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The Oxford/AZ vaccine gets approved – now ministers needs to ensure that it gets out quickly and in

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  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,568
    Charles said:

    We differ in the source of Parliament’s authority (the government’s authority only comes from the royal prerogative plus its ability to control parliament)

    My view is that parliament is the elected representative body of the demos. They have authority over most day to day decisions during their term. But to “change the rules of the game” - leaving the EU, Scottish independence or the length of their own mandate for example - you need to refer back to the people for a specific mandate
    Why?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    HYUFD said:

    Big support for MPs to pass the Deal from voters both Tory and Labour.

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1344222785896288256?s=20

    Scots by 47% to 17% also want MPs to pass the Deal so further evidence Sturgeon and Blackford have made a huge gaffe telling SNP MPs to oppose the Deal against the will of the people of Scotland!

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/survey-results/daily/2020/12/30/2ac0b/1

    Isn't that a subsample?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,737

    Have you seen some tech company disasters....they often weren't for the quality of the people (on paper) they hired.
    Isn't the issue that the screw ups occurred in Brazil rather than the UK and it was very much a case of picking a country where sufficient cases were available to validate the results.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    In a democracy it would mean something , in the UK dictatorship it will be symbolic only.
    Holyrood doesn’t have authority over international treaties in the same way that a vote of Basingstoke and Deane District Council would have no impact either
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550
    An admission then that Scottish Labour are just grandstanding twats....
  • Have you seen some tech company disasters....they often weren't for the quality of the people (on paper) they hired.
    Successful companies could often have turned into disasters too, the boundaries between success and failure are far more often slim than between absolutely brilliant and f***ing useless.
  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382

    Starmer just compromised Scottish Labour by saying voting against is voting for no deal

    He is correct they are voting for no deal as is the SNP liib dems and other minor parties.
    Which is a bit rich from their previous stance.
  • Let us not forget the University of Oxford's role in all of this.
    Were they responsible for trial design? Or is that the manufacturer's responsibility?
  • nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483

    Let us not forget the University of Oxford's role in all of this.
    And the test subjects based in far flung countries because there were not enough cases in the UK at the time, let’s hope they don’t get forgotten in the rush to pat ourselves on the back.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550
    HYUFD said:
    She's had her Weetabix that lass...
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,335
    edited December 2020

    I thought he comes from a family of benevolent Irish landlords? I may have misplaced by copy of Burke's Peerage so can't be wholly sure.
    No, they got everywhere, but only the best everywhere.
    Descended from the Great Montrose as I recall, though Chuck rather revealed his lack of mccredentials by thinking 'bonnie fechter' was an insult.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,480
    Charles said:



    Yes, circumstances changed.

    And I gave no problem with Scotland having another vote, say in 20 years

    Voting again and again until you get the answer you want is undemocratic

    Have to say that's utter nonsense. We have General Elections every 4-5 years normally (we had three in four and a half years so there are exceptions).

    We do vote "again and again" - that's democracy. Saying everything is cast in stone and can't change "for a generation" us profoundly undemocratic.
  • Starmer quite good today, imo at least.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491
    edited December 2020
    eek said:

    Isn't the issue that the screw ups occurred in Brazil rather than the UK and it was very much a case of picking a country where sufficient cases were available to validate the results.
    No...the tale of the oxford vaccine contains loads of mistakes and illogical decisions from Oxford deciding the manufacturer had messed up the dosage, when it was their measurements, to use of different placebos, to not recruiting enough oldies, the list goes on.

    As Max said, no emergency, they would have been sent back to have another go.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,568
    MaxPB said:

    I'm not suggesting it's unsafe and 62% is plenty to be getting on with, however, there is data showing potential for a 95% effective formula which doesn't need a 12 week gap between jabs. AZ also very obviously fucked up the trial. The MHRA should have given this provisional approval and also sent them back for a completely new trial that isn't completely fucked up like this one was.

    I think it's fair to recognise that AZ have made mistakes in the trial process, they should rectify them even if it means running a new trial.
    If the evidence is it is not unsafe then the level of vitriol seems unwarranted notwithstanding fucks ups, which obviously they can be criticised for if that is the case, as already some are suggesting it is ineffective at 62% and we don't want the anti-vaxxers to think problems in the trials mean even the 62% is not safe.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    The vaccines have gained *emergency authorisation* which is different. Safety trials continue. Due to FoI some info is freely available in the USA that I don't think is issued to the public here or in the EU.

    Pfizer and Moderna aren't vaccines, nor are coronavirus vaccines necessarily as useful in a risk-benefit comparison as influenza vaccines. Effective treatment protocols have been pioneered by Dr Pierre Kory and many others but some rich people don't want us to know about them.

    PB is a great betting site. But too many people since Feb 2020 have seemed unable to think for themselves.

    Enjoy your (mostly unnecessary) jabs But if in doubt be sceptical and ask 'Cui bono'. 4-5 PB contributors clearly do.
    Blimey.

    I am very much on the side of those such as @contrarian who believe the cost/benefit has become badly skewed, and that the government is implementing some deeply anti-liberty (was about to say anti-democratic!) measures although I am perhaps not as emphatic as he is.

    But to dismiss the vaccines?!
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    An admission then that Scottish Labour are just grandstanding twats....
    Bit like the SNP really.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550

    Wearing a mask.....

    And holding a garrotte?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    nichomar said:

    And the test subjects based in far flung countries because there were not enough cases in the UK at the time, let’s hope they don’t get forgotten in the rush to pat ourselves on the back.
    I fear that you are missing the sarcasm of a Cambridge graduate. But yes, indeed.
  • Wearing a mask.....

    A Scream mask?
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,928
    HYUFD said:

    Big support for MPs to pass the Deal from voters both Tory and Labour.

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1344222785896288256?s=20

    Scots by 47% to 17% also want MPs to pass the Deal so further evidence Sturgeon and Blackford have made a huge gaffe telling SNP MPs to oppose the Deal against the will of the people of Scotland!

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/survey-results/daily/2020/12/30/2ac0b/1

    The will of the people of Scotland was not to leave the EU in the first place. In absentia of that then a deal will be grudgingly accepted more than no deal would have been.

    The SNP will oppose it, WM will still pass it anyway, most people in Scotland will not give a fig about the hows and why of it.

    There may be some mis-step in the way the SNP have framed it - abstaining would probably have made more sense in a purely politically consistent way - but you boringly persist with the "huge gaffe" line. It's not going to move the dial in any meaningful way.
  • HYUFD said:

    Big support for MPs to pass the Deal from voters both Tory and Labour.

    https://twitter.com/YouGov/status/1344222785896288256?s=20

    Scots by 47% to 17% also want MPs to pass the Deal so further evidence Sturgeon and Blackford have made a huge gaffe telling SNP MPs to oppose the Deal against the will of the people of Scotland!

    https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/survey-results/daily/2020/12/30/2ac0b/1

    Naughty HYUFD, ignoring your own pronouncements on qualifying poll numbers as sub samples.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    Ha! May opening by saying her deal was better than the clown’s!
  • It's that ability to polish a turd that SLab are crying out for.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,480

    Been looking at the new feed of case by age and admissions by age data from PHE - so far they have data for England...

    The following is the full year. Note that the reason for the massive numbers in the later part of the year is mass testing - which allows us to see what is going on.

    2 things stand out

    - The number of daily cases for the elderly is relatively small and quite stable.
    - The big numbers in the recent wave are from the 15-44 and 45-64 groups
    - This may well explain why there isn't a surge in deaths - yet.

    All correct of course and we can only speculate what case numbers were like in mid March for example (100,000 new infections every day perhaps?).

    We know a lot more about the virus now than we did then but the problem is one of behaviours. Insufficient numbers of people have changed their behaviour enough to prevent or slow down transmission. I said this in August - it was our own desire to get back to "normal" that would be our undoing.

    Is it a question of self-discipline, fatigue, fear or something else? I don't know but there are a significant minority of people who have, I suspected, not altered their behaviour at all during this. For them, living their life on their terms is all that matters. My inner Thatcherite tells me there's an issue around self-responsibility and that notion extends beyond oneself to those around us but I might be wrong.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    She’s trying to rescue her reputation now, attacking Bozo’s deal for having nothing for services.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,822

    No...the tale of the oxford vaccine contains loads of mistakes and illogical decisions from Oxford deciding the manufacturer had messed up the dosage, when it was their measurements, to use of different placebos, to not recruiting enough oldies, the list goes on.

    As Max said, no emergency, they would have been sent back to have another go.
    Yup, the placebo change over mid trial stands out as completely stupid. Without a global pandemic on it would be enough to ask for a new trial alone. I think they did recruit enough old people but much later on rather than properly randomised meaning the mistake HD/FD didn't have any over 55s in the cohort.

    I think the MHRA should ask for another trial, the FDA probably will before they approve it.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    HYUFD said:
    Minister of the year, if anyone’s handing out such awards.
  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382
    IanB2 said:

    Ha! May opening by saying her deal was better than the clown’s!

    It was I said at the time Labour should have supported it alongside moderate conservatives.
  • IanB2 said:

    Ha! May opening by saying her deal was better than the clown’s!

    For Remainers like her and HYUFD who voted to Remain in the Single Market and Remain in the Customs Union and didn't accept they lost the Referendum maybe.

    But that is why she was ousted and is history. Good riddance to her and her deal.

    If you wanted to Remain in the Single Market and Customs Union then you should have voted to Remain in the Referendum. But that is over, her side lost.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    https://twitter.com/KieranPAndrews/status/1344226593632358401

    If I read things correctly from the previous tweet as n ow added by me, the press release is that issued by Mr Leonard. So now Mr Sarwar is issuing a statement to the opposite effect. Yet he and his fellow critics backed down from challenging Mr Leonard recently.

    Wonder what will happen to SLAB?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    Now she’s pointing out that the UK will still be involved in lots of joint committees with the EU, many of which with powers over the new arrangements, and reminding that we will still be following lots of EU rules and standards. Great trolling of the leavers.
  • Forget all the nonsense threate in the HoC, vaccine briefing just got under way.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    TOPPING said:

    We've been through this. Charles is wrong. Anyone in the EU could apply for the rolling process but only the UK did.

    The vaccine expertise for the EU previously resided in the UK with the MHRA. All such related matters were referred to the UK for this reason.

    Since Brexit and the separation the MHRA's application for a rolling review only applied to the UK (it would previously have applied to the whole of the EU). Any other EU regulatory body could have applied for one but as the expertise was not there (I'm guessing?) none did.

    So if anything Brexit meant that the EU received its green light later than the UK. Which I suppose for the Brexiters is a huge win.
    I think you are confused @TOPPING

    A “rolling review” is agreed between the company and the regulator. It’s effectively a way of fast tracking - in a normal review the same data is available at the same time but the regulator won’t look at it u til the whole package is complete

    It’s different from the conditional vs emergency approval which is what I think you are referring to where the MHRA chose to use the process and the EMA did not. (And I wasn’t wrong on that one either).

    And I’m sure that Belgium and France appreciate you overlooking their long-standing expertise in vaccines. Ever heard of Louis Pasteur?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,568
    HYUFD said:
    She is ruining her chances of promotion by looking too useful in that department.
  • Notice Sky and BBC have switched away from the HOC just before Blackford stands up

  • YorkcityYorkcity Posts: 4,382
    DavidL said:

    Bit like the SNP really.
    Yes I agree voting in essence for deal does not show competence.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Naughty HYUFD, ignoring your own pronouncements on qualifying poll numbers as sub samples.
    Wasn't HYUFD saying yesterday that Ian Murray would definitely vote against the Deal? Or is my memory wrong?
  • YokesYokes Posts: 1,359
    kle4 said:

    If the evidence is it is not unsafe then the level of vitriol seems unwarranted notwithstanding fucks ups, which obviously they can be criticised for if that is the case, as already some are suggesting it is ineffective at 62% and we don't want the anti-vaxxers to think problems in the trials mean even the 62% is not safe.
    Sinopharm reckons 79% efficacy for theirs, surprisingly little debate on Facebook about this....

    Can we just spare a thought for Andrew Wakefield, a guy who will go down as somehow having really kick-started the anti-vaccine movement and who I believe (and somewhat appropriately) is now in the spirituial home of modern quackery with a white coat on, thge USA.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    15 years ago, most of us thought it was the Tory party that would be broken by the issue of the European Union.

    Now, it looks as though most of the damage has actually been sustained by the Labour Party.

    Compared to the Tories, the various Nationalists & the LibDems, Labour still look broken to pieces on the issue.

    I have come round to thinking SKS has made a bad mistake -- there is absolutely no point in whipping this vote & forcing recalcitrant Remainer Labour MPs to vote for it. He should had left it a free vote for his MPs.

    SKS has just stored up bitterness for 2021 by forcing some MPs to vote against the dictates of their conscience.

    For the Red Wallers, much more important is what the next Labour manifesto says about Europe. Thsi bill is not important. All SKS has done is contribute to a false feeling of unity so Boris can have his big triumph.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    TOPPING said:

    Blimey.

    I am very much on the side of those such as @contrarian who believe the cost/benefit has become badly skewed, and that the government is implementing some deeply anti-liberty (was about to say anti-democratic!) measures although I am perhaps not as emphatic as he is.

    But to dismiss the vaccines?!
    Venturing into pseudo-science does a disservice to those who have been very concerned about the loss of liberty aspects of this crisis.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,840
    DavidL said:

    Speaking for myself I have often reflected on whether this has been worth it. The division in the country, the neglect of many far more important issues, the loss of an excellent PM and Chancellor, Mrs May, there is much to regret. I am glad we are finally at the end of the process (well, sort of) but if I had known how badly this country was going to be divided by this would I have voted for it in the first place? Tbh, my answer varies from day to day.

    What I am much clearer about is that this is the last thing Scotland needs (and it would be multiple times more difficult) right now. Last time around we did significant damage to our tax base and financial services industry even although we voted to remain. But I am a democrat and will accept the decision of the majority in May.
    Are you the same David who thinks that actually leaving the EU with significantly reduced financial services access will be water off a duck's back?
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,928

    Notice Sky and BBC have switched away from the HOC just before Blackford stands up

    I don't think there's a correlation.

    They had a strapline saying they were going to the vaccine briefing at 1030 am, so it probably just got going a bit late.
  • kle4 said:

    She is ruining her chances of promotion by looking too useful in that department.
    In current circumstances her department is probably more meaningful than most other ones.

    Who's done more for the UK on an international stage this year: Liz Truss or Dominic Raab?

    Easy question for me to answer.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Either it was a lie at the time, or circumstances have changed significantly since 2014. Either way a second referendum is justified.
    You didn't answer my question. How do you think you would feel about all this if you were Scottish? Do you think you'd be OK with it?
    My assessment wouldn’t change based on emotional criteria such as nationality.

    There is a third option, which I hold: the situation may have changed but that doesn’t justify an immediate repeat referendum. Who judges what “significant” is?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,211
    stodge said:

    All correct of course and we can only speculate what case numbers were like in mid March for example (100,000 new infections every day perhaps?).

    We know a lot more about the virus now than we did then but the problem is one of behaviours. Insufficient numbers of people have changed their behaviour enough to prevent or slow down transmission. I said this in August - it was our own desire to get back to "normal" that would be our undoing.

    Is it a question of self-discipline, fatigue, fear or something else? I don't know but there are a significant minority of people who have, I suspected, not altered their behaviour at all during this. For them, living their life on their terms is all that matters. My inner Thatcherite tells me there's an issue around self-responsibility and that notion extends beyond oneself to those around us but I might be wrong.
    We have seen quite a few people here, who regard putting off a holiday until June as un-thinkable. An interesting facet of this is the idea that "I don't *seem* to have the virus, so I'm probably ok. So I can do what I want."

    I wonder if this relates to the extreme reactions to calls from the Track-And-Trace teams have received - abuse, even death threats. For telling people that they have a positive result. Suddenly faced by responsibility.....
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    You really are a pompous over privileged arsehole of epic proportions.
    I love you too, Malcolm
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    DavidL said:

    She has a point. There are clearly points where her deal was better. But she still couldn't sell cold beer in the Sahara on a hot summer's day and that is one of the reasons we are in this mess. A little humility would not go amiss.
    TBF to her, she had the likes of Messrs Johnson, Gove, and Francois, so to speak, publicly urinating in her beer-jugs behind her back but very visible to the customer. So I wouldn't blame her as much as you do.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550

    Forget all the nonsense threate in the HoC, vaccine briefing just got under way.

    Big news day.

    We just need Prince Andrew to be extradited.....
  • IanB2 said:

    Hancock started to answer the question this morning, but stopped himself after suggesting new restrictions on education would be needed, saying that our Gav will announce the details later. My guess is a delayed opening for the new term, perhaps with teachers vaccinated meanwhile.
    Teachers should be vaccinated early but don't overlook older pupils and the parents who gather outside the school gates to collect their children at chucking out time.
  • I don't think there's a correlation.

    They had a strapline saying they were going to the vaccine briefing at 1030 am, so it probably just got going a bit late.
    If he'd been less of a timewasting prat with that stupid meaningless division that wasted quarter of an hour with nobody talking, let alone all those "points of order" then he'd have been called before they cut away.

    Irony isn't dead.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    edited December 2020

    Forget all the nonsense threate in the HoC, vaccine briefing just got under way.

    It's the Fat Crofter

    Vaccine briefing:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/live/bbcnews

    Starts at 10.42
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279


    15 years ago, most of us thought it was the Tory party that would be broken by the issue of the European Union.

    Now, it looks as though most of the damage has actually been sustained by the Labour Party.

    Compared to the Tories, the various Nationalists & the LibDems, Labour still look broken to pieces on the issue.

    I have come round to thinking SKS has made a bad mistake -- there is absolutely no point in whipping this vote & forcing recalcitrant Remainer Labour MPs to vote for it. He should had left it a free vote for his MPs.

    SKS has just stored up bitterness for 2021 by forcing some MPs to vote against the dictates of their conscience.

    For the Red Wallers, much more important is what the next Labour manifesto says about Europe. Thsi bill is not important. All SKS has done is contribute to a false feeling of unity so Boris can have his big triumph.

    Listening to Starmer in parliament today, ruthlessly criticising many aspects of the trade deal, makes one wonder why he is voting for it. It is also a bit rich coming from someone who said ANY deal is better than no deal.

    He`s trying to butter both sides of his bread. He may fail on both fronts.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,568
    Sandpit said:

    Minister of the year, if anyone’s handing out such awards.
    Don't The Spectator usually do parliamentarian of the year?
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,012
    Carnyx said:

    "Scottish Labour has found itself trapped in a no-win dilemma over Brexit after it decided to back a Scottish National party motion against the Brexit deal in Holyrood later on Wednesday - in direct contradiction to Keir Starmer’s stance at Westminster.

    To the consternation of his internal critics, Richard Leonard, the party’s Scottish leader, announced on Tuesday the party would vote with the SNP to reject the deal by arguing it would cause unjustified economic damage in Scotland."

    On the Graun feed - more there if wanted. The other surprise, at least in view of what was being said on this forum yesterday, is that Ian Murray, MP for Morningside Matrons, is very much supporting Mr Starmer and voting for the deal.

    Doing the right thing. Speaking as a Conservative for Murray.

  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Democracy doesn't have a 20 year timespan, it has a 5 year timespan.

    Parliament lasts 5 years not 20 years.

    2021 is the next scheduled Holyrood elections. That is not "voting again and again" it is a regularly scheduled election.

    If the Scots elect a government committed to another referendum that is not "voting again and again" it is democracy in action.
    It’s not within the remit of the Scottish government to determine whether there is a referendum

    The British could elect a government committed to requiring the French to implement the Treaty of Troyes but that wouldn’t make it a democratic requirement

    But we are not going to agree on this so let’s not bother to rehearse the same old arguments
  • Why does the NHS app still keep giving those "verifying exposure info" messages.

    I must have had at least 50, none of which have led to anything and afaik no action is supposed to be taken by me, apart from waiting for further messages! Ridiculous, just message me when it thinks I should take action.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    geoffw said:

    Doing the right thing. Speaking as a Conservative for Murray.

    Mphm. A brave thing to do, even so, in Scotland. But he's not the one facing reelection in 2021.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    That great British cereal.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550
    IanB2 said:

    Ha! May opening by saying her deal was better than the clown’s!

    "....and a pint of bitter for the lady....."
  • Notice Sky and BBC have switched away from the HOC just before Blackford stands up

    Such a pity. We all appreciate Blackford's intelligent and measured contribution to any debate! :lol:
  • Carnyx said:

    Wasn't HYUFD saying yesterday that Ian Murray would definitely vote against the Deal? Or is my memory wrong?
    He did, and then scuttled off when it was pointed out to him.
    Much of a one with his cowardice over defending his glorious Union at the ballot box.
  • I don't think there's a correlation.

    They had a strapline saying they were going to the vaccine briefing at 1030 am, so it probably just got going a bit late.
    I agree but it has saved the nation from embarrassment
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180

    Are you the same David who thinks that actually leaving the EU with significantly reduced financial services access will be water off a duck's back?
    Yes. Edinburgh is in an entirely different position than London. It is a satellite and services based centre servicing London. London is arguably the most important international financial centre in the world and utterly dominant in the European time zone. Edinburgh is far more dependent upon London than London is the EU.

    But I have also been critical of this deal because it does not include financial services as Mrs May has just pointed out. Hopefully this will be a short term problem.
  • Charles said:

    My assessment wouldn’t change based on emotional criteria such as nationality.

    There is a third option, which I hold: the situation may have changed but that doesn’t justify an immediate repeat referendum. Who judges what “significant” is?
    I dunno, maybe the democratically elected government of Scotland?
  • Charles said:

    It’s not within the remit of the Scottish government to determine whether there is a referendum

    The British could elect a government committed to requiring the French to implement the Treaty of Troyes but that wouldn’t make it a democratic requirement

    But we are not going to agree on this so let’s not bother to rehearse the same old arguments
    The French are a foreign nation. Are the Scots?

    Your "again and again" or "generation" or "20 year" arguments are just fluff. Elections are routinely held every five years for a reason.

    Either you respect Scottish democracy or you do not. It is a simple enough question. Do you respect Scottish democracy: yes or no?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    He did, and then scuttled off when it was pointed out to him.
    Much of a one with his cowardice over defending his glorious Union at the ballot box.
    I'm actually slightly surprised about Murray, tbf to HYUFD - but maybe he's desperate to gather Tory votes.
  • Charles said:

    My assessment wouldn’t change based on emotional criteria such as nationality.

    There is a third option, which I hold: the situation may have changed but that doesn’t justify an immediate repeat referendum. Who judges what “significant” is?
    The Scottish voters at a national Scottish election.

    Who else?
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    Up to 80% if there is sufficient interval from 1st to 2nd dose.

    Hmmm.

    Good but not utterly stellar.
  • The Racing Post has published its list of the 20 most influential racing figures of 2020. Joint top are Dr Jerry Hill and Dr Jennifer Pugh, the chief medical officers at the BHA and Irish HRB respectively. It sums up this year.
  • But Brexit has already happened. This isn't a vote on Brexit.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    edited December 2020
    Stocky said:

    Venturing into pseudo-science does a disservice to those who have been very concerned about the loss of liberty aspects of this crisis.
    Agree.
  • First batch of vaccine released last night
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    p.s. I was an avid remainer campaigner and I have ZERO interest in Brexit now. Not interested in anything about it. It's done. Finito. Get over it and get on with it.

    Back to Covid. Far more important right now.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Take the point... an add-on to the current contract for pharmaceutical services.

    On numbers, according to the latest figures I could find, from the Pharmaceutical Journal in 2016, the figures are
    "Large multiples (100 or more pharmacies) make up 49.2% of the community pharmacy market in Great Britain, with 12 companies owning 7,085 pharmacies. Small multiples (6–99 pharmacies) account for 12.4% of the market, with 145 companies owning 1,785 pharmacies, and independents (1–5 pharmacies) control 38.4% of the market, with 4,184 companies owning 5,519 pharmacies."
    Glad to see I still have a grip on the corporate ownership landscape in the U.K. pharmacy market...

    😛
  • kinabalu said:

    I sense she is above all else a Conservative Party loyalist, so will be pleased enough, but I'd be surprised if there were not some less charitable sentiment in there too.

    This bloke who brought me down and replaced me, saying my Deal was rubbish, goes and agrees the sort of noddy Deal I could have done in 10 minutes if I'd have dropped my "protect the economy and the constitutional integrity of the UK" red line, and gets cheered to the rafters for it.

    Is it cos I am not a 'born to rule' public school chancer unencumbered by a sense of duty and public service?
    Aqtwtaiy, always.
  • kinabalu said:

    I sense she is above all else a Conservative Party loyalist, so will be pleased enough, but I'd be surprised if there were not some less charitable sentiment in there too.

    This bloke who brought me down and replaced me, saying my Deal was rubbish, goes and agrees the sort of noddy Deal I could have done in 10 minutes if I'd have dropped my "protect the economy and the constitutional integrity of the UK" red line, and gets cheered to the rafters for it.

    Is it cos I am not a 'born to rule' public school chancer unencumbered by a sense of duty and public service?
    Or perhaps because her vision of "protecting the economy" was precisely what was wrong?

    She sought to protect the economy be de facto keeping the UK within the Single Market and Customs Union that we had voted to leave. The economy arguments were debated in the referendum and were defeated - her vision of "protecting the economy" was to Remain in the EU.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    Carnyx said:

    I'm actually slightly surprised about Murray, tbf to HYUFD - but maybe he's desperate to gather Tory votes.
    For those of us hazy on our Geography of Edinburgh, is Murray's seat essentially dominated by the University?
  • I think the important news is that the JCVI does not advise a preference for either vaccine in any specific location
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    OllyT said:

    If circumstances have changed (and leaving the EU is a massive change for Scotland) then logic dictates you allow another referendum now. Where is the logic in waiting 20 years?
    Can you demonstrate the logic? It doesn’t follow.

    Constitutional decisions are for an extended period of time. It helps no one to have repeated votes and continuous agitation. (20 is arbitrary but 15-30 would be reasonable. 40 feels too long and 10 too short)
  • Charles said:

    No.

    Yes Charles. Yes.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,568
    No preference for either vaccine in any specific population advised, so down to logistics as expected.
  • kinabalu said:

    I sense she is above all else a Conservative Party loyalist, so will be pleased enough, but I'd be surprised if there were not some less charitable sentiment in there too.

    This bloke who brought me down and replaced me, saying my Deal was rubbish, goes and agrees the sort of noddy Deal I could have done in 10 minutes if I'd have dropped my "protect the economy and the constitutional integrity of the UK" red line, and gets cheered to the rafters for it.

    Is it cos I am not a 'born to rule' public school chancer unencumbered by a sense of duty and public service?
    Will Theresa May be kicked upstairs in the New Year Honours? It would suit Boris and explain the gong-blocking Blair stories this week.
  • Up to 80% if there is sufficient interval from 1st to 2nd dose.

    Hmmm.

    Good but not utterly stellar.

    https://twitter.com/ewanbirney/status/1344232650945531905?s=20
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,728
    edited December 2020
    MaxPB said:

    Yup, the placebo change over mid trial stands out as completely stupid. Without a global pandemic on it would be enough to ask for a new trial alone. I think they did recruit enough old people but much later on rather than properly randomised meaning the mistake HD/FD didn't have any over 55s in the cohort.

    I think the MHRA should ask for another trial, the FDA probably will before they approve it.
    I seriously doubt it; they’ll probably just wait for the data from our mass vaccination program.
    I think this is an excellent (unlike the trial) decision. One good thing from the AZN is that they ran what was effectively a single shot cohort for five months, which looked effective as the full dose & booster. So there is a strong rationale for running with the full dose plus later booster in order to get vaccination started as soon as possible.
    https://twitter.com/michaelmina_lab/status/1344214591010701312
  • Stocky said:

    Listening to Starmer in parliament today, ruthlessly criticising many aspects of the trade deal, makes one wonder why he is voting for it. It is also a bit rich coming from someone who said ANY deal is better than no deal.

    He`s trying to butter both sides of his bread. He may fail on both fronts.
    I thought it was good and the kind of grown up politics we have been missing for the last 5 years. The choice is this deal or no deal, it is a no brainer.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    kinabalu said:

    I sense she is above all else a Conservative Party loyalist, so will be pleased enough, but I'd be surprised if there were not some less charitable sentiment in there too.

    This bloke who brought me down and replaced me, saying my Deal was rubbish, goes and agrees the sort of noddy Deal I could have done in 10 minutes if I'd have dropped my "protect the economy and the constitutional integrity of the UK" red line, and gets cheered to the rafters for it.

    Is it cos I am not a 'born to rule' public school chancer unencumbered by a sense of duty and public service?
    If true, is it necessarily an advantage? I`m sure pleased that my provenance didn`t mean that I`m `born to rule`.

    Phew, bullet dodged.
  • MysticroseMysticrose Posts: 4,688
    A very good Downing Street briefing on the vaccines. Neither too highfalutin nor too patronising.
  • Charles said:

    Can you demonstrate the logic? It doesn’t follow.

    Constitutional decisions are for an extended period of time. It helps no one to have repeated votes and continuous agitation. (20 is arbitrary but 15-30 would be reasonable. 40 feels too long and 10 too short)
    No that does not follow and never has followed.

    Decisions are for one Parliament only. Always have been. No Parliament can bind its successor.

    Where does an "extended period of time" come from? What constitutional settlement or principle determines that?
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,480


    15 years ago, most of us thought it was the Tory party that would be broken by the issue of the European Union.

    Now, it looks as though most of the damage has actually been sustained by the Labour Party.

    Compared to the Tories, the various Nationalists & the LibDems, Labour still look broken to pieces on the issue.

    I have come round to thinking SKS has made a bad mistake -- there is absolutely no point in whipping this vote & forcing recalcitrant Remainer Labour MPs to vote for it. He should had left it a free vote for his MPs.

    SKS has just stored up bitterness for 2021 by forcing some MPs to vote against the dictates of their conscience.

    For the Red Wallers, much more important is what the next Labour manifesto says about Europe. Thsi bill is not important. All SKS has done is contribute to a false feeling of unity so Boris can have his big triumph.

    Labour has always been divided on the issue of the EU. In 1983, there was a manifesto commitment to withdraw from the then EEC. Labour was Eurosceptic long before most Tories had even heard of the term.

    There were a very few sceptical Conservatives but the Conservatives were for decades the most pro-European of the main parties. Heath spent most of his political career trying to get this into the EEC and Thatcher was the main proponent of the Yes vote in 1975.

    There may still be pro-European Conservatives but they have either been driven to the margins or driven out of the Party completely. Labour continues to accommodate its European factions - the 1975 Referendum was one of the milestones on the journey to the SDP schism.

    The journey to Conservative Euro-scepticism began before Bruges with the arguments over the rebate in the early 1980s but from Bruges onward, Euro-scepticism grew and developed - it arguably brought down Thatcher and Cameron and contributed to the party spending more than a decade in Opposition after their worst defeat in decades.

    I suspect the next splits will be over environmental policy.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    I thought it was good and the kind of grown up politics we have been missing for the last 5 years. The choice is this deal or no deal, it is a no brainer.
    Agreed that he`s good. Excellent in fact. It`s the relentless politicking that tires me.
This discussion has been closed.