts: 662

    https://twitter.com/kingsthings/status/1322245339567456256
    Interesting interview, thanks for that
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Cyclefree said:

    And riding stables. For crying out loud. There are risks riding a horse on a beach or up a hillside but Covid is not one of them.
    Are we back to "don't drive a car/ride a horse because you might have an accident and take up a crucially needed hospital bed" argument?
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,622
    Charles said:

    It’s Kate Bingham, the doyen of the U.K. life sciences industry and the most experienced investor in development stage drugs the country has
    Is there no-one in government who understands the concept of conflicts of interest or the risks of insider dealing or why there may be issues in doing this?

    Kate Bingham may be all that @Charles describes but a lot of care needs to be taken about sharing sensitive and potentially price sensitive information such as this in such a way. Did anyone think about this and provide some guidance about what is or is not appropriate?
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Pulpstar said:

    Charles this is the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. The method was ruled legal by the Texas Supreme Court. Take it to a Federal court to prevent more drive in voting, sure. But invalidating cast votes is preposterous.
    Not if they were cast illegally
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    No he isn't. If the Republicans get a Republican judge to rule 1 day before the election that all the votes cast for the Democrats were illegal, then thats the law. Absolutely nothing dodgy about that...
    If state law says drive through voting is illegal then it is illegal even if you call it something else.

    And that should equally apply in both Republican and Democratic leaning areas

    But it doesn’t mean the GOP has an obligation to file lawsuits in GOP leaning areas
  • Scott_xP said:
    It confirms what I have been saying for a few days

  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,622
    Charles said:

    Because the other cities had agreed the lower amount was sufficient. So why would a prudent government spend more?
    I do hope your tongue was firmly in your cheek when you wrote that.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    People love the idea of sitting at home on 80% wages for doing nothing?
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Cyclefree said:

    I do hope your tongue was firmly in your cheek when you wrote that.
    It's amazing that someone who in the past often sounded so sensible can have gone so absolutely bonkers.
  • I wonder how many decades we will still be paying for this?
  • dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,307
    Cyclefree said:

    Is there no-one in government who understands the concept of conflicts of interest or the risks of insider dealing or why there may be issues in doing this?

    Kate Bingham may be all that @Charles describes but a lot of care needs to be taken about sharing sensitive and potentially price sensitive information such as this in such a way. Did anyone think about this and provide some guidance about what is or is not appropriate?
    On the face of it she seems to be very well qualified to help advise HMG. Strong scientific and business background, but why address US investors if there was a risk of accusations about conflicts of interest?

    https://svhealthinvestors.com/people/kate-bingham
  • https://twitter.com/ChrisHopkins92/status/1322658258780327936

    Yup, Keir Starmer has played a political masterstroke, the best leader of the opposition since Blair (not a high bar, I will give my detractors that)
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,384

    As I said at the time, politically smart, but this is intellectually dishonest.
    I'm not sure how you arrived at that. Seems to me to be accurate in every particular
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,394

    I wonder how many decades we will still be paying for this?

    Trying not to think about it.
  • So is it correct I can walk around Endcliffe Park in Sheffield but am not allowed to walk around Sheffield Botanical Gardens a quarter of a mile away ?

    And is it correct I can walk around a golf course but cannot do so while playing golf ?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,420
    .
    MaxPB said:

    We need to stop thinking of this as a trade off between saving lives or saving the economy. That's a false choice. We can have both with good testing and isolation measures and we don't need a lockdown to implement them. Any isolation system that doesn't have daily door knocks at random times, GPS tracking or government quarantine facilities is going to fail, people are too irresponsible and have proved they can't be trusted to isolate when they have the virus. That the problem we need to solve, it has a hugely negative effect on the R, we've been building a model of different isolation rates based on studies done on the subject and an average of 5 days spent being infectious before being isolated. If we isolate 60% of people properly the R falls below 1, if we get to 100% it falls to around 0.8 even with that 5 day infectious period.

    We can use the same shit testing system we have which waits for people to come to it and have an R significantly below 1 if we make people isolate properly.
    I’m not sure you can guarantee that, but it would certainly make a large difference.
    Put together with rapid testing done locally and it almost certainly would control any outbreak.
  • Scott_xP said:
    I will respect any mp who comes out publically, not anonymous briefing
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    I wonder how many decades we will still be paying for this?

    I went to London Zoo a couple of weeks ago. It's much more than a zoo. It is the epicentre of crucial conservation work all over the world. The implication was strongly that the first lockdown left it in truly dire financial straits. Whether it will survive another one, who knows? The loss of this work will be incalculable for future generations. And people visiting it present almost zero COVID risk.

    But... zoos will shut. It's just a few animals, isn't it?

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,394
    Mal557 said:

    Interesting interview, thanks for that
    Ta. To be honest if Trump wins then the polling industry will be the least of the worries. End of America democracy.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092
    Charles said:

    Not if they were cast illegally
    Ruled illegal by GOP judges. Nothing dodgy about that.
  • alex_ said:

    People love the idea of sitting at home on 80% wages for doing nothing?
    Some of whom will be unpleasantly surprised to be told that they still have to work.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited October 2020
    Roger said:

    I'm not sure how you arrived at that. Seems to me to be accurate in every particular
    Because the model this 2 week suggestion was built on was total horseshit and spat out numbers which didn't provide something which could be used to compare against potential economic cost. And what they have announced isn't the same.

    If he had said we need another lockdown that will last at least a month, that would be more reasonable....but will come with huge economic cost.

    But as you prove, he has won the politics, even though those of us who have a grasp on the mathematical modelling presented by SAGE plus the science of this virus means 2 weeks was not some simple easy decision that definitely would have resulted in any real gains.
  • alex_ said:

    People love the idea of sitting at home on 80% wages for doing nothing?
    It is more than that

    Huge numbers are public sector or local authority employees or are pensioners all of whom have no financial penalties by staying at home, while the private sector is decimated, along with the tax revenues that go a long way to paying for the public sector

    Big tax rises are coming down the line for everyone
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,444
    Cyclefree said:

    And riding stables. For crying out loud. There are risks riding a horse on a beach or up a hillside but Covid is not one of them.
    I don't think SAGE understand the concept of risk.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195
    Charles said:

    Not if they were cast illegally
    Charles you are being seriously seriously ridiculous here
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,622
    dr_spyn said:

    On the face of it she seems to be very well qualified to help advise HMG. Strong scientific and business background, but why address US investors if there was a risk of accusations about conflicts of interest?

    https://svhealthinvestors.com/people/kate-bingham
    Who was advising her? The government legal service? Anyone? Or did they not even realise there might be an issue? Or didn’t care?
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    Cyclefree said:

    And riding stables. For crying out loud. There are risks riding a horse on a beach or up a hillside but Covid is not one of them.
    How do you look after your horses. My daughter has to go minimum twice a day to see to her horses.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025

    I will respect any mp who comes out publically, not anonymous briefing
    Not a spine between them
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,085
    Cyclefree said:

    If the law is to apply equally to all - a basic principle in most well-functioning democracies - then such a ruling should mean that ALL votes cast using this method, whether in Democratic or GOP areas, should be cast aside. This should not depend on a lawsuit being filed in all such areas, precisely in order to stop parties gaming the system.

    But that is what it appears is being done here. Added to which the judge should recuse himself from ruling in order to avoid the appearance of bias, another basic principle common to common and civil law jurisdictions.

    If neither of these two happen then it is simply an attempt to cheat the electorate of their votes and steal an election by foul means.
    If such a method of voting, which voters participated in in good faith believing it legal, is declared illegal without re-running the ballot, then America is no more a democracy than Belarus, Venezuela or Zimbabwe.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Roger said:

    I'm not sure how you arrived at that. Seems to me to be accurate in every particular
    It won't help him. I predict that Johnson will be back at 50% in the polls within a week. The public will accept that he has tried his best to avoid a lockdown but he had to succumb. And Starmer's attempts to criticise will be characterised as sniping. It'll be like the last 6 months never happened.
  • malcolmg said:

    Not a spine between them
    I do believe Boris will be gone in the new year
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,394
    If Tory MPs are turning on Johnson now, god knows what they will be like for his third national lockdown in January.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,622
    So basically all that lockdown earlier this year was largely pointless because the time gained was wasted and here we are having to do it all again but weaker, poorer, during winter and with 50,000 people already having died.

    Let’s hope that in the middle of all this nothing happens to disrupt any medical supplies and drugs we need to import, eh!
    malcolmg said:

    Not a spine between them
    They couldn’t take the skin off a rice pudding.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,262
    Andy_JS said:
    I've yet to see a poll that shows a majority of people against covid restrictions.

    If you have some, please share.

  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    alex_ said:

    It's amazing that someone who in the past often sounded so sensible can have gone so absolutely bonkers.
    It is the old silver spoon way, they have no time or care for the plebs.
  • I do believe Boris will be gone in the new year
    They will wait until Brexit deal is done and a vaccine approved, then Tories do what they do best, getting rid of a leader whose time has past.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    I will respect any mp who comes out publically, not anonymous briefing
    If the mp exists; I wouldn't hang a dog on the evidence of this self-important numpty whose output Scotty has decided to share with us.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,763

    It is more than that

    Huge numbers are public sector or local authority employees or are pensioners all of whom have no financial penalties by staying at home, while the private sector is decimated, along with the tax revenues that go a long way to paying for the public sector

    Big tax rises are coming down the line for everyone
    Here we go again, the myth repeated. The vast majority of public sector and local authority employees are not sitting at home on furlough - they are working. Most have face-to-face roles - you may even see them emptying your bins, staffing your hospitals, teaching your grandchildren, or cremating the dead. Some are working at home. Not very many are on furlough.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195
    malcolmg said:

    How do you look after your horses. My daughter has to go minimum twice a day to see to her horses.
    Lol what ?
    We have to go to the stables daily in Winter to feed the horses. Has the government banned it ?
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,622
    malcolmg said:

    How do you look after your horses. My daughter has to go minimum twice a day to see to her horses.
    I don’t own any. But am well aware that they need to be ridden and exercised daily. There are two very good ones near me and one winter treat is riding on Silecroft beach .

    Plus the closure of such stables is a blow for those who work with disabled children and adults who get a lot from interacting with and riding horses.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,262
    edited October 2020
    Sean_F said:

    I don't think SAGE understand the concept of risk.
    I don't think SAGE are deciding which activities can and cannot continue.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195

    Ruled illegal by GOP judges. Nothing dodgy about that.
    It's been ruled ok by the TX supreme court. The lawsuit is cretinous, the GOP need to never see power again
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,263

    I've yet to see a poll that shows a majority of people against covid restrictions.

    If you have some, please share.

    Nothing wrong with being in the minority sometimes.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,384

    https://twitter.com/kingsthings/status/1322245339567456256
    Possible but sometimes it just feels like the zeitgeist has shifted and this is one of those times.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    malcolmg said:

    How do you look after your horses. My daughter has to go minimum twice a day to see to her horses.
    "Riding stables" = stable where you go to rent horses from the stable owner, by the hour. Someone else's stable where you keep your own horse is a livery stable, not a riding stable, and different rules apply.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,763

    If Tory MPs are turning on Johnson now, god knows what they will be like for his third national lockdown in January.

    No, they'll forgive him as we begin to reap the benefits of Brexit, and the first mega-queues of lorries start taking shape in Kent.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    I've yet to see a poll that shows a majority of people against covid restrictions.

    If you have some, please share.

    Because you are in a minority means you should shut up?
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    I don't think SAGE are deciding which activities can and cannot continue.
    Well, all we can hope is that the lobbying and special pleading gets somewhere i wouldn't hold out much hope though. Not now the message has officially reverted to "Stay at Home..."
  • isamisam Posts: 41,214

    I've yet to see a poll that shows a majority of people against covid restrictions.

    If you have some, please share.

    Nerds who like answering political polls are boring and socially inept, of course they’re not going to be against everyone being forced to stay in!
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited October 2020
    Cannot believe they are shutting golf courses. A sport you can easily social distance . Johnson really needs to look at what he is doing
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125
    Cyclefree said:

    So basically all that lockdown earlier this year was largely pointless because the time gained was wasted and here we are having to do it all again but weaker, poorer, during winter and with 50,000 people already having died.

    Let’s hope that in the middle of all this nothing happens to disrupt any medical supplies and drugs we need to import, eh!

    They couldn’t take the skin off a rice pudding.
    Time was indeed wasted. There was no plan post Cummings.

    "It is your patriotic duty to go to the pub" quipped Johnson. Now he has promptly closed them all.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    RobD said:

    Because you are in a minority means you should shut up?
    I think the point was that Hitchens was suggesting that if nothing else "numbers" would worry the MPs. But if the polling shows its popular, "numbers" opposed won't mean anything.
  • Here we go again, the myth repeated. The vast majority of public sector and local authority employees are not sitting at home on furlough - they are working. Most have face-to-face roles - you may even see them emptying your bins, staffing your hospitals, teaching your grandchildren, or cremating the dead. Some are working at home. Not very many are on furlough.
    I was not suggesting they are on furlough, quite the opposite

    They are guaranteed their jobs and pensions and as with pensioners will not see any loss of income

    I do not expect any public sector workers to loss their jobs, but on the other hand the private sector are looking at millions of job loses
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332
    alex_ said:

    I think the point was that Hitchens was suggesting that if nothing else "numbers" would worry the MPs. But if the polling shows its popular, "numbers" opposed won't mean anything.
    A significant minority can still be worrisome.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195
    IshmaelZ said:

    "Riding stables" = stable where you go to rent horses from the stable owner, by the hour. Someone else's stable where you keep your own horse is a livery stable, not a riding stable, and different rules apply.
    ok yes that makes sense.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    Cannot believe they are shutting golf courses. A sport you can easily social distance . Johnson really needs to look at what he is doing

    They are back to "you must only leave your house for essential reasons". It doesn't matter how safe the activity you are undertaking is.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    I was not suggesting they are on furlough, quite the opposite

    They are guaranteed their jobs and pensions and as with pensioners will not see any loss of income

    I do not expect any public sector workers to loss their jobs, but on the other hand the private sector are looking at millions of job loses
    Don't you? Half the Councils in the country are on the verge of bankruptcy. I'm expecting across the board pay cuts and massive retrospective changes to pension entitlements.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,262
    RobD said:

    A significant minority can still be worrisome.
    Yes but you can just completely ignore them. See also Brexit.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited October 2020

    I was not suggesting they are on furlough, quite the opposite

    They are guaranteed their jobs and pensions and as with pensioners will not see any loss of income

    I do not expect any public sector workers to loss their jobs, but on the other hand the private sector are looking at millions of job loses
    I doubt many members of the public really appreciate the shear mountain of debt and long term economic damage being built up during this crisis that will have to result in higher taxes for everybody for many decades.

    This isn't just a matter of get a vaccine in a few months, job done, back to normal everybody, nothing to see. This is worse than 2008.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,262

    I was not suggesting they are on furlough, quite the opposite

    They are guaranteed their jobs and pensions and as with pensioners will not see any loss of income

    I do not expect any public sector workers to loss their jobs, but on the other hand the private sector are looking at millions of job loses
    Which public sector jobs would you like to see cut?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898
    alex_ said:

    They are back to "you must only leave your house for essential reasons". It doesn't matter how safe the activity you are undertaking is.
    I live right next to a golf course.
    It is Covid non-compliance central.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100

    I doubt many members of the public really appreciate the shear mountain of debt and long term economic damage being built up during this crisis that will have to result in higher taxes for everybody for many decades.
    Tragic and costly that the government didn’t act sooner.
  • alex_ said:

    It won't help him. I predict that Johnson will be back at 50% in the polls within a week. The public will accept that he has tried his best to avoid a lockdown but he had to succumb. And Starmer's attempts to criticise will be characterised as sniping. It'll be like the last 6 months never happened.
    British public will support government measures just imposed. But methinks they will NOT be thanking Boris Johnson OR the Tory Party. Cursing is more like it.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,384

    I will respect any mp who comes out publically, not anonymous briefing
    Unlike the Prime Minister you mean?
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