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Former Welsh Secretary, Cheryl Gillam, dies after long illness – politicalbetting.com

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  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    I have no idea whether Starmer can ever surpass mediocrity.

    Many on this site laugh hysterically at Starmer's pathetic ineptitude compared to their hero Boris Johnson, and his unassailable popularity amongst the great unwashed. They may be more astute than I am, because Johnson comes across to me as being incredibly casual and wholly unsuited to high office (lucky yes, but serious, absolutely not).

    Now since the vaccination came on stream, the only issue of any interest to the national mainstream media has been vaccination progress statistics (no other metrics - or news- matters). On listening to the BBC R2 news broadcasts. I now try to pre-empt the presenter by beating him or her to the first words of the bulletin. So I start with a, "Boris Johnson..." I am correct around 50% of the time.

    Starmer may be dreadful, that remains to be seen, but he hardly gets a word in. During my almost 60 years, I have not come across a politician that dominates the media narrative like Johnson. It is predominantly positive too, and even when he gets it wrong, his errors are hoovered up (the Cenotaph effect). Not even Mrs Thatch. could manage that.
    What would work for SKS is this: He is honest, dull, decent electable. Most Tories/centre right don't look on the the idea of a SKS government with horror, though he has not given habitual or new Tories anything very much to switch sides about.

    If Boris's wheels came off properly they would do so with a screech of brakes, smash of glass and scrunching metal, and in particular if the magic of his charisma vanished through the wrong sort of scandal (clearly conventional scandals won't hack it) or mistake on the Iraq/poll tax/Suez/25% inflation/15% mortgage rate/house price halve scale very quickly his style and rumpled look would cease to entertain and amuse and people would reflect on whether private character and public life may be related and have a fit of moral probity.

    At that point SKS looks just the ticket, and the Tory cabinet look like a Guardian cartoon.

    Just as Boris v Nicola is a great show (with N v Salmond as side attraction), waiting for the Godot of Boris's wheels coming off is the stuff of politics nerds. Avoiding it must be about Boris's number 1 concern.

  • QuincelQuincel Posts: 4,042
    kle4 said:

    How does he know people want 'radical change' before we see the outcome of the poll that has been commissioned to see if they want it? And if it does show a Tory lead, in what universe would that mean people actually want radical change from their opposition parties (including the one currently holding the seat), rather than showing they, for whatever reason, want what the Tories are offering?
    He's already done a poll of his gut feeling. Or perhaps of what he knows in his bones.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    IanB2 said:

    The irony is that your defence rests upon the assumption that he is a political imbecile.

    Anyone with experience of high office would understand the consequences of announcing weeks in advance that on April 5 you may be able to say more about travel restrictions (or permissions) and then briefing the press a day or two beforehand that this is what you intend to do.
    Where's the press release briefing the press that this is what is intended to be done?

    You keep claiming with a straight face that the press were briefed but I've not seen a single press release showing they were. The press reporting something doesn't make it so.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,823
    algarkirk said:

    No, I think we are agreed about Nicola Sturgeon. She does want independence, and isn't going to go for it until she can get it. As it happens I don't think that time can be foreseen. The difference I suspect is only that we are on different sides about the outcome we would like and the strength of the case once the gloves were off and campaigning mode began.

    Nicola Sturgeon is one of the two outstandingly able politicians in the UK. My admiration for her is almost limitless. I just think she is wrong. So do most people who, like me, live in close to the border of England and Scotland.

    Sturgeon's problem is that she no idea what to do if - when - Boris refuses a 2nd indyref. She clearly believes in indy, she would love to be the FM that delivered it, but there is no obvious route. Moreover, she has got a reputation, however unfair, for havering. Whereas Salmond is the man who looks like he REALLY wants it and will start riots if needs be (tho in fact I am unsure he has any better ideas that Sturgeon)

  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,509

    Great we agree. So let's be patient until everyone who can has been vaccinated.

    You're a legal mind I believe? What does the law say or typically do, about what an economist might call a 'negative externality'? I.e. something that you do that has a negative effect on someone else, effectively making you overconsume it because it's not part of your (self-interested) utility function.

    An economist might suggest a 'Pigovian tax' which effectively internalises the negative outcome within your utility function, altering consumption.

    So, what's the intersection, if there is one, between a market correction such as a Pigovian tax, liberty, the law and an infectious disease such as Covid-19?

    Public health in a pandemic is generally considered to be a public good, which is essentially a special case of an externality. In this context, public good means something different from what it means in every day speech. Such goods have two crucial characteristics: they are non-rivalrous (so you being healthy doesn't mean I'm less so) and non-excludable (so you can't easily stop an individual from getting it). The classic example of a public good is radio broadcasting - you can't easily stop somebody with a radio set from picking up whatever you broadcast, and you listening to your radio set doesn't mean I can't.

    All that background means that Pigovian taxes won't really work here. You basically have to give things like vaccines out for free to anyone, if you assume, as the government does, that nobody's protected till everybody is.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    edited April 2021
    My mask is being burnt on 21st June and not a day later. I shall mark myself as "Exempt" from the 22nd.

    As a conscientious tax payer, I won't be volunteering for a covid test ever again once I'm two vaccines down, which is about 4 weeks away.

    The social distancing rules can already hang themselves, given my entire family has already had one vaccine and are hence safe from serious infection.

    And I'll either rely on a paper vaccine certificate or if not allowed, will refrain from doing anything that requires the app.

    Enough is enough. Come on Starmer you pathetic excuse for a leader. Lead! Work with Tory backbenchers to kill the government's majority on all this. Give us a reason to cheer you just once and perhaps, just perhaps, you'll be thanked for it in May and 2024.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,410
    MaxPB said:

    We will, Israel is stuck at about 80% of the adult population, the UK will easily get past that.
    It's actually slightly worse than that: 77%.

    And this does not include the (Arab) residents of the Occupied Territories. So, the real chance of a refusenik Israeli adult coming across someone with Covid is actually pretty high relative to... say... what we'll have in the UK in three to six weeks time.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,364

    The one positive I think of for the covid id app passport is that Johnson will finally run out of excuses why he can't face a room full of face-to-face journalists who can ask a follow up.

    Today's presser was a disgrace.

    Once the crisis is over, isn't the plan to leave all this stuff to Allegra?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,555
    Comment under the Fraser piece on Spectator:

    "As with most Covid policies over the last year, I find the polling on this to be simply not credible, with some results showing support at over 70%. For identity papers. To go to the pub. In Britain. Never have I ever felt so disconnected for such a sustained period of time from what seems to be majority opinion in this country, assuming that it really is majority opinion. Either the Great British public have indeed lost their minds after being scared into submission, or something is just way off about the polls themselves. "



  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    Leon said:


    Sturgeon's problem is that she no idea what to do if - when - Boris refuses a 2nd indyref. She clearly believes in indy, she would love to be the FM that delivered it, but there is no obvious route. Moreover, she has got a reputation, however unfair, for havering. Whereas Salmond is the man who looks like he REALLY wants it and will start riots if needs be (tho in fact I am unsure he has any better ideas that Sturgeon)

    Ms Sturgeon's nightmare probably involves Boris granting an Indy Ref. After all, there is no guarantee she would win it and if she did win, she would have a huge list of problems on her plate.

    Life will be much easier for her if she can play the underdog for the rest of her political career.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,410
    gealbhan said:

    *** ALERT. The following rambling post contains doomporn

    I don’t think anyone can know what is going to happen.

    Why was the cautious Downing Street briefing predicting a third wave to hit UK? And why is that even deemed controversial? I haven’t come here to knock them, because we can’t just nod when we agree with what they say, sit on our nodding when we don’t, unless Unless Science itself does help with problems but not with 100% record to make us know for sure what happens. I’m not as convinced as I had become the vaccines are going to bring this to an end anytime soon and the roadmap is leading to any end to COVID spikes and lockdowns. It all died back last year without vaccines.

    The problems on the next phase I think is, 2nd and 3rd time of getting covid, where you can feel more sick than the other time and maybe even more chance of long covid the second and third time of getting sick with it, which, crucially, brings with it the issue of work age population not being able to work. The economic disaster bit of the pandemic could be yet to come.

    My guess now is we are going into a lull between lockdown, also pandemic enters new phase where we try to live with it as normal as possible, yet the long covid casualties start mounting up into economic damage so all the countries go broke.
    So, your view is that vaccines suddenly stop working?

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,555
    moonshine said:

    My mask is being burnt on 21st June and not a day later. I shall mark myself as "Exempt" from the 22nd.

    As a conscientious tax payer, I won't be volunteering for a covid test ever again once I'm two vaccines down, which is about 4 weeks away.

    The social distancing rules can already hang themselves, given my entire family has already had one vaccine and are hence safe from serious infection.

    And I'll either rely on a paper vaccine certificate or if not allowed, will refrain from doing anything that requires the app.

    Enough is enough. Come on Starmer you pathetic excuse for a leader. Lead! Work with Tory backbenchers to kill the government's majority on all this. Give us a reason to cheer you just once and perhaps, just perhaps, you'll be thanked for it in May and 2024.

    Hear, hear on Starmer.

    Get off the bloody fence for once and oppose FFS.

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    Comment under the Fraser piece on Spectator:

    "As with most Covid policies over the last year, I find the polling on this to be simply not credible, with some results showing support at over 70%. For identity papers. To go to the pub. In Britain. Never have I ever felt so disconnected for such a sustained period of time from what seems to be majority opinion in this country, assuming that it really is majority opinion. Either the Great British public have indeed lost their minds after being scared into submission, or something is just way off about the polls themselves. "



    One explanation is that many people have so completely given up their lives to screens of one type or another that it doesn't really matter where they are. They could be in the same room for the rest of their lives and still be able to watch their screens. Therefore lockdown doesn't particularly bother them.
  • QuincelQuincel Posts: 4,042

    Comment under the Fraser piece on Spectator:

    "As with most Covid policies over the last year, I find the polling on this to be simply not credible, with some results showing support at over 70%. For identity papers. To go to the pub. In Britain. Never have I ever felt so disconnected for such a sustained period of time from what seems to be majority opinion in this country, assuming that it really is majority opinion. Either the Great British public have indeed lost their minds after being scared into submission, or something is just way off about the polls themselves. "



    People with strong political views and a coherent political philosophy find it very hard to appreciate how rare they are, and how many people have weakly held and varied views with no specific philosophy beyond what feels to them like common sense.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,555
    MaxPB said:

    Yup, it's so obvious that Hancock and Gove are pushing this now. Look at the new bullshit model that's been briefed out tonight. They're simply trying to scare people into accepting that this is the price of a "free" society. Look at how so many usually well informed people on here have accepted that business will not be able to operate as normal without them when there is no scientific basis for that to be true.
    The backbone of the conservative party needs to act now. Surely the vast majority of the membership don't want a "papers please" society and will have no truck with digital id apps and all that big state crap?

    Am I deluded?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Click on that link, click on "Asia and South Asia" and check the UK's figure.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    We had enough questions asked about vaccine passports today to know that the PM cannot, or will not, answer them. Given the ferocity of the debate ahead — and the depth of concern in his party — this bodes ill.

    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/johnson-is-in-trouble-over-vaccine-passports-and-it-s-showing

    The issue is a classic. Opinions are easy and everyone can switch their opinions at will. To do nothing (far the easiest to implement) may well be absolutely impossible, especially in the international sphere.
    To do something sounds great until you actually try to decide enough policy to be able to draft some legislation. At that point it becomes a legal drafting nightmare; followed by a parliamentary nightmare of opposition from a sensible right, left and liberal caucus; followed immediately by a nightmare of implementation.

    IMHO getting is right is almost impossible, getting it wrong could be the stuff of which governments don't recover. Being the opposition is a piece of cake.

    It is the biggest immediate danger to the government's long term survival.

    If it is humanly possible the safest course is for government only to allow commerce etc to impose the rules it wishes, and to legislate to permit but not require every individual to possess, free, a vaccine status document just like a driving licence.

  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    The backbone of the conservative party needs to act now. Surely the vast majority of the membership don't want a "papers please" society and will have no truck with digital id apps and all that big state crap?

    Am I deluded?
    The trouble is that when push comes to shove, there are so few Tory MPs with sufficiently firm principles to do anything other than make a bit of a whinge before heading into the Aye lobby. The pointless money wasting mass testing, the social distancing and masks for another year, the Stasi app... any of them by themselves would warrant a letter to 1922. But all three?! What is Tissue Price's position?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022



    Hear, hear on Starmer.

    Get off the bloody fence for once and oppose FFS.

    But he doesn’t want to oppose this, as he’s massively in favour of it. Doubly so, if the other side take the brickbats for having to implement it.

    I usually dislike the playing of base politics, but is the LOTO really too blind to see a good chance of defeating the government here?

    He should be working with the libertarian Tories, he won’t need to look too far to find 45 of them willing to vote against.

    He’ll probably whip Labour to abstain.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    Banging on about LGBT on Twitter rather than opposing some of the worst and most significant policy of recent decades?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Leon said:

    Sturgeon's problem is that she no idea what to do if - when - Boris refuses a 2nd indyref. She clearly believes in indy, she would love to be the FM that delivered it, but there is no obvious route. Moreover, she has got a reputation, however unfair, for havering. Whereas Salmond is the man who looks like he REALLY wants it and will start riots if needs be (tho in fact I am unsure he has any better ideas that Sturgeon)

    If the choice is between NS who says 'I would like independence but the polls aren't there for us' and Salmond who is saying (you suggest) '50% want independence so let's have a riot' a lot of unionists - about 50% of the population - will back NS on that issue. There are plenty of people who don't want Scotland turned into either Catalonia or NI.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Presumably he’ll make the same apology after his next visit to a mosque, or a temple?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,555
    moonshine said:

    The trouble is that when push comes to shove, there are so few Tory MPs with sufficiently firm principles to do anything other than make a bit of a whinge before heading into the Aye lobby. The pointless money wasting mass testing, the social distancing and masks for another year, the Stasi app... any of them by themselves would warrant a letter to 1922. But all three?! What is Tissue Price's position?
    At some point the Great British Public will say enough of all this. Then the tide will go out and they will found wanting.

    Or maybe I don't live in the country I thought I lived in.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Some of the replies on Twitter to this are really idiotic.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,538
    Sandpit said:

    Presumably he’ll make the same apology after his next visit to a mosque, or a temple?
    Depends how vocal they are about their beliefs.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,555

    Once the crisis is over, isn't the plan to leave all this stuff to Allegra?
    Indeed. Johnson likes to play the Big Important Prime Minister when it suits him, but not when he has to answer for the shit that his government is planning.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,823
    algarkirk said:

    If the choice is between NS who says 'I would like independence but the polls aren't there for us' and Salmond who is saying (you suggest) '50% want independence so let's have a riot' a lot of unionists - about 50% of the population - will back NS on that issue. There are plenty of people who don't want Scotland turned into either Catalonia or NI.

    Yes, most Scots of any persuasion would be appalled by the UDI/endless demos route proposed by Salmond, Sturgeon's problem is that enough Nats ARE prepared to take this wild road. 30% of YES voters mebbes?

    Boris has to look generous and pensive, but be flinty in his refusal of indyref2, then he has a real prospect of watching YES split in two. However his refusal may inflame Nat opinion and unite them. Impossible to say

    Perilous times for both sides. Boris has to and will say No, however, as he is the PM of the UK and has to act in the interests of the entire UK (Scotland included). Let all British MPs in the Commons have a free vote on indyref2, or not. Then close the book for a few years
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    At some point the Great British Public will say enough of all this. Then the tide will go out and they will found wanting.

    Or maybe I don't live in the country I thought I lived in.
    Distant Facebook contacts are quite useful because they remind me that there really are moral high horsers who have religiously stuck to every rule for a year and even this weekend, only saw family outside despite them all already having been vaccinated. I can privately smirk at such loopy masochism but it seems it's actually the prevalent view, which makes it altogether less funny.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,335
    ...
    I wonder if any Labour MPs criticised Theresa May when she visited? Apparently Boris went there in 2009! What is it about the place?
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826

    Once the crisis is over, isn't the plan to leave all this stuff to Allegra?
    All governments have long had press secretaries doing briefings.

    The only difference is that the briefing will be on camera. Doing briefings is not original to Allegra.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087
    edited April 2021
    Sandpit said:

    Presumably he’ll make the same apology after his next visit to a mosque, or a temple?
    Jesus House – which is part of the Redeemed Christian Church of God – has allegedly carried out “exorcisms” on people who are “sexually attracted to members of their own sex" and opposes gay marriage.

    It is however a black majority church, showing again the clashes between the cultural left and some of the most socially conservative BAME elements within the Labour Party coalition

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,410
    It's an EU survey, so it's results can't be trusted...

    [JOKE!]
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,538
    Just catching up on Rigby and Chile. Witty was incredibly diplomatic. I think it needed a firmer answer.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,677
    Quincel said:

    People with strong political views and a coherent political philosophy find it very hard to appreciate how rare they are, and how many people have weakly held and varied views with no specific philosophy beyond what feels to them like common sense.
    It's not that they are ready to make a supreme sacrifice of liberty as the writer supposes - most people don't see liberty as an indivisible unity covering everything from having vaccination cards to abolishing freedom of speech. They just don't think carrying a vaccination card is a big deal, and pragmatically it might offer some protection, so they're mildly up for it.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362
    rcs1000 said:

    So, your view is that vaccines suddenly stop working?

    It’s exactly the sort of glib one liners like yours I received back that could actually prove something is missing from the discussion. Let me explain it like this, then you could actually say wether you can see the point I am making.

    Do I believe vaccines work? Is that vaccination programmes in general or just this one? I believe in general that vaccination is a great breakthrough in human science. So about covid vaccine? What do you mean work? That it makes covid disappear? If so, in what sort of timeframe

    Is it really fiction for me to say the briefing today offered up potential or even likelihood of third wave in UK?

    And one for you if I may. Would you put the risk, that while we come out of lockdown and try to cohabit with covid, the risk to the working population getting long covid and hurting the economy is zero - it’s such a silly point I am making it shouldn’t even be brought up and bottom out?
  • isamisam Posts: 41,335
    edited April 2021
    Sandpit said:

    Presumably he’ll make the same apology after his next visit to a mosque, or a temple?
    Fans of Sir Keir talk up his competence, assuredness, and forensic eye for detail but he’s had to apologise for trying to start a fight w Boris in the commons after he got the wrong end of the stick about the EMA, & again now he’s been visiting a homophobic church that Theresa May was slaughtered for attending in the last parliament. It’s only a mile or two away from his front door, he can’t really plead ignorance. What are his redeeming features, other than not being Corbyn, and being chief Remainer?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    tlg86 said:

    Just catching up on Rigby and Chile. Witty was incredibly diplomatic. I think it needed a firmer answer.

    My answer to every death rigby question would be a simple....NEEEEEXT QUESTION.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    The backbone of the conservative party needs to act now. Surely the vast majority of the membership don't want a "papers please" society and will have no truck with digital id apps and all that big state crap?

    Am I deluded?
    Don't tempt me.
  • gealbhangealbhan Posts: 2,362

    At some point the Great British Public will say enough of all this. Then the tide will go out and they will found wanting.

    Or maybe I don't live in the country I thought I lived in.
    I presume you live in UK? The answer is obvious to me, your entire life you have lived in a conservative country not a libertarian one.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192

    At some point the Great British Public will say enough of all this. Then the tide will go out and they will found wanting.

    Or maybe I don't live in the country I thought I lived in.

    That sounds like me a few years ago.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    How is this possible? I don't suppose we can rely on the likes of Beth Rigby to ask Johnson about this any time soon.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    moonshine said:

    Banging on about LGBT on Twitter rather than opposing some of the worst and most significant policy of recent decades?
    Starmer owes you nothing. Stop whinging about him. You wouldn't vote Labour in a million years.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    My answer to every death rigby question would be a simple....NEEEEEXT QUESTION.
    Mine would be that it’s important that we all play by the rules, isn’t it Beth? It would make her job completely untenable, if every politician she speaks to kept referring back to her own indiscretions.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,555
    Not bloody surprising after the last few days. Pathetic.

    Apparently he is now annoyed that the Telegraph sought to highlight his own words when he said vaxports were "unbritish".

    Presumably because he was still waiting to be told which side of the fence to dangle his legs over.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087
    isam said:

    Fans of Sir Keir talk up his competence, assuredness, and forensic eye for detail but he’s had to apologise for trying to start a fight w Boris in the commons after he got the wrong end of the stick about the EMA, & again now he’s been visiting a homophobic church that Theresa May was slaughtered for attending in the last parliament. It’s only a mile or two away from his front door, he can’t really plead ignorance. What are his redeeming features, other than not being Corbyn, and being chief Remainer?
    He has a brain and had a successful career as a top barrister, I don't see anyone else in Labour doing better and most would do worse. However Boris is the best Tory leader since Thatcher so he will not find it easy
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,271
    rcs1000 said:

    It's actually slightly worse than that: 77%.

    And this does not include the (Arab) residents of the Occupied Territories. So, the real chance of a refusenik Israeli adult coming across someone with Covid is actually pretty high relative to... say... what we'll have in the UK in three to six weeks time.
    Though with the high rates amongst Haredi and also Arab Israelis the remaining 23% must include a fair number of survivors with antibodies.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    kinabalu said:

    Starmer owes you nothing. Stop whinging about him. You wouldn't vote Labour in a million years.
    In England we find ourselves in a two party system at present. If you are too precious to let me vote for your Labour Party then just who am I supposed to vote for if I want the government to crash?
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    moonshine said:

    Banging on about LGBT on Twitter rather than opposing some of the worst and most significant policy of recent decades?
    I'm giving up on Starmer. He's just not up to it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087
    Cyclefree said:

    I'm giving up on Starmer. He's just not up to it.
    The only Labour figure who might have done better than Starmer is Chuka Umunna, who is similar ideologically but more charismatic.

    Unfortunately for Labour he left for the LDs and is now working as a corporate adviser
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,410
    Foxy said:

    Though with the high rates amongst Haredi and also Arab Israelis the remaining 23% must include a fair number of survivors with antibodies.
    That's a fair point.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    dixiedean said:
    Have to be the £20k a week cottage in the Cotswolds for them instead....
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    gealbhan said:

    I presume you live in UK? The answer is obvious to me, your entire life you have lived in a conservative country not a libertarian one.
    If it were genuinely a conservative country it would be sceptical of state power and grand solutions.

    Being in favour of traditional British freedoms does not make one a libertarian. It makes one .... well ..... British.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559
    That photo looks like much more like Stanley than the Boris who fought the last election.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,335
    HYUFD said:

    The only Labour figure who might have done better than Starmer is Chuka Umunna, who is similar ideologically but more charismatic.

    Unfortunately for Labour he left for the LDs and is now working as a corporate adviser
    That’s a good point - I always thought he should be Labour Leader. He would be doing much better in my view
  • Cyclefree said:

    I'm giving up on Starmer. He's just not up to it.
    Most indicators show he is losing the public through dithering and fence sitting

    I believe he is a decent mp but to be honest he is bland, trying too hard to be popular, and frightened of his shadow

    However, in just over four weeks the huge opinion poll across the UK, including Hartlepool by election, will be a big moment for the Labour Party if the present trend in the polls continues to election day
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    HYUFD said:

    The only Labour figure who might have done better than Starmer is Chuka Umunna, who is similar ideologically but more charismatic.

    Unfortunately for Labour he left for the LDs and is now working as a corporate adviser
    What about Jo Rowling>?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,271
    Cyclefree said:

    I'm giving up on Starmer. He's just not up to it.
    I
    Cyclefree said:

    I'm giving up on Starmer. He's just not up to it.
    I was never convinced. I think that next year, unless there is a major turnaround he should step down.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,943
    Meanwhile...The Jimmy White v Hendry match is of a terrible standard.
    There is a reason McEnroe doesn't try to qualify for the Wimbledon main draw.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    HYUFD said:

    The only Labour figure who might have done better than Starmer is Chuka Umunna, who is similar ideologically but more charismatic.

    Unfortunately for Labour he left for the LDs and is now working as a corporate adviser
    What an odd choice. I'd forgotten all about him.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823

    I thought conservatives were in favour of maintaining our bedrock freedoms and traditions?

    Seems it is only the flag itself and not the freedoms, history and way of life it represents that matters to this lot.
    Post of the evening.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    gealbhan said:

    It’s exactly the sort of glib one liners like yours I received back that could actually prove something is missing from the discussion. Let me explain it like this, then you could actually say wether you can see the point I am making.

    Do I believe vaccines work? Is that vaccination programmes in general or just this one? I believe in general that vaccination is a great breakthrough in human science. So about covid vaccine? What do you mean work? That it makes covid disappear? If so, in what sort of timeframe

    Is it really fiction for me to say the briefing today offered up potential or even likelihood of third wave in UK?

    And one for you if I may. Would you put the risk, that while we come out of lockdown and try to cohabit with covid, the risk to the working population getting long covid and hurting the economy is zero - it’s such a silly point I am making it shouldn’t even be brought up and bottom out?
    You seem to spend most of your either hinting at or directly forecasting misery and disaster. It’s little wonder people respond with concise sentences, to do otherwise would require successive lengthy essays saying the same thing.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559
    isam said:

    That’s a good point - I always thought he should be Labour Leader. He would be doing much better in my view
    Chuka was just another smug London politico. He would not have connected with the Midlands, still less with Red Wall Labour. Labour needs somebody from Sheffield or Leeds or Newcastle who would not flinch from kicking Boris in the bollocks (politically).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087

    What an odd choice. I'd forgotten all about him.
    Or maybe Andy Burnham, however he is also ineligible having left Westminster to be Mayor of Manchester
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,271
    edited April 2021

    The government don't have time to control the tourists, they are far too busy devising schemes to control access in and out of pubs.
    Are they actually tourists though? It's not as if the sights are open!

    For example one of my Greek colleagues reappeared last week after 10 days in his flat to do a locum. He has residence rights, but a Greek passport, and arrived for work, but would look like a tourist in the stats as he doesn't need a work visa.
  • Chuka was just another smug London politico. He would not have connected with the Midlands, still less with Red Wall Labour. Labour needs somebody from Sheffield or Leeds or Newcastle who would not flinch from kicking Boris in the bollocks (politically).
    Andy Burnham maybe
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087
    Foxy said:

    I I was never convinced. I think that next year, unless there is a major turnaround he should step down.
    Why? Corbyn and Ed Miliband were hopeless and neither stepped down until the electorate made the decision for them
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Cyclefree said:

    I'm giving up on Starmer. He's just not up to it.
    Jess Phillips would have done better I feel. That's with hindsight - I can't remember who I felt would be best at the time.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559

    Andy Burnham maybe
    He has come as near as anybody, when he refused to accept the Manchester lockdown was right.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    I have to say there is a serious lack of talent on the opposition benches. Not a single MP stands out as being able to take the fight to the government. All spineless.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,271

    Chuka was just another smug London politico. He would not have connected with the Midlands, still less with Red Wall Labour. Labour needs somebody from Sheffield or Leeds or Newcastle who would not flinch from kicking Boris in the bollocks (politically).
    Angela Rayner...and as Deputy she gets the gig for some months during a contest.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651
    Foxy said:

    I I was never convinced. I think that next year, unless there is a major turnaround he should step down.
    Who do you think would or should replace him?
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,683
    moonshine said:

    In England we find ourselves in a two party system at present. If you are too precious to let me vote for your Labour Party then just who am I supposed to vote for if I want the government to crash?
    Alba.
  • londonpubmanlondonpubman Posts: 3,641
    HYUFD said:

    Or maybe Andy Burnham, however he is also ineligible having left Westminster to be Mayor of Manchester
    But it is possible to return from mayoralty to Westminster and do quite well!
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526

    He has come as near as anybody, when he refused to accept the Manchester lockdown was right.
    But he was wrong....all that playing hardball just cost lives.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087
    Foxy said:

    Angela Rayner...and as Deputy she gets the gig for some months during a contest.
    Angela Rayner is ghastly, appallingly rude in the Commons and barely has a GCSE, even Corbyn was better than she would be
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,683
    HYUFD said:

    The only Labour figure who might have done better than Starmer is Chuka Umunna, who is similar ideologically but more charismatic.

    Unfortunately for Labour he left for the LDs and is now working as a corporate adviser
    I fancy Rachel Reeves.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    algarkirk said:

    The issue is a classic. Opinions are easy and everyone can switch their opinions at will. To do nothing (far the easiest to implement) may well be absolutely impossible, especially in the international sphere.
    To do something sounds great until you actually try to decide enough policy to be able to draft some legislation. At that point it becomes a legal drafting nightmare; followed by a parliamentary nightmare of opposition from a sensible right, left and liberal caucus; followed immediately by a nightmare of implementation.

    IMHO getting is right is almost impossible, getting it wrong could be the stuff of which governments don't recover. Being the opposition is a piece of cake.

    It is the biggest immediate danger to the government's long term survival.

    If it is humanly possible the safest course is for government only to allow commerce etc to impose the rules it wishes, and to legislate to permit but not require every individual to possess, free, a vaccine status document just like a driving licence.

    It is the safest but also the right course.

    If companies wish to impose rules that's their choice; if customers want venues to impose rules that's their choice.

    It isn't the states choice. They're not responsible.

    We've gotten too used to the state making our decisions for us this past year, it isn't healthy. People should make their own decisions.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087

    Jess Phillips would have done better I feel. That's with hindsight - I can't remember who I felt would be best at the time.
    Jess Phillips is probably the only credible Labour alternative in the Commons but she is even further right than Starmer, so would not get the gig even if she wanted it
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,030
    edited April 2021
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087

    Chuka was just another smug London politico. He would not have connected with the Midlands, still less with Red Wall Labour. Labour needs somebody from Sheffield or Leeds or Newcastle who would not flinch from kicking Boris in the bollocks (politically).
    Blair was also a London lawyer and managed to win the Midlands and Red Wall
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    MaxPB said:

    I have to say there is a serious lack of talent on the opposition benches. Not a single MP stands out as being able to take the fight to the government. All spineless.

    I agree. Might seem an odd question but do Labour's rules require leadership nominees to be MPs or can they be Lords?

    I am serious about Jo Rowling. She'd wipe the floor with all of them if she wanted to.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,103
    algarkirk said:

    If the choice is between NS who says 'I would like independence but the polls aren't there for us' and Salmond who is saying (you suggest) '50% want independence so let's have a riot' a lot of unionists - about 50% of the population - will back NS on that issue. There are plenty of people who don't want Scotland turned into either Catalonia or NI.

    That is bollox
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    Cyclefree said:

    Who do you think would or should replace him?
    The one I would least like to lead Labour is Jess Phillips, but I'm fairly confident Labour won't choose her. She lacks the right genitals to be leader of the Labour Party to start with.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    Phone poll on a bank holiday weekend....that doesn't sound ideal for gathering opinion.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,087

    I fancy Rachel Reeves.
    Does she like trains, could be a date?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,121
    People aged under-30 in the UK may stop being given the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, over concerns about rare blood clots, according to Channel 4 News.

    Several countries across Europe have suspended its use in their vaccine programmes over the concerns, and data on Friday showed that seven people had died from blood clots in the UK after getting the jab.

    “Two senior sources have told this programme that while the data is still unclear, there are growing arguments to justify offering younger people – below the age of 30 at the very least – a different vaccine,” the broadcaster reported on Monday night.

    The UK’s regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), said no decision had been taken. The body, along with several scientists, said the benefits of the vaccine in preventing Covid far outweigh the small risks of blood clots, and continue to encourage people to get their jabs.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    HYUFD said:

    Blair was also a London lawyer and managed to win the Midlands and Red Wall
    Chuka is Tony Blair with the bullshit / insincerity turned up to 11...000.
This discussion has been closed.