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With 10 weeks to go to the Holyrood election new Scottish poll has the SNP down to lowest point sinc

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  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,453
    Andy_JS said:

    I wonder if it occurs to Corbyn supporters that without Corbyn they might be doing worse than with Starmer.
    Doesn't matter. He's still a loser...
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Age related data

    image
    image
    image

    @Malmesbury would it be possible to do a chart showing the decline in different age rates from a peak date, scaled to using a '100' starting point for all the age groups?

    Does that make sense? So we could see the percentage decline in deaths, hospital and admissions etc from the same date for each age group?
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    edited March 2021

    Oh don't be so stupidly partisan. For one, I wasn't comparing Bozo with Starmer (he is leader of Labour btw, and is as yet largely untested!), I was comparing Johnson with Margaret Thatcher, who was, love her or loathe her, a colossus. The only thing about Boris er er er Johnson is his stomach, and the colossal consequences of his incompetence ("oh but the vaccines the vaccines" you will no doubt nauseously and obsequiously cry in your inability to point to anything else he has got lucky with while in office).
    Sounds like you're the only one crying as Boris' ratings continue to climb on the back of his world-beating vaccine rollout.

    It's almost as if he knows much more about how to do the job than you do...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,453
    HYUFD said:

    Starmer will be thanking his lucky stars the Tories won the 2017 county council elections by 11%, thus even 8% behind on the new Survation he can still claim a 'swing' and council seat gains from the Tories in May.

    If it was just the 2016 local seats up again, when Labour and the Tories were neck and neck, the headlines would likely be Labour going backwards.
    The 2016 seats are likely to be worse for Labour than the 2017 will be good for them, so the narrative might well still be "Labour going backwards....."
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    I see a couple of folk on the last thread were making tearful 'I'd vote for Jackie Baillie if I could' declarations. She's no 1 on the Labour West Scotland list so she'll be re-elected as an MSP whatever happens.

    One would have hoped PBers would have slightly more of a clue about Scotland's voting system than Galloway.

    https://twitter.com/jamesdoleman/status/1366108187557048322?s=20
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,724
    MIx it in with some charlie. I think we all need it.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    Van-Tam: overall effect of both vaccines in over 70s - single dose preventing 60% of illnesses and 80% of hospitalisations. Single dose of Pfizer vaccine cuts deaths by 85% in this age group (insufficient data available for AZ, which came into service later.)
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Animal_pb said:

    That poll has the nasty, grinding-rock feeling of the Great British electorate starting to decide that SKS is a bit of a dud. That tends to only go one way, once it sets in.
    I don't carry a torch for Starmer ( I have been a Tory for most of my adult life), but I also heard people write Cameron off in a similar way, and also John Major. The latter went on to win a GE and the former won twice. Incidentally, I recall that John Major was once "more popular than Churchill" according to an opinion poll and headline for the Telegraph in 1991 (1st Gulf War). He wasnt so popular by 1997! Opinion polls in the middle of a pandemics or crisis mean jack shit. Starmer will also be helped by the slow realisation, even by the politically slow, that Boris Johnson is an incompetent buffoon ("oh the vaccine rollout, the vaccine rollout" the politically gullible will still be saying ad nauseam!)
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    The 2016 seats are likely to be worse for Labour than the 2017 will be good for them, so the narrative might well still be "Labour going backwards....."
    Possibly, though they may be able to offset that if Khan wins big in London and they retake the West Midlands Mayoralty from Andy Street and overtake the Tories to take back second in Scotland too.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    No, his incompetence changed the nature of the game.

    The latter tries only came about due to England having to take the risks which opened up the game.
    Alternatively, England could have played like a professional squad instead of a pub side after the third round.

    Then this would be moot...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,453
    Ideally, they'll be able to administer it within a chocolate bar...
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    DougSeal said:

    An immunologist gives his considered scientific opinion...

    https://twitter.com/andrew_croxford/status/1366424545226293257

    Amen brother!!!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    I don't carry a torch for Starmer ( I have been a Tory for most of my adult life), but I also heard people write Cameron off in a similar way, and also John Major. The latter went on to win a GE and the former won twice. Incidentally, I recall that John Major was once "more popular than Churchill" according to an opinion poll and headline for the Telegraph in 1991 (1st Gulf War). He wasnt so popular by 1997! Opinion polls in the middle of a pandemics or crisis mean jack shit. Starmer will also be helped by the slow realisation, even by the politically slow, that Boris Johnson is an incompetent buffoon ("oh the vaccine rollout, the vaccine rollout" the politically gullible will still be saying ad nauseam!)
    Starmer strikes me as a UK Hollande or Biden, he will not win because he is a greatly popular, charismatic leader but because he is a relatively offensive alternative to an unpopular populist leader, if that is the case in 2024
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,734

    Ideally, they'll be able to administer it within a chocolate bar...
    Why would you want to stick a chocolate bar up your nose?
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243
    HYUFD said:

    If the SNP fail to get a majority but only scrape back again with the Greens the Scots will not even be voting majority SNP anyway
    No but they will still have voted for a party supporting Independence. Were I in Scotland I would not be able to bring myself to vote for the SNP as it is currently configured. But I would vote for the Greens as an alternative that still expressed my support for Independence.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281

    Ideally, they'll be able to administer it within a chocolate bar...
    Very many moons ago I had my Polio inoculation on a sugar cube!
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Sounds like you're the only one crying as Boris' ratings continue to climb on the back of his world-beating vaccine rollout.

    It's almost as if he knows much more about how to do the job than you do...
    He knows how to gull the gullible if you consider that is part of his job? Speaking of the supremely gullible, I have decided that for Lent I will start being nice to them. How are you today? Having a good one?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,453

    Why would you want to stick a chocolate bar up your nose?
    Hey, it's chocolate....
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,486

    I don't carry a torch for Starmer ( I have been a Tory for most of my adult life), but I also heard people write Cameron off in a similar way, and also John Major. The latter went on to win a GE and the former won twice. Incidentally, I recall that John Major was once "more popular than Churchill" according to an opinion poll and headline for the Telegraph in 1991 (1st Gulf War). He wasnt so popular by 1997! Opinion polls in the middle of a pandemics or crisis mean jack shit. Starmer will also be helped by the slow realisation, even by the politically slow, that Boris Johnson is an incompetent buffoon ("oh the vaccine rollout, the vaccine rollout" the politically gullible will still be saying ad nauseam!)
    Boris Johnson is the most written off and underestimated politician in my lifetime, though, however competent he may be at governing. I first heard someone write him off in 2008, during his campaign to be Mayor of London. I wonder if people will still be making that mistake if he's PM a decade from now?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    Fishing said:

    Boris Johnson is the most written off and underestimated politician in my lifetime, though, however competent he may be at governing. I first heard someone write him off in 2008, during his campaign to be Mayor of London. I wonder if people will still be making that mistake if he's PM a decade from now?
    His best case scenario, perhaps, is to be the Baldwin of the age. Baldwin, after all, won three elections with majorities that made Blair’s seem like Major’s, and never lost the popular vote as leader of the party.

    Trouble is, that isn’t a great scenario from rather too many other points of view.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,153
    I see that the Scottish Greens are standing in only two of the nine constituencies in the Lothian Region.

    Situation would be a lot harder for the SNP if the Greens saw this as an opportunity to win support as a party of independence not embroiled in scandal.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207
    Oh ffs - what a waste of space these journalists are
  • Floater said:

    Oh ffs - what a waste of space these journalists are

    They are utterly ridiculous
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Fishing said:

    Boris Johnson is the most written off and underestimated politician in my lifetime, though, however competent he may be at governing. I first heard someone write him off in 2008, during his campaign to be Mayor of London. I wonder if people will still be making that mistake if he's PM a decade from now?
    I suppose one of the weaknesses of our quasi-democratic system is that, certainly in the case of Boris Johnson, you do not need to be competent to be popular. Boris Johnson has a certain cunning no doubt, and dishonesty can sometimes get some people a long way, particularly with the very gullible. He has been lucky, in the sense that he was the choice over Jeremy Corbyn. I suspect one day his luck will run out and his fall from grace may well be spectacular.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    He knows how to gull the gullible if you consider that is part of his job? Speaking of the supremely gullible, I have decided that for Lent I will start being nice to them. How are you today? Having a good one?
    I do hope that you don't teach students at the Nigel Foremain School of Political Leadership that winning over voters is an irrelevant skill for a politician. That way lies humiliating defeat of the sort suffered at Boris' hands by Ken Livingstone, the Remain campaign, the Tory Wets, Change UK, the Lib Dems, the Labour Party...
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    HYUFD said:

    Starmer strikes me as a UK Hollande or Biden, he will not win because he is a greatly popular, charismatic leader but because he is a relatively offensive alternative to an unpopular populist leader, if that is the case in 2024
    That is how I view him. He will be seen as a safe pair of hands that is a contrast to Billy Bunter. That is why he is a threat and the Tories will be very stupid if they underestimate him IMO.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,690

    I do hope that you don't teach students at the Nigel Foremain School of Political Leadership that winning over voters is an irrelevant skill for a politician. That way lies humiliating defeat of the sort suffered at Boris' hands by Ken Livingstone, the Remain campaign, the Tory Wets, Change UK, the Lib Dems, the Labour Party...
    Not to mention that little Japanese boy who tried to get in the way of Boris when he was holding a rugby ball.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    So they’ve found 6 cases out of 150,000 of the Brazilian variant they’ve sequenced...and the journalists are still wittering on about it?

    JVT playing it straight on European holidays and magnificently diplomatic on European countries approach to AZ.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513

    They are utterly ridiculous
    You only have yourselves to blame for watching the Q&A.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,486

    I suppose one of the weaknesses of our quasi-democratic system is that, certainly in the case of Boris Johnson, you do not need to be competent to be popular. Boris Johnson has a certain cunning no doubt, and dishonesty can sometimes get some people a long way, particularly with the very gullible. He has been lucky, in the sense that he was the choice over Jeremy Corbyn. I suspect one day his luck will run out and his fall from grace may well be spectacular.
    That's obviously what you want to happen, and it may well. I wouldn't bet on it though.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    I do hope that you don't teach students at the Nigel Foremain School of Political Leadership that winning over voters is an irrelevant skill for a politician. That way lies humiliating defeat of the sort suffered at Boris' hands by Ken Livingstone, the Remain campaign, the Tory Wets, Change UK, the Lib Dems, the Labour Party...
    Oh dear, you have got it bad. You really are a believer aren't you? I find people who are so brainwashed quite fascinating and sometimes frightening. Some might say quaint perhaps, but pretty sad. Boris Johnson definitely can fool some of the fools all of the time.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    If these stats are correct - and even though they are from JVT I very much hope they are - does it make a case for everyone under 60 not in a vulnerable group to have just one jab?

    After all, we generally have milder forms anyway and the key is to eliminate deaths and serious illnesses. Plus, it would appear, those who are mildly unwell/asymptomatic are not usually big spreaders of the disease.

    That could speed things up tremendously and free up capacity across the world.

    What do those people who know what they’re talking about think?
  • BannedinnParisBannedinnParis Posts: 1,884

    It was also very linear the last time it fell away after the first wave, IIRC.
    I thought it curved.

    Suggest putting a log on the two sets of data.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Such lowness, it is more than I can take.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,252
    RobD said:

    .

    Can you explain how that has "fucked the holiday industry"?
    I could be wrong here, but I suspect that - even if Brexit had never happened - this might not have been a banner year for the British tourism industry.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    HYUFD said:

    IDS would still lose Chingford unfortunately even with that tiny swing since 2019
    Chingford will be SKS' Putney
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    Many thanks to PBers for the TV recommendations. I shall bookmark the thread. TA

    On topic, whatever your views on the indyref question, whether Boris should allow it or not (I think he's absolutely right, and justified, in refusing, but I can see the opposing argument), the fact is, Realpolitik tells us he just won't allow it, whatever

    He wants to be known as the PM who delivered Brexit and steered us through Covid (with a wobbly start and a sprinting finish). Plus then some levelling up (if he can). So far, he's doing OK, as the polls show.

    Allowing a Sindyref into all that, and potentially losing Scotland from the Union, means THAT would be his epitaph, instead.

    They've all learned from Brexit. Referendums ruin prime ministerial careers. Cameron will only be remembered for his Brexit defeat. Quite a tragic fate

    Sindyref 2 is not going to happen until 2024 earliest
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    Oh dear, you have got it bad. You really are a believer aren't you? I find people who are so brainwashed quite fascinating and sometimes frightening. Some might say quaint perhaps, but pretty sad. Boris Johnson definitely can fool some of the fools all of the time.
    “You can fool some of the people all the time, and those are the ones you want to concentrate on.”

    ― George W. Bush
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    If true, this is an extremely embarrassing story and an extremely unnecessary lapse of judgement.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9311719/Labour-deputy-leader-Angela-Rayner-charged-taxpayer-249-pair-PERSONALISED-AirPods.html
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    I'm sure this piece will only add to the love and respect felt towards Campbell on PB

    https://twitter.com/heraldscotland/status/1366440599025459205?s=20
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087
    edited March 2021

    I thought it curved.

    Suggest putting a log on the two sets of data.
    It was surprisingly linear for quite a while - curved out in the end, of course...

    An old chart...

    image
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,080
    HYUFD said:

    Starmer strikes me as a UK Hollande or Biden, he will not win because he is a greatly popular, charismatic leader but because he is a relatively offensive alternative to an unpopular populist leader, if that is the case in 2024
    ‘tis the general way of things. Trump only won because he wasn’t Clinton. Macron because he wasn’t Le Pen. Johnson because he wasn’t Corbyn. People do tend to vote negatively.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    edited March 2021

    Looks like the special chips the government put in the vaccine were worth every penny... :wink:
    It'll look a lot more suspicious once it gets into the 20s, 30s and 40s and they start indicating Tory support - so they had better switch to the placebos soon.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    I see that the Scottish Greens are standing in only two of the nine constituencies in the Lothian Region.

    Situation would be a lot harder for the SNP if the Greens saw this as an opportunity to win support as a party of independence not embroiled in scandal.

    You have to remember that most Green support is parasitical and it does not do to bite the hand that feeds you.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556

    Oh dear, you have got it bad. You really are a believer aren't you? I find people who are so brainwashed quite fascinating and sometimes frightening. Some might say quaint perhaps, but pretty sad. Boris Johnson definitely can fool some of the fools all of the time.
    Well, you have repeatedly tried to sell yourself as a expert on political leadership despite, er, knowing nothing about it, so you must have considerable faith in your own ability to fool and brainwash others.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    edited March 2021
    https://twitter.com/GlennBBC/status/1366448131496361986?s=20


    So it had to be gouged out of him, and he only did it at the last minute, to save his skin. Do the SNP realise how bad this looks?!
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,585
    ydoethur said:

    If true, this is an extremely embarrassing story and an extremely unnecessary lapse of judgement.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9311719/Labour-deputy-leader-Angela-Rayner-charged-taxpayer-249-pair-PERSONALISED-AirPods.html

    It’s no wonder people think all politicians are the same.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Fishing said:

    Boris Johnson is the most written off and underestimated politician in my lifetime, though, however competent he may be at governing. I first heard someone write him off in 2008, during his campaign to be Mayor of London. I wonder if people will still be making that mistake if he's PM a decade from now?
    He has surprised me on several occasions. The thing is, we might think he is an incompetent buffon, he might well be an incompetent buffoon, but so far he has succeeded electorally. No that doesn't mean he will always do so, but it does mean we cannot rule out further success, whether it be luck or something else.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    ydoethur said:

    If true, this is an extremely embarrassing story and an extremely unnecessary lapse of judgement.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9311719/Labour-deputy-leader-Angela-Rayner-charged-taxpayer-249-pair-PERSONALISED-AirPods.html

    She won't be alone I bet.

  • Leon said:

    https://twitter.com/GlennBBC/status/1366448131496361986?s=20


    So it had to be gouged out of him, and he only did it at the last minute, to save his skin. Do the SNP realise how bad this looks?!

    The whole thing is unbelievable and if the SNP hold onto their popularity they will be very lucky
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Leon said:

    https://twitter.com/GlennBBC/status/1366448131496361986?s=20
    So it had to be gouged out of him, and he only did it at the last minute, to save his skin. Do the SNP realise how bad this looks?!

    If the options were looking bad either way, it won't make much of a difference, so you go for the least bad option.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,486
    edited March 2021
    Animal_pb said:

    That poll has the nasty, grinding-rock feeling of the Great British electorate starting to decide that SKS is a bit of a dud. That tends to only go one way, once it sets in.
    The electorate isn't monolithic on this - as (I think) OGH pointed out, he's a pin-up boy for soft LibDems. One of my close relatives has been a LibDem for 30 years but is now switching. But as a wealthy, suburban professional and Remainer, he is atypical.

    Starmer will do nothing for Labour in the red wall though. No matter how many flags he hides in front of.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,453
    Leon said:

    https://twitter.com/GlennBBC/status/1366448131496361986?s=20


    So it had to be gouged out of him, and he only did it at the last minute, to save his skin. Do the SNP realise how bad this looks?!

    Bigger question is: how bad do the contents look?
  • Leon said:

    So it had to be gouged out of him, and he only did it at the last minute, to save his skin. Do the SNP realise how bad this looks?!

    Let's see if they even release the advice, or just a dozen pages of redactions...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    edited March 2021

    Oh dear, you have got it bad. You really are a believer aren't you?
    ...He's called BluestBlue.
    He can 'defend' himself by claiming now the data shows that that is good, but of course there was no data showing quasi ineffectiveness so that'd be bull.
  • Time_to_LeaveTime_to_Leave Posts: 2,547
    kle4 said:

    She won't be alone I bet.

    I used to give MPs some benefit of the doubt on this and assume they were usually made to look silly by a really junior staff member just processing receipts without looking at them. However we are now getting to the stage that you have to question the judgement of an MP who doesn’t get someone to run a sense check on their expenses, given the stories that keep turning up. None of them ever seem to though.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    kle4 said:

    If the options were looking bad either way, it won't make much of a difference, so you go for the least bad option.
    It suggests to me that the legal advice (if it shows up unredacted, still an IF) is bad for Sturgeon but not necessarily fatal. So they've decided to risk it, and hope she survives rather than throwing Swinney out to thwart the inquiry (which would look VERY bad)

    Still, it's all pretty shit for the SNP. lol
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,243
    HYUFD said:

    No it isn't, it is entirely in accordance with the Scotland Act 1998 in which Union matters are reserved to Westminster.

    We Tories have a majority at Westminster, have been clear 2014 was a once in a generation vote and will not therefore allow a legal indyref2.

    If it was such a material change anyway Yes would be over 62% given 62% of Scots voted Remain in 2016, not just 43% ie even less than it got in 2014

    https://twitter.com/BallotBoxScot/status/1365978299265150978?s=20
    If we had relied upon opinion polls as an indicator of whether or not to hold a referendum there would never have been a Brexit vote.

    Why are you so afraid of an Independence vote if you are so sure the Unionists would win?
  • Time_to_LeaveTime_to_Leave Posts: 2,547
    Leon said:

    It suggests to me that the legal advice (if it shows up unredacted, still an IF) is bad for Sturgeon but not necessarily fatal. So they've decided to risk it, and hope she survives rather than throwing Swinney out to thwart the inquiry (which would look VERY bad)

    Still, it's all pretty shit for the SNP. lol
    Or he’s knifing her and wants to be first minister....
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    edited March 2021
    kle4 said:

    She won't be alone I bet.
    Buying earphones on expenses is fair enough. After all, she is an MP and a very senior one, and she doesn’t live alone. She will hear lots of things that need to be kept confidential. From that point of view, I wouldn’t even have a problem with them being top of the range. Same with any MP. I want them to have the tech to do their job, and do it well, and I don’t mind paying for that.

    But if she wants them personalised, she pays that extra herself. That’s what looks bad here (if it’s true).

    Just as, my school gives me a laptop. It’s not top of the range but it’s OK. It does the job. If I want something bells and whistles, which will dance when I command it to and I use for things other than work, I would expect to pay for it myself.
  • Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    The whole thing is unbelievable and if the SNP hold onto their popularity they will be very lucky
    The SNP are the party of independence. Lots and lots and lots of people want independence. So they'll keep voting for the SNP regardless of the circumstances.

    This is uncontroversial. So long as the core policy remains in place they can get away with anything, and still scoop up at least 45% of the constituency vote.
  • contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    edited March 2021
    I wondered whether the tory recovery group's best chance of earlier lockdown release might be hijacking the Sunak budget. Labour will vote against that, after all.

    But actually I'm now not sure they will!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    If we had relied upon opinion polls as an indicator of whether or not to hold a referendum there would never have been a Brexit vote.

    Why are you so afraid of an Independence vote if you are so sure the Unionists would win?
    Yes, referendums are unpredictable, which is even more reason to refuse an indyref2 and respect the 'once in a generation' 2014 vote.

    As a non Tory you are entitled to your opinion but we Tories have a majority and we will say a firm no and refuse a legal indyref2 as we are entitled to do under the Scotland Act 1998
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    I used to give MPs some benefit of the doubt on this and assume they were usually made to look silly by a really junior staff member just processing receipts without looking at them. However we are now getting to the stage that you have to question the judgement of an MP who doesn’t get someone to run a sense check on their expenses, given the stories that keep turning up. None of them ever seem to though.
    Same thing when parties get knuckles rapped for election expenses issues. Yes, the law and guidance can be a confusing mess sometimes, but the parties at least have the people and resources to make sure they don't cock up. Benefit of the doubt goes to intentional action.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    Or he’s knifing her and wants to be first minister....
    He didn’t learn from before then that he’s just not very good as a leader?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    Or he’s knifing her and wants to be first minister....
    I have on occasions read opinions from Roddy Dunlop QC. They don't tend to be difficult to follow. Clear and succinct in my experience.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    BBC says Passengers say seven-hour Heathrow queues inhumane

    BJO says Don't f****ng fly then

    Admirably succinct.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited March 2021
    IanB2 said:

    ‘tis the general way of things. Trump only won because he wasn’t Clinton. Macron because he wasn’t Le Pen. Johnson because he wasn’t Corbyn. People do tend to vote negatively.
    Not really, Trump was a charismatic leader as Macron and Boris are too, all got lots of votes for them, not just against the other guy as Biden and Hollande did.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    ydoethur said:

    Buying earphones on expenses is fair enough. After all, she is an MP and a very senior one, and she doesn’t live alone. She will hear lots of things that need to be kept confidential. From that point of view, I wouldn’t even have a problem with them being top of the range. Same with any MP. I want them to have the tech to do their job, and do it well, and I don’t mind paying for that.

    But if she wants them personalised, she pays that extra herself. That’s what looks bad here (if it’s true).

    Just as, my school gives me a laptop. It’s not top of the range but it’s OK. It does the job. If I want something bells and whistles, which will dance when I command it to and I use for things other than work, I would expect to pay for it myself.
    I've always thought that. I think the seminal argument back in the expenses day for me was around a trouser press. As far as I saw it it'd be fine to pay for formal trousers for an MP if they don't have any or might struggle to afford them even on their salary, you need formal attire to attend the Commons chamber. But it doesn't matter how sharp your creases are or how flat the rest of the fabric is, so you can pay for that yourself.
  • The SNP are the party of independence. Lots and lots and lots of people want independence. So they'll keep voting for the SNP regardless of the circumstances.

    This is uncontroversial. So long as the core policy remains in place they can get away with anything, and still scoop up at least 45% of the constituency vote.
    Time will tell but as has been pointed out a considerable number of SNP supporters were formerly labour and support the union, they just thought the SNP would govern Scotland better

    It is now uncertain just how many of these supporters will stay will the SNP and as I have said before, some of my Scots family members are SNP supporters but also pro the Union
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585

    The SNP are the party of independence. Lots and lots and lots of people want independence. So they'll keep voting for the SNP regardless of the circumstances.

    This is uncontroversial. So long as the core policy remains in place they can get away with anything, and still scoop up at least 45% of the constituency vote.
    These things are never settled

    In 2005, 54% of Quebeckers wanted independence from Canada, 46% did not.

    The independenc movement, however, narrowly lost their last, second referendum, and the question has never been revisited.

    Nor is it likely to be. At the moment polls show 56% of Quebeckers want to stay in Canada, and only 32% want to Leave. The separatist movement has collapsed

    Unionists just have to show some backbone, and remain steady under fire, while developing some positive reasons for Scotland to stay in the UK: for the inevitable 2nd ref, which WILL come (just not in the short term)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_sovereignty_movement#Opinion_polls
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    ydoethur said:

    Buying earphones on expenses is fair enough. After all, she is an MP and a very senior one, and she doesn’t live alone. She will hear lots of things that need to be kept confidential. From that point of view, I wouldn’t even have a problem with them being top of the range. Same with any MP. I want them to have the tech to do their job, and do it well, and I don’t mind paying for that.

    But if she wants them personalised, she pays that extra herself. That’s what looks bad here (if it’s true).

    Just as, my school gives me a laptop. It’s not top of the range but it’s OK. It does the job. If I want something bells and whistles, which will dance when I command it to and I use for things other than work, I would expect to pay for it myself.
    It smacks of the 2009 Labour expenses scandal, all over again. One would have thought after that episode, another failure of personal proberty by senior party personnel should lead to a resignation.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    The SNP are the party of independence. Lots and lots and lots of people want independence. So they'll keep voting for the SNP regardless of the circumstances.

    This is uncontroversial. So long as the core policy remains in place they can get away with anything, and still scoop up at least 45% of the constituency vote.
    Yes, whilst Sindy support is so high, the floor to which SNP cock ups can cause the party support to fall is limited
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Leon said:

    These things are never settled

    In 2005, 54% of Quebeckers wanted independence from Canada, 46% did not.

    The independenc movement, however, narrowly lost their last, second referendum, and the question has never been revisited.

    Nor is it likely to be. At the moment polls show 56% of Quebeckers want to stay in Canada, and only 32% want to Leave. The separatist movement has collapsed

    Unionists just have to show some backbone, and remain steady under fire, while developing some positive reasons for Scotland to stay in the UK: for the inevitable 2nd ref, which WILL come (just not in the short term)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_sovereignty_movement#Opinion_polls
    I hope so.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585

    Time will tell but as has been pointed out a considerable number of SNP supporters were formerly labour and support the union, they just thought the SNP would govern Scotland better

    It is now uncertain just how many of these supporters will stay will the SNP and as I have said before, some of my Scots family members are SNP supporters but also pro the Union
    Yes, after many years of appearing sensible and competent compared to Westminster, suddenly the SNP look hugely inept, riven with internal wars, and incapable of being honest. This may make voters scrutinise the rest of their record, and think Hmmm, because their record is not very good

    That's the big damage from Salmondgate. It removes the SNP's and Sturgeon's supposed USP: calm and measured governance.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    It smacks of the 2009 Labour expenses scandal, all over again. One would have thought after that episode, another failure of personal proberty by senior party personnel should lead to a resignation.
    One would at least have hoped they had learned the fecking lesson - don’t take the piss.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,026

    I must admit I don't really have a good answer for why the gap between constituency and list votes for the SNP (regardless of the overall level) differ so much, much more than at the last election.

    Any thoughts on whether that gap is real?
    That is because people are going to give other independence parties their second vote. Last time they had nearly a million on list but due to winning most on constituency seats they got something like 4 list seats. So 800000 wasted votes. If they all went to another independence party they would get probably 20-30 extra seats.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,026
    Breaking: @johnswinney
    intends to release the key legal advice to Holyrood committee tomorrow
  • ydoethur said:

    Buying earphones on expenses is fair enough. After all, she is an MP and a very senior one, and she doesn’t live alone. She will hear lots of things that need to be kept confidential. From that point of view, I wouldn’t even have a problem with them being top of the range. Same with any MP. I want them to have the tech to do their job, and do it well, and I don’t mind paying for that.

    But if she wants them personalised, she pays that extra herself. That’s what looks bad here (if it’s true).

    Just as, my school gives me a laptop. It’s not top of the range but it’s OK. It does the job. If I want something bells and whistles, which will dance when I command it to and I use for things other than work, I would expect to pay for it myself.
    Getting your Airpods engraved at Apple is free.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223

    The SNP are the party of independence. Lots and lots and lots of people want independence. So they'll keep voting for the SNP regardless of the circumstances.

    This is uncontroversial. So long as the core policy remains in place they can get away with anything, and still scoop up at least 45% of the constituency vote.
    And as long as the Unionists parties only offer no to independence, thus will it stay. Given the utter dearth of policy or ideas offered by them it could be argued that they're actually more dependent on the constitutional debate than the SNP; in fact if the debate was suddenly magically resolved, the Tories in particular would revert to the dried out husk of the 90's and 2000s.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585
    ydoethur said:

    One would at least have hoped they had learned the fecking lesson - don’t take the piss.
    I need to see proof of "personalised" airpods. And what does "personalisation" mean?

    This site implies that if you buy the top range of Airpods you can personalise them for free. So she did that, and it cost us nothing

    https://www.apple.com/uk/shop/product/MWP22ZM/A/airpods-pro

    I guess you could get angry at her buying the best possible airpods, but life is probably too short for that (especially now)

    This is a mild embarrassment, and no more
  • solarflaresolarflare Posts: 3,906
    edited March 2021
    Surely the vaccine data is just going to make the case for unlocking faster and faster more and more compelling?

    Or he’s knifing her and wants to be first minister....
    Swinney, the whispering ghost shadow? Fuck me. That would be the most noticeable thing he'd done in a while.

    But let's see this legal advice. Out of interest did many folk here sit through the full Salmond session to the committee? Even having seen it all coming on the indy blogs, it was still remarkable.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,585

    Surely the vaccine data is just going to make the case for unlocking faster and faster more and more compelling?


    Swinney, the whispering ghost shadow? Fuck me. That would be the most noticeable thing he'd done in a while.

    But let's see this legal advice. Out of interest did many folk here sit through the full Salmond session to the committee? Even having seen it all coming on the indy blogs, it was still remarkable.
    https://twitter.com/RossFootball/status/1366454797566681088?s=20
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,026

    I see that the Scottish Greens are standing in only two of the nine constituencies in the Lothian Region.

    Situation would be a lot harder for the SNP if the Greens saw this as an opportunity to win support as a party of independence not embroiled in scandal.

    Don't be a silly billy , they have no chance of winning constituency seats whatsoever.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353

    Getting your Airpods engraved at Apple is free.
    And costs £50 more than buying the identical model, unengraved, from Amazon.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    Leon said:

    Yes, after many years of appearing sensible and competent compared to Westminster, suddenly the SNP look hugely inept, riven with internal wars, and incapable of being honest. This may make voters scrutinise the rest of their record, and think Hmmm, because their record is not very good

    That's the big damage from Salmondgate. It removes the SNP's and Sturgeon's supposed USP: calm and measured governance.
    They have been staggeringly incompetent in the way that they have governed Scotland.

    Our education system, once a source of legitimate pride, is falling into disarray.

    Our Universities are in a very bad place, dependent upon non EU students who might not come and English students who are no longer to be funded up here.

    Police Scotland has been a disaster, remote, unaccountable and incompetent. The number of people are not large but this police force covers 1/3rd of the British land mass. It just doesn't work.

    The centralisation of regulation has gutted local authorities of their responsibilities. Indeed local authorities have been starved of funds to generate the cash for SNP showpieces.

    £20-30m has been wasted on Bifab, another £20m on Ferguson Shipyard, £20m on wrongful prosecution of the Rangers administrators with more to come, £20-30m on the nationalisation of Prestwick airport, its staggering.

    None of that has mattered to a political generation who never think beyond constitutional issues. We really need a change.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,353
    Leon said:

    https://twitter.com/RossFootball/status/1366454797566681088?s=20
    It was a slip of the tongue, he was worrying about being locked up.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,453
    Leon said:

    Yes, after many years of appearing sensible and competent compared to Westminster, suddenly the SNP look hugely inept, riven with internal wars, and incapable of being honest. This may make voters scrutinise the rest of their record, and think Hmmm, because their record is not very good

    That's the big damage from Salmondgate. It removes the SNP's and Sturgeon's supposed USP: calm and measured governance.
    Tories have an interesting line to tread on all this. They need to damage the SNP to the extent that it really hurts independence. But not to the extent that it trashes the SNP so that Labour can start getting material numbers of Westminster seats. A seriously wounded Sturgeon still in place is probably Boris's best outcome.
  • Surely the vaccine data is just going to make the case for unlocking faster and faster more and more compelling?


    Swinney, the whispering ghost shadow? Fuck me. That would be the most noticeable thing he'd done in a while.

    But let's see this legal advice. Out of interest did many folk here sit through the full Salmond session to the committee? Even having seen it all coming on the indy blogs, it was still remarkable.
    I did and it was remarkable if you are interested in Scotland and it's politics

  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,540
    DavidL said:

    They have been staggeringly incompetent in the way that they have governed Scotland.

    Our education system, once a source of legitimate pride, is falling into disarray.

    Our Universities are in a very bad place, dependent upon non EU students who might not come and English students who are no longer to be funded up here.

    Police Scotland has been a disaster, remote, unaccountable and incompetent. The number of people are not large but this police force covers 1/3rd of the British land mass. It just doesn't work.

    The centralisation of regulation has gutted local authorities of their responsibilities. Indeed local authorities have been starved of funds to generate the cash for SNP showpieces.

    £20-30m has been wasted on Bifab, another £20m on Ferguson Shipyard, £20m on wrongful prosecution of the Rangers administrators with more to come, £20-30m on the nationalisation of Prestwick airport, its staggering.

    None of that has mattered to a political generation who never think beyond constitutional issues. We really need a change.
    I thought the bill for the vexatiious prosecution of Rangers' people was headed for £100m.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    ydoethur said:

    One would at least have hoped they had learned the fecking lesson - don’t take the piss.
    I wasn't sure you weren't directing that comment at me. For a moment, I imagined you were my Accountant.
This discussion has been closed.