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Both Trump and Biden stage Georgia rallies on the eve of today’s Georgia runoffs – politicalbetting.

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  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    Most voters the Tories won over in the RedWall would at least have had GCSEs or O Levels unlike Rayner
    Like I said, your attitude would go down like a bucket of cold sick.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,549

    Ah, you're missing the Corbynite red meat. Sadly Labour's gone all vegan now, and their tastiest offering is some cold raw tofu, which makes it a bit tricky to compete with 17 stone of solid muscle:

    https://twitter.com/EuanTennant1/status/1346232411256975360

    Ah, you're missing the Corbynite red meat. Sadly Labour's gone all vegan now, and their tastiest offering is some cold raw tofu, which makes it a bit tricky to compete with 17 stone of solid muscle:

    https://twitter.com/EuanTennant1/status/1346232411256975360
    "Keir "sentient shade of beige" Starmer". LOL

    Makes comparisons with Gordon Brittas seem quite affectionate......
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Yes it is during a boom, 16 years after the last recession. 🤦🏻‍♂️

    When the next inevitable recession hits and you're already standing there with your pants down with a 3% deficit then what do you think happens next?

    Its like saying someone in stable employment, who hasn't had any financial shocks in a decade and a half isn't exposed to debt because their credit cards and loans are maxed out but they're barely making the minimum repayments each month. Then when a shock hits, an unforeseen bill or drop of income, then they should be completely surprised and taken aback to now be in difficulty.
    Your deficit goes up. If your deficit goes from 3% to 10% you're not in a qualitatively different position from if your deficit goes from 0% to 7%. Especially if you are starting from a low level of debt (which is where your simplistic analogy to the person with maxed out credit cards breaks down). You're simply wrong on this. The UK's fiscal position in 2007 is at best a minor footnote in terms of explaining what happened next.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    edited January 2021

    Or, indeed, Jim Callaghan.

    I'm not sure I want Angela Rayner as PM- I think what I want is a Conservative party that is capable of governing honourably. But she has made a go of her life, and that's a good thing, isn't it?

    (And if I were the Conservative party, I'd be very very careful making digs at people making babies...)
    Jim Callaghan passed the Senior Oxford Certificate and the civil service entrance exam as well as tough exams to become a senior tax inspector
  • Sainsbury's Norniron have got around the Project Fear story of shortages by supplying in Spar branded products via the Republic
    https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/politics/days-after-brexit-many-products-vanish-sainsburys-northern-ireland-and-are-replaced-spar-brand-3085106
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,411
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group representing major U.S. airlines on Monday backed a proposal by public health officials to implement a global testing program requiring negative tests before most international air passengers return to the United States, according to a letter seen by Reuters....

    ....The CDC on Dec. 28 began requiring all airline passengers arriving from Britain - including U.S. citizens - to test negative for COVID-19 within 72 hours of departure.


    https://www.usnews.com/news/us/articles/2021-01-04/major-us-airlines-back-expanding-covid-19-testing-for-more-international-travelers?source=content_type:react|first_level_url:news|section:main_content|button:body_link
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    Carnyx said:

    But a poorer one than someone of his background, schooling and purported intelligence should have obtained, especially in that subject and especially a subject inculcated into him from early in his prep school days.

    That's not quite the conclusive argument you might think. Boris was right on the Upper Second / First borderline, and it came down to a philosophy viva that failed to get him across it (in the dark days when vast tracts of philosophy were compulsory in Greats). The sadly-departed Martin West, perhaps the greatest Hellenist of his generation, also took a Second for the same reason.
  • HYUFD is just like Gordon Brown and Labour between circa 2006 and 2015.

    They kept on banging on about Cameron being a toff and the voters didn't care, poshboy-cum-aristo or working clas pleb, doesn't matter where you're from, it's where you're going that counts.
    Education is important but nothing compares to the education you get through real life.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    edited January 2021
    Stocky said:

    I do think it is fair to say that Johnson vacillates. Despite being PM he is no decision-maker. I`m guessing that he had a strong constituency arguing that "whatever happens schools stay open" and a second constituency saying "the writing is on the wall close them now, you are going to have to do so eventually anyway".

    I think he sided with the first constituency and then switched late on.

    The sheep in Animal Farm come to mind.
    Johnson just cannot tough out bad publicity from the MSM/opposition/commentariat.

    When BBC is running a headline 'pressure grows' you know a U-turn is coming.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    Like I said, your attitude would go down like a bucket of cold sick.
    No it wouldn't, it may do with class warfare obsessed Corbyn voters there filled with inverse snobbery but they would never vote Tory anyway
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    My girlfriend has no qualifications other than A-Levels but that does not mean she is any less intelligent than me. She has other skills acquired outside of a formal education environment.
    She sounds super intelligent aside from her one obvious blind spot.

    :wink:
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    I'd query that - it's a relatively uncompetitive course to get onto compared to PPE at least, given few schools teach Latin and Greek. That's why quite a lot of public school types go for it.

    No offence to those with good Classics degrees - I'm sure a lot of work went into achieving the grades and I know several who are fine and capable people - but it isn't known as a particularly tough option.
    I have a first in PPE. I can`t comment on other degrees in comparison, but my degree was bloody difficult. I do have degree-comparable occupational type qualifications and they were nowhere near as difficult as getting my degree in PPE.
  • HYUFD said:

    They are still qualifications so obviously count, Rayner left school with no qualifications at all
    So, she sacrificed her chances to look after her baby. Again, not sure that line of attack is entirely wise while the Conservative party has its present leader...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    My girlfriend has no qualifications other than A-Levels but that does not mean she is any less intelligent than me. She has other skills acquired outside of a formal education environment.
    So she has A Levels then, unlike Rayner
  • Like I said, your attitude would go down like a bucket of cold sick.
    Evergreen message with him.

    If he represented the Tory Party in reality rather than in the fiction of his and extreme socialists minds then I and many other Tories on this site would abandon the party PDQ.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,826

    That's not quite the conclusive argument you might think. Boris was right on the Upper Second / First borderline, and it came down to a philosophy viva that failed to get him across it (in the dark days when vast tracts of philosophy were compulsory in Greats). The sadly-departed Martin West, perhaps the greatest Hellenist of his generation, also took a Second for the same reason.
    Did he take it stoically?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    That's not quite the conclusive argument you might think. Boris was right on the Upper Second / First borderline, and it came down to a philosophy viva that failed to get him across it (in the dark days when vast tracts of philosophy were compulsory in Greats). The sadly-departed Martin West, perhaps the greatest Hellenist of his generation, also took a Second for the same reason.
    Yet that was always part of the rules. The trick was to make dam' sure you weren't borderline.

    (As a matter of interest, what was the source for that story, please?)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    Evergreen message with him.

    If he represented the Tory Party in reality rather than in the fiction of his and extreme socialists minds then I and many other Tories on this site would abandon the party PDQ.
    You have never been a true Tory anyway, as proved by your votes for Blair and Farage
  • Boris was right on the Upper Second / First borderline, and it came down to a philosophy viva that failed to get him across it

    Lol, just the level of fanboi detail I would expect on PB!
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Stocky said:

    I`ve been speaking to a few people today about the strengthened lockdown. People, on the whole, seem bruised but resigned to the situation I`d say; coupled with slightly less intention of sticking to the letter of the law, perhaps. Acceptance and compliance is dwindling only a little. Sunak`s financial support is vital to this, of course.

    One aspect to think about is this: we shall soon get to the point where whole cohorts are vaccinated. Groups of people who have all been vaccinated will feel justified in having more freedoms compared to those that haven`t been vaccinated yet. I`ve not seen this aspect discussed anywhere, but it will become an issue I predict.

    Indeed, once my septuagenarian parents are vaccinated, where is the problem in my seeing them, as long as a I drive there and back with my household and don't stop en route?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    Stocky said:

    I have a first in PPE. I can`t comment on other degrees in comparison, but my degree was bloody difficult. I do have degree-comparable occupational type qualifications and they were nowhere near as difficult as getting my degree in PPE.
    I think if you do the economics element for all 3 years that makes it harder
  • Your deficit goes up. If your deficit goes from 3% to 10% you're not in a qualitatively different position from if your deficit goes from 0% to 7%. Especially if you are starting from a low level of debt (which is where your simplistic analogy to the person with maxed out credit cards breaks down). You're simply wrong on this. The UK's fiscal position in 2007 is at best a minor footnote in terms of explaining what happened next.
    You absolutely are in a qualitatively different position with a 10% deficit and a 7% deficit.

    The low level of debt is absolutely irrelevant if you have a 10% deficit.

    This is exponential growth all over again. YOU are the one simply wrong, if you can't comprehend the exponential growth problem with a 10% deficit then you are beyond help.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    No it wouldn't, it may do with class warfare obsessed Corbyn voters there filled with inverse snobbery but they would never vote Tory anyway
    This just shows that you have zero understanding of your new voters other than "they want Brexit".
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,220
    HYUFD said:

    No but leaving school with no GCSEs either is not exactly a qualification to be PM
    Never confuse lack of formal qualifications with lack of intelligence. Rayner is worth 10 of the Tory front bench.
  • TOPPING said:

    She sounds super intelligent aside from her one obvious blind spot.

    :wink:
    Also looks hot in riot gear I've heard.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    So she has A Levels then, unlike Rayner
    Unlike Rayner, she was required to stay in school until she was 18. You can thank mr Blair for that.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Did he take it stoically?
    No, I think he was too cynical about it - lived in the garden shed at Balliol or something.

    Seriously, though, he must have taken his degree in the 1960s - a good two decades before Mr J, and with the great collapse in school classics in between, surely.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    HYUFD said:

    You have never been a true Tory anyway, as proved by your votes for Blair and Farage
    Sounding a bit Corbynista there mate

    Next you tell him to fuck off and join party X
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    Foxy said:

    Never confuse lack of formal qualifications with lack of intelligence. Rayner is worth 10 of the Tory front bench.
    She has no visible evidence of great intelligence either and the fact she used a debate in the Commons to shout 'scum' at a fellow MP shows she also needs to learn some manners as well
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    Your deficit goes up. If your deficit goes from 3% to 10% you're not in a qualitatively different position from if your deficit goes from 0% to 7%. Especially if you are starting from a low level of debt (which is where your simplistic analogy to the person with maxed out credit cards breaks down). You're simply wrong on this. The UK's fiscal position in 2007 is at best a minor footnote in terms of explaining what happened next.
    Regardless (irregardless), Lab spent a sh*t load of money while fiscal receipts were into the stratosphere. No one is disputing that money needed to be spent in 1997, or rather, after their matching commitment ran out, but we were several years into boom time mortgage offers falling out of your cornflakes box and @kinabalu-type City bonuses by 2007.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    This just shows that you have zero understanding of your new voters other than "they want Brexit".
    Given you did not vote Tory last year when they did and most still are on the latest polling I suggest I have more understanding of them than you
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited January 2021
    Rayner is very bright and quick, no question. She also conveys genuine warmth, which is a rare quality and invaluable among politicians.

    Re; a post on Brexit below, the Tory lead will continue for now ; but only if there aren't too many days with these kinds of stories in the media, or if they fade after February/March.

    "A growing number of retailers in the EU have decided they won’t deliver to Britain because of the new costs involved in sending packages after Brexit. Companies have said they are unwilling to register for VAT in the UK, with one Dutch firm calling the red tape “ludicrous”.

    It comes as problems emerged with the first lorries to cross from Great Britain into Northern Ireland. Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork, with waits of 10 hours at new border posts. Disruption means Sainsbury’s has reportedly lost around 700 product lines in NI – and the giant has been forced to stock goods from Spar."
  • HYUFD said:

    She has no visible evidence of great intelligence either and the fact she used a debate in the Commons to shout 'scum' at a fellow MP shows she also needs to learn some manners as well
    Yes Boris Johnson is the perfect man to teach her some manners.
  • HYUFD said:

    No it wouldn't, it may do with class warfare obsessed Corbyn voters there filled with inverse snobbery but they would never vote Tory anyway
    It really would. "Vote for me, I'm considerably cleverer than you and look at these certificates if you don't believe me" just isn't a good look among ANY part of the electorate.

    That's not to say a keen intellect isn't an asset. But the way you've expressed it on this thread - implying that an Oxbridge degree is proof of that, and that folk without formal qualifications can't be sharp as a tack - is both wrong in fact and politically poisonous as a message.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    Yes Boris Johnson is the perfect man to teach her some manners.
    Boris has never yelled abuse at a fellow MP in the Commons
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    Carnyx said:

    Yet that was always part of the rules. The trick was to make dam' sure you weren't borderline.

    (As a matter of interest, what was the source for that story, please?)
    It's in Anthony Kenny's memoirs (quoted here: https://arikdondi.com/2019/08/01/what-does-studying-classics-at-oxford-teach-you-about-running-a-country/).

    Although the first time I heard the story was from Boris' old tutor.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Did he take it stoically?
    Overdid it on the Kant?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    It really would. "Vote for me, I'm considerably cleverer than you and look at these certificates if you don't believe me" just isn't a good look among ANY part of the electorate.

    That's not to say a keen intellect isn't an asset. But the way you've expressed it on this thread - implying that an Oxbridge degree is proof of that, and that folk without formal qualifications can't be sharp as a tack - is both wrong in fact and politically poisonous as a message.
    I did not say an Oxbridge degree was a prerequisite, I had no problem with Callaghan or Major being PM but they at least had some qualifications, Rayner left school with none at all
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    Given you did not vote Tory last year when they did and most still are on the latest polling I suggest I have more understanding of them than you
    Just because I did not vote Tory doesn't mean I don't understand why people did vote Tory at least here in the North East.

    There's a reason why I voted for Lisa Nandy to be Labour leader. She got it more than Starmer did.
  • HYUFD said:

    Boris has never yelled abuse at a fellow MP in the Commons
    'Boris Johnson told not to hurl 'insults' by Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle'

    https://tinyurl.com/y2eu55cx
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    Overdid it on the Kant?
    Oh nooo...
  • Yes Boris Johnson is the perfect man to teach her some manners.
    Maybe he could delegate classes on respectful behaviour in the Commons to Jacob Rees-Mogg?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    edited January 2021

    Why don't you celebrate the fact that despite a challenging start she has rolled her sleeves up, got on with it and achieved plenty? Isn't that what Tories tell us all to do?

    Yes but we do not make them PM otherwise you would give everyone walking down the street a go, Rayner has achieved no more than the average person on Epping High Street educationally and professionally
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,795
    Sandpit said:

    Politicising a pandemic might go down well with the Canary-reading Corbyn fan club, but it will go down like a cup of cold sick with the other 99% of the population who are happy we have vaccines coming, and think the government did everything they could to avoid closing the schools.
    So the public need to open their eyes then - and Labour must help them do it. I'd say it's a duty. Presiding over this mess should not translate to a lead in the polls. Something is not right there. Something is rotten in the state of Denmark. Very dangerous for our democracy if there is no penalty for callous incompetence in government.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    HYUFD said:

    Given you did not vote Tory last year when they did and most still are on the latest polling I suggest I have more understanding of them than you
    Given that you disagree with the Tory's central policy I would tread carefully, O Chairman.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,549

    Rayner is very bright and quick, no question. She also conveys genuine warmth, which is a rare quality and invaluable among politicians.

    Re; a post on Brexit below, the Tory lead will continue for now - as long as there aren't too many days with these kinds of stories in the media, or if they fade after February/March.

    "A growing number of retailers in the EU have decided they won’t deliver to Britain because of the new costs involved in sending packages after Brexit. Companies have said they are unwilling to register for VAT in the UK, with one Dutch firm calling the red tape “ludicrous”.

    It comes as problems emerged with the first lorries to cross from Great Britain into Northern Ireland. Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork, with waits of 10 hours at new border posts. Disruption means Sainsbury’s has reportedly lost around 700 product lines in NI – and the giant has been forced to stock goods from Spar."

    The Great Brexit Disaster:

    "Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork".

    Oh. Hmmmm. But I bet before Brexit, EVERY lorry had the correct paperwork.

    Oh - they didn't? Hmmmmm.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    I did not say an Oxbridge degree was a prerequisite, I had no problem with Callaghan or Major being PM but they at least had some qualifications, Rayner left school with none at all
    Please keep alienating vast swathes of your own voters. Thank you. :)
  • HYUFD said:

    Boris has never yelled abuse at a fellow MP in the Commons
    Oh really?

    https://news.sky.com/story/boris-johnson-told-not-to-hurl-insults-by-commons-speaker-sir-lindsay-hoyle-12065849

    But thank you for walking into my elephant trap.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,277
    HYUFD said:

    I did not say an Oxbridge degree was a prerequisite, I had no problem with Callaghan or Major being PM but they at least had some qualifications, Rayner left school with none at all
    That is outrageously out-dated, not to say irrelevant.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but we do not make them PM otherwise you would give everyone walking down the street a go, Rayner has achieved no more than the average person on Epping High Street educationally and professionally
    Given that she as leader would be a gift for the Tories over Starmer I would have thought you`d be championing her HYUFD.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but we do not make them PM otherwise you would give everyone walking down the street a go, Rayner has achieved no more than the average person on Epping High Street educationally and professionally
    She earns at least double the median salary. That's pretty good going for someone with no qualifications. I need to take a leaf out of her book.
  • Anyhoo.

    Big shoutout to all the parents who are doing dry January as well as homeschooling for the month.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    It's in Anthony Kenny's memoirs (quoted here: https://arikdondi.com/2019/08/01/what-does-studying-classics-at-oxford-teach-you-about-running-a-country/).

    Although the first time I heard the story was from Boris' old tutor.
    Ah, thank you very much. Very Jowettian.

    Hmm - if Kenny said "On the basis of the tutors’ reports, I formed the judgement that while Boris had the necessary intelligence, he lacked the appropriate diligence to achieve the first-class degree that he clearly felt was his due."

    And he failed because he did not know his Aristotle. Imagine not knowing the Stagyrite after - what was it? - 4 years of Lit. Hum. Not a great (sorry) look.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    She earns at least double the median salary. That's pretty good going for someone with no qualifications. I need to take a leaf out of her book.
    The only qualification you need to be an MP is to win an election that does not mean you should automatically lead the country
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703
    HYUFD said:

    Yes but we do not make them PM otherwise you would give everyone walking down the street a go, Rayner has achieved no more than the average person on Epping High Street educationally and professionally
    Erm this is bonkers. She has risen to very near the top of the political ladder. A path that you wish dearly you could emulate. You have failed, as have thousands and thousands of others. She has succeeded. Hence she has achieved a sh*tload more than the average person on Epping High Street professionally and who cares about educationally.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited January 2021

    The Great Brexit Disaster:

    "Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork".

    Oh. Hmmmm. But I bet before Brexit, EVERY lorry had the correct paperwork.

    Oh - they didn't? Hmmmmm.
    This particular question will only be worrying for the government if this apparently early trickle of retailers pulling out becomes a flood.

    It's far too early to say how Brexit and many other processes will go this year, in all sorts of ways ; naturally.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    The only qualification you need to be an MP is to win an election that does not mean you should automatically lead the country
    That's literally why you think Boris should be Prime Minister. Because he wins elections.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    'Boris Johnson told not to hurl 'insults' by Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle'

    https://tinyurl.com/y2eu55cx
    No swearing there
  • GaussianGaussian Posts: 831
    Scottish case details are out, with some surprises. Among the worst affected now are Dumfries&Galloway and the Borders with case rates in the 400s and 500s. They had dropped to level 1 a couple weeks before Christmas ...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,692
    MrEd said:

    The question, interestingly, is whether the Democrats would be so keen given the shifts in the Hispanic vote in the election. It might temper their view.
    It's the right thing to do.
    The competitiveness of the putative state might just stop the Republicans vetoing it.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Overdid it on the Kant?
    I'm missing the pun. Can someone esplain please?
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,666
    HYUFD said:

    Given you did not vote Tory last year when they did and most still are on the latest polling I suggest I have more understanding of them than you
    Seriously? You know more about working class voters in the north than working class PBers in the north?

    Time out, comrade.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,549
    kinabalu said:

    So the public need to open their eyes then - and Labour must help them do it. I'd say it's a duty. Presiding over this mess should not translate to a lead in the polls. Something is not right there. Something is rotten in the state of Denmark. Very dangerous for our democracy if there is no penalty for callous incompetence in government.
    Maybe what is rotten is Labour's ability to look coherent.

    I mean, if you can't get a 24-carat, diamond-encrusted win on education, something's wrong. Against Gavin Williamson? Somebody REALLY isn't doing their job if that challenge is a no-score draw....
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    Please keep alienating vast swathes of your own voters. Thank you. :)
    The vast majority of Tory voters have more GCSEs than Rayner has
  • Describing Rayner as bright. OK.
    Describing her as quick. Christ.

    Her mouth hangs open at the end of every sentence like some ungulate.

    Over-promoted beyond words. At least its a blind spot that will help keep Labour away from responsibility.
  • HYUFD said:

    Yes but we do not make them PM otherwise you would give everyone walking down the street a go, Rayner has achieved no more than the average person on Epping High Street educationally and professionally
    What? Her profession is politics. Simply by being an MP, she's in the top 650 or so politicians in the UK; we can argue exactly how far up that list she is right now, but she's closer to the top than the bottom.

    I know that Epping is a cut above, but I never realised it was such a home of the gods...
  • Don't get me started on Dodds.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    edited January 2021
    Stocky said:

    Given that she as leader would be a gift for the Tories over Starmer I would have thought you`d be championing her HYUFD.
    She most likely would but no election is certain and we cannot afford the risk of having her as PM
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    HYUFD said:

    No swearing there
    But you said "She has no visible evidence of great intelligence either and the fact she used a debate in the Commons to shout 'scum' at a fellow MP shows she also needs to learn some manners as well".

    I know scum is a 4 letter word, but it's not swearing, so far as I know, unless it was prefixed with Tory or something like it.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    Rayner is very bright and quick, no question. She also conveys genuine warmth, which is a rare quality and invaluable among politicians.

    Re; a post on Brexit below, the Tory lead will continue for now ; but only if there aren't too many days with these kinds of stories in the media, or if they fade after February/March.

    "A growing number of retailers in the EU have decided they won’t deliver to Britain because of the new costs involved in sending packages after Brexit. Companies have said they are unwilling to register for VAT in the UK, with one Dutch firm calling the red tape “ludicrous”.

    It comes as problems emerged with the first lorries to cross from Great Britain into Northern Ireland. Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork, with waits of 10 hours at new border posts. Disruption means Sainsbury’s has reportedly lost around 700 product lines in NI – and the giant has been forced to stock goods from Spar."

    EU share trading flees London

    ESMA withdraws the registrations of four UK-based trade repositories

    drip drip drip
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818

    Don't get me started on Dodds.

    Annelise or Nigel?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    That is outrageously out-dated, not to say irrelevant.
    It isn't, the UK PM should have educational qualifications
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    HYUFD said:

    The vast majority of Tory voters have more GCSEs than Rayner has
    How many is a vast majority? 90%?
  • HYUFD said:

    You have never been a true Tory anyway, as proved by your votes for Blair and Farage
    I never voted for Farage, I voted to get rid of Farage by abolishing our MEPs.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    Gaussian said:

    Scottish case details are out, with some surprises. Among the worst affected now are Dumfries&Galloway and the Borders with case rates in the 400s and 500s. They had dropped to level 1 a couple weeks before Christmas ...

    Do you7 have the link please?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    Seriously? You know more about working class voters in the north than working class PBers in the north?

    Time out, comrade.
    Tory working class voters yes, they are no different to Tory working class voters in Epping really.

  • HYUFD said:

    No swearing there
    Get out of that barrel little fishy.

    'A swear word and clapping in the Commons: Boris Johnson's first PMQs were an explosive affair'

    https://tinyurl.com/y4l83vao
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    A man who stabbed three people to death in a Reading park believed he was carrying out "an act of religious jihad", a court has heard.

    The court heard the defendant, who had been refused asylum, had been involved with militias as part of the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi.

    Between 2013 and 2020 he was repeatedly arrested and convicted of various offences in the UK.

    While in HMP Bullingdon, Saadallah had associated with radical preacher Omar Brooks who is associated with banned terror group Al-Muhajiroun, the court heard. He was released from the prison in June, days before the attack.

    BBC News - Reading stabbings: Man motivated by 'religious jihad'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-55545669

    Odd - I thought it was repeatedly said NOT to be religiously motivated. Not doubting the story, more the reporting, and the need to downplay aspects.
  • Don't get me started on Dodds.

    But like Boris Johnson she's read PPE at Oxford, so she must be very intelligent as per the Boris fanbois.

    She even obtained a first, so she's much more intelligent Boris Johnson, amIright?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    That's literally why you think Boris should be Prime Minister. Because he wins elections.
    And he has an Oxford degree
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024

    But like Boris Johnson she's read PPE at Oxford, so she must be very intelligent as per the Boris fanbois.

    She even obtained a first, so she's much more intelligent Boris Johnson, amIright?
    Boris did not read PPE, as mentioned earlier he read literae humaniores
  • HYUFD said:

    Tory working class voters yes, they are no different to Tory working class voters in Epping really.

    Bollox, plenty of working class Northerners own their own home unlike those in the South who cannot because of the ridiculous house prices in the South.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    Carnyx said:

    How many is a vast majority? 90%?
    At least and they would all be more qualified to be PM than Rayner
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,165
    HYUFD said:

    And he has an Oxford degree
    😂 You're a funny man.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,104
    HYUFD said:

    The only qualification you need to be an MP is to win an election that does not mean you should automatically lead the country
    Yet we got landed with this clown through precisely that mechanism.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,666
    Slight cock-up from Bozo. He misread Veganuary as Vaginuary. That's why he is making a twat of himself every day.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    Don't get me started on Dodds.

    I disagree with you on Dodds. She is intellectually brilliant. I agree that isn`t everything but it`s a start. Raynor doesn`t even get past the starting pistol in my view.
  • HYUFD said:

    Boris did not read PPE, as mentioned earlier he read literae humaniores
    But it is an Oxford degree, I mean I thought about reading Greats at Oxford but I said no because I wanted to do a hard degree with a career pathway at the end of it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    Stocky said:

    I disagree with you on Dodds. She is intellectually brilliant. I agree that isn`t everything but it`s a start. Raynor doesn`t even get past the starting pistol in my view.
    Dodds would certainly be far more capable of doing the job of PM than Rayner is, as would Thomas Symonds or virtually any other Labour frontbencher
  • GaussianGaussian Posts: 831
    Carnyx said:

    Do you7 have the link please?
    https://public.tableau.com/profile/phs.covid.19#!/vizhome/COVID-19DailyDashboard_15960160643010/Overview
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,692
    edited January 2021
    HYUFD said:

    Fair enough but you can walk down any housing estate in the country and find someone who left school at 16 with no GCSEs and had a baby, you can use them in an election broadcast, you do not need to make them your candidate to be PM!
    How many do you find in the House of Commons, though ?

    And if we're being disparaging, there are plenty of slavish Tory loyalists on the backbenches already...

    Though given their average IQ, not quite so many intellectual snobs.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    HYUFD said:

    Dodds would certainly be far more capable of doing the job of PM than Rayner is, as would Thomas Symonds or virtually any other Labour frontbencher
    Both Dodds and Thomas Symonds are held in the highest regard by Starmer I heard. Either possible successors.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,104
    Gaussian said:

    Scottish case details are out, with some surprises. Among the worst affected now are Dumfries&Galloway and the Borders with case rates in the 400s and 500s. They had dropped to level 1 a couple weeks before Christmas ...

    As a hypothesis, being in a lower tier has made people more relaxed about taking the necessary precautions. Yet time and time again we’ve seen the virus move into area with previously low rates of infection and produce an explosion of new cases (at national level, cf. the Czech Republic).

    Which suggests that a weakness of the government’s tier strategy is that it encourages those in the lower tiers to imagine that the virus is somewhere else’s problem.
  • Rayner is very bright and quick, no question. She also conveys genuine warmth, which is a rare quality and invaluable among politicians.

    Re; a post on Brexit below, the Tory lead will continue for now ; but only if there aren't too many days with these kinds of stories in the media, or if they fade after February/March.

    "A growing number of retailers in the EU have decided they won’t deliver to Britain because of the new costs involved in sending packages after Brexit. Companies have said they are unwilling to register for VAT in the UK, with one Dutch firm calling the red tape “ludicrous”.

    It comes as problems emerged with the first lorries to cross from Great Britain into Northern Ireland. Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork, with waits of 10 hours at new border posts. Disruption means Sainsbury’s has reportedly lost around 700 product lines in NI – and the giant has been forced to stock goods from Spar."

    Spar NI not having the same problems as Spar ROI dominates operations on the island...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,370
    edited January 2021
    OK.

    I've run the numbers on Georgia. I took the six counties with the largest vote margin for each candidate (using NYTimes):
    - Fulton, DeKalb and Richmond for the Dems
    - Forsyth, Hall and Cherokee for the Republicans

    I then used electproject.github.io and looked at early voting turnout in 2020 and in 2021, to see where the biggest changes were.

    Here you go:
    Result      2020    2000    2001        Change
    Fulton D +46 57.9 42.4 -27%
    DeKalb D +67 60.8 46.6 -23%
    Forsyth R +33 73.2 47.9 -35%
    Hall R +43 61.3 37.6 -39%
    Richmond D +37 51.6 33.9 -34%
    Cherokee R +39 61.9 37.2 -40%
    Averaging it out, early voting turnout in Democrat areas fell 28% relative to November, and 38% in Republican areas. (And the most Democratic the county is, the smaller early voting turnout seems to be down.)

    I think that makes the Democrats favourites to win both Senate seats.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,104
    HYUFD said:

    The vast majority of Tory voters have more GCSEs than Rayner has
    Demonstrably false, since the majority of Tory voters are over retirement age, and I will leave you to look up the date when GCSEs were introduced.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,024
    edited January 2021

    But it is an Oxford degree, I mean I thought about reading Greats at Oxford but I said no because I wanted to do a hard degree with a career pathway at the end of it.
    Greats is a hard degree even if it most likely leads to academia or teaching unless you subsequently qualify in something else or as with Boris make writing your living as a journalist
  • The Great Brexit Disaster:

    "Some food shipments did not have the correct paperwork".

    Oh. Hmmmm. But I bet before Brexit, EVERY lorry had the correct paperwork.

    Oh - they didn't? Hmmmmm.
    I can guarantee you that every truck driving from the UK to the UK had the correct paperwork before Brexit.
This discussion has been closed.