Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Options

I agree with Shadsy – politicalbetting.com

1567911

Comments

  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    Cookie said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    kle4 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    @Aiannucci: Johnson using Republican tactics again. And this will only get worse. ID cards at poll stations coming in Queen’… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1391471399152324609

    I think ID cards, of some description, to vote while ok in theory seems disproportionate to the problems they are trying to address, but it's just lazy to label it as Republican tactics by Boris when some have been pushing this idea for bloody ages. I'd expect better from Iannuci than 'The bad man does something like the other people you don't like, so they are exactly the same' stuff.
    If you believe they want ID cards to make elections fairer rather than more favourable to them you are slipping. Their rationale is the same as the Republicans on this issue, bend democracy to the Tories/Republicans at the cost of fairness.
    But that works both ways. If you believe Labour oppose ID cards for voting in order to make elections fairer rather than more favourable to them you are also slipping.
    I don't see why a modicum of curiosity that voters are indeed who they say they are is treated with such horror. Don't they do it that way in NI?
    I am not a Labour fan, but don't think that is true. Not everything is opposites.
    No political party has ever proposed a change - or defended a status quo - to the voting system which was not in their interests electorally.
    Er, only up to a point. The SNP have urged it for Westminster.
    Interesting point. That would clearly rest in fewer SNP MPs. But it would make majority government pretty unlikely, therefore significantly increasing the influence of that reduced number of SNP MPs.
    The Scots ARE a canny lot!
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,980
    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    In that case, why did we have a Brexit?
    That was 30+ years since the first one.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412
    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    According to this poll tonight Independence is going backwatds


    https://twitter.com/scotlandinunion/status/1391462115374944257?s=19
    Good! I am not an advocate for independence! I am an advocate for democracy. Scotland just voted in record numbers to implement a 2nd referendum. How they choose to vote afterwards is not currently the question - that they have the right to have their democratic will carried out IS the question.
    I'm more and more convinced that the Unionists on PB and more generally are like whiny toddlers trying to think up successive excuses why they should not Go To Bed.
    How do you get more and more convinced than the 100% convinced you already were?
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412
    isam said:

    isam said:

    When I think of Sir Keir, almost instantly the words to Beat Surrender by The Jam come to mind

    "All the things that I shout about (but never act upon)
    All the courage and the dreams that I have
    (but seem to wait so long)
    My doubt is cast aside, watch phonies run to hide
    The dignified don't even enter in the game
    And if you feel there's no passion
    No quality sensation
    Seize the young determination
    Show the fakers you ain't foolin
    You'll see me come runnin
    To the sound of your strummin
    Fill my heart with joy and gladness
    I've lived too long in shadows of sadness"

    All the things he is not.

    Labour should be a revolutionary party campaigning for the rights of the workers and those left behind by capitalism. Corbyn may have been a nutter, but he had passion, and conviction. Labour voters should be young, enthusiastic and full of passion, not middle of the road and middle aged. I actually think Labour can be successful without being in government as relentless insurgents keeping the Tories on their toes. Sir Keir's corporate middle management style is the worst of all worlds - he isn't going to win, and he doesn't have any gusto. Labour should get rid and go left field


    At least one of

    Female
    Not white
    Not straight

    Should be essentials for their next leader. Walk the walk if you're going to talk the talk

    More identity politics in selecting the leader to match the identity politics they can't stop talking about?

    I presume you're trying to throw them off the scent here.
    I wasn't but it does look like that I guess... "non graduate" could be added to that list to make it less "woke".

    But they should be left field. Maybe my examples were lazy stereotypes of left field thinking, seems so old fashioned now, but there still hasnt been any of those boxes ticked as Lab leader.

    Labour should be a revolutionary movement for change, not a corporate party concerned about power.. I think I am becoming a Corbynite! Always late to the party
    Err, ok dude.
  • Options
    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    Pulpstar said:

    In a new gritty crime drama, a grizzled detective and his erstwhile side-kick hunt out who killed the Labour Party

    Spoiler. In episode eight it transpires it was an inside job all along.
    But who on the inside ?

    The deranged bloke from Sedgefield ?

    The gruff fellow from Kirkcaldy ?

    The nerdy chap from Doncaster ?
    Sedgefield Man is charged at the end of episode eight, but by episode ten it becomes apparent that he was a fool whose strings were being pulled by a shadowy Glaswegian syndicate (which was subsequently mown down in a hail of bullets by a more ruthless rival family.)
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,637
    Leon said:

    A beautiful, soft, elegantly warm evening, the first of the year. Camden is alive with happy drinkers, mellow and giggly. My daughters are growing and healthy and in their eager early teens. They laugh at me, as is only right

    Life is OK. We have survived

    Praise be

    Eager you say? Don't let a certain member of the royal family know.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    In that case, why did we have a Brexit?
    That was 30+ years since the first one.
    That wasn't the reason, the reason was that the electorate elected a government who wanted a referendum. Just like they have in Scotland...
  • Options
    AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    Baroness Chapman is married to the MP for Blaenau Gwent
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    The number of MSPs is relevant to the mandate. Whether the mandate should be denied by Westminster on arcane legal grounds is a separate question. My opinion is it could be but shouldn't be. For 2 reasons, one of principle, one pragmatic. The principle is the right of the Scottish people to decide whether they wish to stay a part of the union. The pragmatism is that to deny and delay would make an acrimonious split more likely. Remain would be favourite if the vote were held soon. Respect democracy, win the vote, secure the union. That's the right way, the honest way, the best way. So I suppose Johnson won't do it. Or might he? In truth I'm not so sure.
    And that’s exactly the point:

    The MSP mandate explicitly doesn’t include a referendum under the terms of the law that established the Scottish Parliament

    The right of the Scottish people to determine their future is more strongly demonstrated by the share of the vote which was about 50/50. If it had been 60/40 then I would have happily argued that Westminster should listen to that demand. But 50/50 doesn’t demonstrate a desire to go through the trauma of a further referendum
    Glad that Charles is on the "uppity Scotch were too stupid to know what they were voting for" bus. That is how you ensure the future of the union - tell Scotland that whatever it thinks it voted for it can't have it, so get back in line and do what England tell you to.

    How odd that the people on that bus claim to be Unionists.
    No, I’m not on the”uppity” bus

    I’m on the “that’s the law, buddy, and if you don’t like it then campaign for it to be changed” bus
    I mean objectively the Scots don't have the power to change that law through democracy. The SNP already hold pretty much every Scottish Westminster seat.

    I'm afraid you're being very hypocritical here Charles.
    No. The Union doesn’t just involve Scotland. Other parts of the Uk have a say as well.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,820
    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    According to this poll tonight Independence is going backwatds


    https://twitter.com/scotlandinunion/status/1391462115374944257?s=19
    Good! I am not an advocate for independence! I am an advocate for democracy. Scotland just voted in record numbers to implement a 2nd referendum. How they choose to vote afterwards is not currently the question - that they have the right to have their democratic will carried out IS the question.
    I'm more and more convinced that the Unionists on PB and more generally are like whiny toddlers trying to think up successive excuses why they should not Go To Bed. Mrs Thatcher after all accepted up fromt that a simple majority of SNP MPs was sufficient to trigger independence (implicitly, but there being no other criterion of political success that she would accept). Bot today has been an absolute masterclass in toddlerism.
    In fairness, (and though I am most definitely a unionist) many have been pretty open that under no circumstances was there going to be a referendum (permitted anyway) as far as they were concerned - so it's not actually hidden that its about whether there are defendable reasons that can be found from what occurred.

    Some have been, er, less defensible than others.
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    Leon said:

    A beautiful, soft, elegantly warm evening, the first of the year. Camden is alive with happy drinkers, mellow and giggly. My daughters are growing and healthy and in their eager early teens. They laugh at me, as is only right

    Life is OK. We have survived

    Praise be

    Look out! Here comes the killer asteroid!! (Just kidding!!!)
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    The number of MSPs is relevant to the mandate. Whether the mandate should be denied by Westminster on arcane legal grounds is a separate question. My opinion is it could be but shouldn't be. For 2 reasons, one of principle, one pragmatic. The principle is the right of the Scottish people to decide whether they wish to stay a part of the union. The pragmatism is that to deny and delay would make an acrimonious split more likely. Remain would be favourite if the vote were held soon. Respect democracy, win the vote, secure the union. That's the right way, the honest way, the best way. So I suppose Johnson won't do it. Or might he? In truth I'm not so sure.
    And that’s exactly the point:

    The MSP mandate explicitly doesn’t include a referendum under the terms of the law that established the Scottish Parliament

    The right of the Scottish people to determine their future is more strongly demonstrated by the share of the vote which was about 50/50. If it had been 60/40 then I would have happily argued that Westminster should listen to that demand. But 50/50 doesn’t demonstrate a desire to go through the trauma of a further referendum
    Glad that Charles is on the "uppity Scotch were too stupid to know what they were voting for" bus. That is how you ensure the future of the union - tell Scotland that whatever it thinks it voted for it can't have it, so get back in line and do what England tell you to.

    How odd that the people on that bus claim to be Unionists.
    No, I’m not on the”uppity” bus

    I’m on the “that’s the law, buddy, and if you don’t like it then campaign for it to be changed” bus
    I mean objectively the Scots don't have the power to change that law through democracy. The SNP already hold pretty much every Scottish Westminster seat.

    I'm afraid you're being very hypocritical here Charles.
    No. The Union doesn’t just involve Scotland. Other parts of the Uk have a say as well.
    Yes, but they shouldn't. That's the entire point of self-determination.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285

    Leon said:

    A beautiful, soft, elegantly warm evening, the first of the year. Camden is alive with happy drinkers, mellow and giggly. My daughters are growing and healthy and in their eager early teens. They laugh at me, as is only right

    Life is OK. We have survived

    Praise be

    Look out! Here comes the killer asteroid!! (Just kidding!!!)
    Or bits from the Chinese rocket....
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    According to this poll tonight Independence is going backwatds


    https://twitter.com/scotlandinunion/status/1391462115374944257?s=19
    Good! I am not an advocate for independence! I am an advocate for democracy. Scotland just voted in record numbers to implement a 2nd referendum. How they choose to vote afterwards is not currently the question - that they have the right to have their democratic will carried out IS the question.
    I'm more and more convinced that the Unionists on PB and more generally are like whiny toddlers trying to think up successive excuses why they should not Go To Bed.
    How do you get more and more convinced than the 100% convinced you already were?
    Cookie said:

    Carnyx said:

    Cookie said:

    Cookie said:

    kle4 said:

    Scott_xP said:

    @Aiannucci: Johnson using Republican tactics again. And this will only get worse. ID cards at poll stations coming in Queen’… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1391471399152324609

    I think ID cards, of some description, to vote while ok in theory seems disproportionate to the problems they are trying to address, but it's just lazy to label it as Republican tactics by Boris when some have been pushing this idea for bloody ages. I'd expect better from Iannuci than 'The bad man does something like the other people you don't like, so they are exactly the same' stuff.
    If you believe they want ID cards to make elections fairer rather than more favourable to them you are slipping. Their rationale is the same as the Republicans on this issue, bend democracy to the Tories/Republicans at the cost of fairness.
    But that works both ways. If you believe Labour oppose ID cards for voting in order to make elections fairer rather than more favourable to them you are also slipping.
    I don't see why a modicum of curiosity that voters are indeed who they say they are is treated with such horror. Don't they do it that way in NI?
    I am not a Labour fan, but don't think that is true. Not everything is opposites.
    No political party has ever proposed a change - or defended a status quo - to the voting system which was not in their interests electorally.
    Er, only up to a point. The SNP have urged it for Westminster.
    Interesting point. That would clearly rest in fewer SNP MPs. But it would make majority government pretty unlikely, therefore significantly increasing the influence of that reduced number of SNP MPs.
    Don't know about that. The same could be said of everyone else, right down to UKIP, Count Binface, and the LDs. Oh, and the assorted Greens.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,980

    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    In that case, why did we have a Brexit?
    That was 30+ years since the first one.
    That wasn't the reason, the reason was that the electorate elected a government who wanted a referendum. Just like they have in Scotland...
    The main difference being they elected one that could actually implement it.
  • Options
    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    In that case, why did we have a Brexit?
    Because Westminster sought instruction from the voters and, correctly, implemented the results of that referendum
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,556
    isam said:

    When I think of Sir Keir, almost instantly the words to Beat Surrender by The Jam come to mind

    "All the things that I shout about (but never act upon)
    All the courage and the dreams that I have
    (but seem to wait so long)
    My doubt is cast aside, watch phonies run to hide
    The dignified don't even enter in the game
    And if you feel there's no passion
    No quality sensation
    Seize the young determination
    Show the fakers you ain't foolin
    You'll see me come runnin
    To the sound of your strummin
    Fill my heart with joy and gladness
    I've lived too long in shadows of sadness"

    All the things he is not.

    Labour should be a revolutionary party campaigning for the rights of the workers and those left behind by capitalism. Corbyn may have been a nutter, but he had passion, and conviction. Labour voters should be young, enthusiastic and full of passion, not middle of the road and middle aged. I actually think Labour can be successful without being in government as relentless insurgents keeping the Tories on their toes. Sir Keir's corporate middle management style is the worst of all worlds - he isn't going to win, and he doesn't have any gusto. Labour should get rid and go left field


    At least one of

    Female
    Not white
    Not straight

    Should be essentials for their next leader. Walk the walk if you're going to talk the talk

    If I passionately didn't want Labour to be in power over the next 20 years I would certainly run with this agenda. A dose of this (grand daughter of Corbyn + yoof+ idealism+ gender and race politics) actually might see them off altogether.

  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,030
    edited May 2021

    Cookie said:

    eek said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Does anyone believe Keir Starmer could remain as leader if Batley & Spen is also lost at a by-election?

    Yes, if only because his opponents would die laughing...
    Why - labour haven't got a chance of keeping that seat
    Are you serious? I thought it would be a tougher hill to climb than Hartlepool, but I'm happy to defer to local knowledge.
    B/S is not Hartlepool. Much more Muslim, for a start, and not as working class. Also held by the Conservatives within living memory (held in 1992, IIRC). Once upon a time the latter would have been a distinct positive indicator for the Tories, but I'm not sure if it is any more.
    Are there any prices for it yet? My guess is Lab about 60% likely to win, Con about 40%.
    I think it is much more important for SKS to retain it than the Tories to take it. The pressure is all on Labour.

    It is like a relegation battle on the last day for SKS, any mistake can't be recovered from. And ... err ... won't there be some in his party who want him to fail ?

    The constituency seems to be 60 per cent leave. It is certainly more ethnically mixed than Hartlepool, but that also has potential pitfalls for Labour as well.

    I'd probably make Labour very slight favourites -- but then I made Labour favourites to hold Hartlepool.

    Overall, a knife-edge by-election in the midst of party disarray is not really what SKS needs right now.
    Kirklees local authority though, which contains Batley and Spen, was only 54.7% Leave which is significantly less than Hartlepool which was 69.6% Leave and there will be less BXP vote for the Tories to squeeze, though the blue vote should still be up and the Batley and Spen council results on Thursday saw the Tories and Labour tied.

    The LDs will also fancy their chances of making inroads into the Tory majority in Chesham and Amersham as the seat was in Chiltern local authority area (now in Bucks) which was 55% Remain.

    The top Tory only beat the top LD by 2% in Amersham and Chesham Bois on Thursday with the top Green on 6%.

    In Chesham the top Tory got 15% with the top LD on 9% and the top Labour candidate on 10% and the top Green on 6%

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=17&RPID=3792032

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=2&RPID=3791902
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412
    Putin's clearly going for "death by natural causes" here by bumping off any doctors who try and save him:

    https://twitter.com/Billbrowder/status/1391429735419363333?s=20
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803
    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    In that case, why did we have a Brexit?
    Because Westminster sought instruction from the voters and, correctly, implemented the results of that referendum
    But Westminster decided to impose a period of instability as a result of an election. Despite previous promises in the 2014 referendum.

    You see?
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited May 2021
    No real reshuffle apparently...nobody will budge (according to Owen Jones).

    https://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1391487843135066117?s=19
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,820
    BBC page showing the LDs in England have a net gain of 7 cllrs, and a council.

    Given what could have happened, I guess they'd be happy with that?
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    In that case, why did we have a Brexit?
    That was 30+ years since the first one.
    That wasn't the reason, the reason was that the electorate elected a government who wanted a referendum. Just like they have in Scotland...
    The main difference being they elected one that could actually implement it.
    That's not really relevant to the timing issue though.
  • Options
    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    eek said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Does anyone believe Keir Starmer could remain as leader if Batley & Spen is also lost at a by-election?

    Yes, if only because his opponents would die laughing...
    Why - labour haven't got a chance of keeping that seat
    Are you serious? I thought it would be a tougher hill to climb than Hartlepool, but I'm happy to defer to local knowledge.
    B/S is not Hartlepool. Much more Muslim, for a start, and not as working class. Also held by the Conservatives within living memory (held in 1992, IIRC). Once upon a time the latter would have been a distinct positive indicator for the Tories, but I'm not sure if it is any more.
    Are there any prices for it yet? My guess is Lab about 60% likely to win, Con about 40%.
    I think it is much more important for SKS to retain it than the Tories to take it. The pressure is all on Labour.

    It is like a relegation battle on the last day for SKS, any mistake can't be recovered from. And ... err ... won't there be some in his party who want him to fail ?

    The constituency seems to be 60 per cent leave. It is certainly more ethnically mixed than Hartlepool, but that also has potential pitfalls for Labour as well.

    I'd probably make Labour very slight favourites -- but then I made Labour favourites to hold Hartlepool.

    Overall, a knife-edge by-election in the midst of party disarray is not really what SKS needs right now.
    Kirklees local authority though, which contains Batley and Spen, was only 54.7% Leave which is significantly less than Hartlepool which was 69.6% Leave and there will be less BXP vote for the Tories to squeeze, though the blue vote should still be up.

    The LDs will also fancy their chances of making inroads into the Tory majority in Chesham and Amersham as the seat was in Chiltern local authority area (which was in Bucks) which was 55% Remain.

    The top Tory only beat the top LD by 2% in Amersham and Chesham Bois on Thursday with the top Green on 6%.

    In Chesham the top Tory got 15% with the top LD on 9% and the top Labour candidate on 10% and the top Green on 6%

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=17&RPID=3792032

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=2&RPID=3791902
    "The most overwhelming support for Brexit came from the Batley and Spen constituency with a 60% ‘Leave’ result."

    Source is here:

    https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/kirklees-constituency-voted-against-brexit-12593757

  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,820

    Putin's clearly going for "death by natural causes" here by bumping off any doctors who try and save him:

    https://twitter.com/Billbrowder/status/1391429735419363333?s=20

    Well Russia pulled The Death of Stalin from cinemas, so Putin may not have picked up on some obvious things to avoid should he ever find himself in need of good doctors.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081

    No real reshuffle apparently...nobody will budge (according to Owen Jones).

    https://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1391487843135066117?s=19

    They can't even organise a f*cking reshuffle FFS
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    edited May 2021
    Just had a wild thought -

    WHOM among the PB hordes would make the BEST independent/mini-party by-election candidate?

    My nomination is for Leon.

    Articulate, amusing, passionate, intelligent, determined (any book author has some grit in their gizzard).

    PLUS he'd be sure to snap up the votes of

    a) fellow flint knappers (who feel themselves seriously unrepresented in parliament)
    b) connoisseurs of his fine handcrafted flint dildos (a significant & varied slice of the electorate)
    c) drunken PBers (ditto)
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,556

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    TBF there was no-one to vote for if you wanted independence but not in the next X years. You had to vote for a 2023 Ref2 party, or a unionist one. A vote is a blunt instrument. Let us be thankful for the quiet refined genius of Westminster who will, with the noisy assistance of Nicola, close the matter down for now, keeping everyone in a job.

  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195

    No real reshuffle apparently...nobody will budge (according to Owen Jones).

    https://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1391487843135066117?s=19

    They can't even organise a f*cking reshuffle FFS
    It does have a certain hilarity about it though
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    I suppose Starmers non reshuffle isn't quite as comical as at the height of Jezza where he literally couldn't find enough MP to do jobs and they had to double up roles, as people just kept refusing.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 40,933
    edited May 2021
    algarkirk said:

    isam said:

    When I think of Sir Keir, almost instantly the words to Beat Surrender by The Jam come to mind

    "All the things that I shout about (but never act upon)
    All the courage and the dreams that I have
    (but seem to wait so long)
    My doubt is cast aside, watch phonies run to hide
    The dignified don't even enter in the game
    And if you feel there's no passion
    No quality sensation
    Seize the young determination
    Show the fakers you ain't foolin
    You'll see me come runnin
    To the sound of your strummin
    Fill my heart with joy and gladness
    I've lived too long in shadows of sadness"

    All the things he is not.

    Labour should be a revolutionary party campaigning for the rights of the workers and those left behind by capitalism. Corbyn may have been a nutter, but he had passion, and conviction. Labour voters should be young, enthusiastic and full of passion, not middle of the road and middle aged. I actually think Labour can be successful without being in government as relentless insurgents keeping the Tories on their toes. Sir Keir's corporate middle management style is the worst of all worlds - he isn't going to win, and he doesn't have any gusto. Labour should get rid and go left field


    At least one of

    Female
    Not white
    Not straight

    Should be essentials for their next leader. Walk the walk if you're going to talk the talk

    If I passionately didn't want Labour to be in power over the next 20 years I would certainly run with this agenda. A dose of this (grand daughter of Corbyn + yoof+ idealism+ gender and race politics) actually might see them off altogether.

    I am beginning to think maybe Labour shouldn't be concerned about being in power, but being constant opposition - to be fair it has been like that most of my life anyway, and when they were in power they had to wear Tory clothes, and smuggle in their big lefty ideas undercover. So why not just go for it, free from the constraints of focus group politics and worrying about polls - Let the Tories be the stiffs again

    That is why I like d being in UKIP , we knew we weren't ever going to be the government, so we could do and say what we liked/believed

  • Options
    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    kle4 said:

    BBC page showing the LDs in England have a net gain of 7 cllrs, and a council.

    Given what could have happened, I guess they'd be happy with that?

    They're still in the same coma they've been in for the last ten years, but at least the doctors haven't decided to switch off the life support machine.

    That's the present state, in the round, of the Liberal Democrats.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,760

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    According to this poll tonight Independence is going backwatds


    https://twitter.com/scotlandinunion/status/1391462115374944257?s=19
    Good! I am not an advocate for independence! I am an advocate for democracy. Scotland just voted in record numbers to implement a 2nd referendum. How they choose to vote afterwards is not currently the question - that they have the right to have their democratic will carried out IS the question.
    I'm more and more convinced that the Unionists on PB and more generally are like whiny toddlers trying to think up successive excuses why they should not Go To Bed.
    How do you get more and more convinced than the 100% convinced you already were?
    Well, you know, "Nats & Numbers".....
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,030
    edited May 2021

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    'A comfortable win for No' means at minimum 55%+, any lower margin than 2014 and Nationalists will see the swing to Yes and push for indyref3 the next day and the UK government having been so weak as to give Nationalists indyref2 before a generation has elapsed since indyref1 in 2014 will not be strong enough to resist.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,556
    edited May 2021

    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    eek said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Does anyone believe Keir Starmer could remain as leader if Batley & Spen is also lost at a by-election?

    Yes, if only because his opponents would die laughing...
    Why - labour haven't got a chance of keeping that seat
    Are you serious? I thought it would be a tougher hill to climb than Hartlepool, but I'm happy to defer to local knowledge.
    B/S is not Hartlepool. Much more Muslim, for a start, and not as working class. Also held by the Conservatives within living memory (held in 1992, IIRC). Once upon a time the latter would have been a distinct positive indicator for the Tories, but I'm not sure if it is any more.
    Are there any prices for it yet? My guess is Lab about 60% likely to win, Con about 40%.
    I think it is much more important for SKS to retain it than the Tories to take it. The pressure is all on Labour.

    It is like a relegation battle on the last day for SKS, any mistake can't be recovered from. And ... err ... won't there be some in his party who want him to fail ?

    The constituency seems to be 60 per cent leave. It is certainly more ethnically mixed than Hartlepool, but that also has potential pitfalls for Labour as well.

    I'd probably make Labour very slight favourites -- but then I made Labour favourites to hold Hartlepool.

    Overall, a knife-edge by-election in the midst of party disarray is not really what SKS needs right now.
    Kirklees local authority though, which contains Batley and Spen, was only 54.7% Leave which is significantly less than Hartlepool which was 69.6% Leave and there will be less BXP vote for the Tories to squeeze, though the blue vote should still be up.

    The LDs will also fancy their chances of making inroads into the Tory majority in Chesham and Amersham as the seat was in Chiltern local authority area (which was in Bucks) which was 55% Remain.

    The top Tory only beat the top LD by 2% in Amersham and Chesham Bois on Thursday with the top Green on 6%.

    In Chesham the top Tory got 15% with the top LD on 9% and the top Labour candidate on 10% and the top Green on 6%

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=17&RPID=3792032

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=2&RPID=3791902
    "The most overwhelming support for Brexit came from the Batley and Spen constituency with a 60% ‘Leave’ result."

    Source is here:

    https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/kirklees-constituency-voted-against-brexit-12593757

    I don't think either one is remotely in the bag, and both have the potential to do damage to Boris. At the moment a Labour loss at Batley won't add much to their pre existing woes. But a Tory fail to win in Batley, and losing or a narrow win at the Hams would have a little touch of failure about it, unpleasing to Boris.

  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Those on here who are celebrating the death of the Labour Party have short memories or are young - or both. We've been here before.

    In 1983, Thatcher destroyed the Labour Party, eating deep into its heartlands in the north, the midlands and London. It was absolutely rife for commentators to report that the Party had been taken over by "Hampstead intellectuals", as personified by its hapless leader, Michael Foot, and had lost, or abandoned, its working class roots. The Labour Party was dead and would never govern again, they said. 27.6% of the votes - a complete disaster, an existential crisis. And it was.

    But the rest is history. Yes, it took a long time for the Party to reinvigorate itself. But I suspect overcoming Boris's undoubted political skills will be somewhat easier than it was to break through against Thatcherism, if only because the current PM and his cabal could implode quite quickly.

    Can I just say that I do not celebrate the possible demise of labour

    HMG needs a proper opposition and so does the country
    I would. I think it is unhealthy how institutionally influential the unions are in Labour. An independent party would be a better opposition
    But of course the influence of corporate donors and the landed gentry in the Conservative Party is a force for good?
    Relatively few corporate donors these days, just rich individuals. But I would probably cap donations from any individuals / affiliated companies at say £100k per year.

    The landed gentry don’t have that much influence any more
    Big Money = Free Speech! Or so says SCOTUS.
    Well we know from Dred Scott and Roe vs Wade that SCOTUS is not infallible
    I said after SCOTUS handed down decision re: Bush v Gore, that now Al could REALLY empathize with Dred Scott.

    (Bit surprised that nobody - that I'm aware of anyway - has NOT called Alex Salmond "Dred Scott"?)
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,125

    No real reshuffle apparently...nobody will budge (according to Owen Jones).

    https://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1391487843135066117?s=19

    In office, but not in power....
  • Options
    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,880
    kle4 said:

    BBC page showing the LDs in England have a net gain of 7 cllrs, and a council.

    Given what could have happened, I guess they'd be happy with that?

    They had a net gain of 2 in Chesterfield
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited May 2021

    No real reshuffle apparently...nobody will budge (according to Owen Jones).

    https://twitter.com/jessicaelgot/status/1391487843135066117?s=19

    In office, but not in power....
    The David Brent analogy from last night is rather fitting....
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    According to this poll tonight Independence is going backwatds


    https://twitter.com/scotlandinunion/status/1391462115374944257?s=19
    Good! I am not an advocate for independence! I am an advocate for democracy. Scotland just voted in record numbers to implement a 2nd referendum. How they choose to vote afterwards is not currently the question - that they have the right to have their democratic will carried out IS the question.
    I'm more and more convinced that the Unionists on PB and more generally are like whiny toddlers trying to think up successive excuses why they should not Go To Bed.
    How do you get more and more convinced than the 100% convinced you already were?
    Well, you know, "Nats & Numbers".....
    That's because I had no idea to what extent of logic and mathematics Unionists would go until the last 48 hours. The simile had not occurred to me till this evening, if slightly surprisingly, right down to the sulks and unwillingness when the errors are pointed out. So what I say is (a) true and (b) entirely logical.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    I agree with you, and it's just a question of tactics.

    On one thing I'd be firm, though, it shouldn't happen until Autumn 2022 at the earliest because it'll put a huge question mark over the UK's recovery and we all desperately need that right now - the hole we're in is simply too big to risk the rebound.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,030

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,760
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Aaron Bastani waxing lyrical about China - the most negative thing he could bring himself to say

    "They aren't perfect - they don't have the NHS"

    Lisa Nandy now being crapped all over by them - apparently she is a neocon.......
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,030

    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    eek said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Does anyone believe Keir Starmer could remain as leader if Batley & Spen is also lost at a by-election?

    Yes, if only because his opponents would die laughing...
    Why - labour haven't got a chance of keeping that seat
    Are you serious? I thought it would be a tougher hill to climb than Hartlepool, but I'm happy to defer to local knowledge.
    B/S is not Hartlepool. Much more Muslim, for a start, and not as working class. Also held by the Conservatives within living memory (held in 1992, IIRC). Once upon a time the latter would have been a distinct positive indicator for the Tories, but I'm not sure if it is any more.
    Are there any prices for it yet? My guess is Lab about 60% likely to win, Con about 40%.
    I think it is much more important for SKS to retain it than the Tories to take it. The pressure is all on Labour.

    It is like a relegation battle on the last day for SKS, any mistake can't be recovered from. And ... err ... won't there be some in his party who want him to fail ?

    The constituency seems to be 60 per cent leave. It is certainly more ethnically mixed than Hartlepool, but that also has potential pitfalls for Labour as well.

    I'd probably make Labour very slight favourites -- but then I made Labour favourites to hold Hartlepool.

    Overall, a knife-edge by-election in the midst of party disarray is not really what SKS needs right now.
    Kirklees local authority though, which contains Batley and Spen, was only 54.7% Leave which is significantly less than Hartlepool which was 69.6% Leave and there will be less BXP vote for the Tories to squeeze, though the blue vote should still be up.

    The LDs will also fancy their chances of making inroads into the Tory majority in Chesham and Amersham as the seat was in Chiltern local authority area (which was in Bucks) which was 55% Remain.

    The top Tory only beat the top LD by 2% in Amersham and Chesham Bois on Thursday with the top Green on 6%.

    In Chesham the top Tory got 15% with the top LD on 9% and the top Labour candidate on 10% and the top Green on 6%

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=17&RPID=3792032

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=2&RPID=3791902
    "The most overwhelming support for Brexit came from the Batley and Spen constituency with a 60% ‘Leave’ result."

    Source is here:

    https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/kirklees-constituency-voted-against-brexit-12593757

    Still about 10% less Leave than Hartlepool even then, though I would not rule out the Tories gaining Batley and Spen from Labour but losing Chesham and Amersham to the LDs
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Nick Brown sacked as chief whip
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Fascinating
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,172
    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    The number of MSPs is relevant to the mandate. Whether the mandate should be denied by Westminster on arcane legal grounds is a separate question. My opinion is it could be but shouldn't be. For 2 reasons, one of principle, one pragmatic. The principle is the right of the Scottish people to decide whether they wish to stay a part of the union. The pragmatism is that to deny and delay would make an acrimonious split more likely. Remain would be favourite if the vote were held soon. Respect democracy, win the vote, secure the union. That's the right way, the honest way, the best way. So I suppose Johnson won't do it. Or might he? In truth I'm not so sure.
    And that’s exactly the point:

    The MSP mandate explicitly doesn’t include a referendum under the terms of the law that established the Scottish Parliament

    The right of the Scottish people to determine their future is more strongly demonstrated by the share of the vote which was about 50/50. If it had been 60/40 then I would have happily argued that Westminster should listen to that demand. But 50/50 doesn’t demonstrate a desire to go through the trauma of a further referendum
    Glad that Charles is on the "uppity Scotch were too stupid to know what they were voting for" bus. That is how you ensure the future of the union - tell Scotland that whatever it thinks it voted for it can't have it, so get back in line and do what England tell you to.

    How odd that the people on that bus claim to be Unionists.
    No, I’m not on the”uppity” bus

    I’m on the “that’s the law, buddy, and if you don’t like it then campaign for it to be changed” bus
    I mean objectively the Scots don't have the power to change that law through democracy. The SNP already hold pretty much every Scottish Westminster seat.

    I'm afraid you're being very hypocritical here Charles.
    No. The Union doesn’t just involve Scotland. Other parts of the Uk have a say as well.
    No. The European Union doesn’t just involve the UK. Other parts of the EU have a say as well.

    Imagine the prolapses and strokes if some etiolated minor EUrocrat had popped that one out and expected to be taken seriously!
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803
    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
  • Options
    algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 10,556

    Just had a wild thought -

    WHOM among the PB hordes would make the BEST independent/mini-party by-election candidate?

    My nomination is for Leon.

    Articulate, amusing, passionate, intelligent, determined (any book author has some grit in their gizzard).

    PLUS he'd be sure to snap up the votes of

    a) fellow flint knappers (who feel themselves seriously unrepresented in parliament)
    b) connoisseurs of his fine handcrafted flint dildos (a significant & varied slice of the electorate)
    c) drunken PBers (ditto)

    Pronoun alert.

  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,760
    As Labour reshuffle continues, some detect hand of Peter Mandelson.

    One senior MP says he’s “actively involved” & encouraging Chapman/McSweeney to “follow his past strategy of isolating the Left.”

    Another party source claims they’re both “enamoured by him”.


    https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/1391491348746866693?s=20
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,980
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    Salmond and Sturgeon, last time around.
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Fascinating
    It also falls down as a comparison because there is this teensy weeeeeensy difference between federation and powers-retained devolution UK style. Is HYUFD advocating the breakup of England into provinces of equal status and roughjly equal size with Wales, etc.?
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,760
    Floater said:

    Nick Brown sacked as chief whip

    Brave. Very brave.

    What's he got to do with weak council results or Hartlepool?
  • Options
    isam said:

    When I think of Sir Keir, almost instantly the words to Beat Surrender by The Jam come to mind

    "All the things that I shout about (but never act upon)
    All the courage and the dreams that I have
    (but seem to wait so long)
    My doubt is cast aside, watch phonies run to hide
    The dignified don't even enter in the game
    And if you feel there's no passion
    No quality sensation
    Seize the young determination
    Show the fakers you ain't foolin
    You'll see me come runnin
    To the sound of your strummin
    Fill my heart with joy and gladness
    I've lived too long in shadows of sadness"

    All the things he is not.

    Labour should be a revolutionary party campaigning for the rights of the workers and those left behind by capitalism. Corbyn may have been a nutter, but he had passion, and conviction. Labour voters should be young, enthusiastic and full of passion, not middle of the road and middle aged. I actually think Labour can be successful without being in government as relentless insurgents keeping the Tories on their toes. Sir Keir's corporate middle management style is the worst of all worlds - he isn't going to win, and he doesn't have any gusto. Labour should get rid and go left field


    At least one of

    Female
    Not white
    Not straight

    Should be essentials for their next leader. Walk the walk if you're going to talk the talk

    I had been away for a while and just realised posts like this are why I have been returning (under various noms de guerre) for many years.
    Thanks isam
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412
    Floater said:

    Aaron Bastani waxing lyrical about China - the most negative thing he could bring himself to say

    "They aren't perfect - they don't have the NHS"

    Lisa Nandy now being crapped all over by them - apparently she is a neocon.......

    Aaron Bastani would be crying for the Foreign Office, and his mum, after ten minutes if he tried to pull his shit in the PRC.

    He epitomises the spoilt brat tendency of British politics.
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803
    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    Salmond and Sturgeon, last time around.
    Well? Not legislation.

    And diffferent parliamentary terms.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited May 2021
    Floater said:

    Aaron Bastani waxing lyrical about China - the most negative thing he could bring himself to say

    "They aren't perfect - they don't have the NHS"

    Lisa Nandy now being crapped all over by them - apparently she is a neocon.......

    He isn't worried about the low pay and terrible working conditions ? And by low, I mean in some cases no pay, as it is slave labour.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,266
    Labour wants an issue to get back on front foot?

    Here's an issue. Very senior GP calls out the move to non-face-to-face medicine.

    https://twitter.com/thelucyjohnston/status/1391309207832510464/photo/1
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,803

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    The number of MSPs is relevant to the mandate. Whether the mandate should be denied by Westminster on arcane legal grounds is a separate question. My opinion is it could be but shouldn't be. For 2 reasons, one of principle, one pragmatic. The principle is the right of the Scottish people to decide whether they wish to stay a part of the union. The pragmatism is that to deny and delay would make an acrimonious split more likely. Remain would be favourite if the vote were held soon. Respect democracy, win the vote, secure the union. That's the right way, the honest way, the best way. So I suppose Johnson won't do it. Or might he? In truth I'm not so sure.
    And that’s exactly the point:

    The MSP mandate explicitly doesn’t include a referendum under the terms of the law that established the Scottish Parliament

    The right of the Scottish people to determine their future is more strongly demonstrated by the share of the vote which was about 50/50. If it had been 60/40 then I would have happily argued that Westminster should listen to that demand. But 50/50 doesn’t demonstrate a desire to go through the trauma of a further referendum
    Glad that Charles is on the "uppity Scotch were too stupid to know what they were voting for" bus. That is how you ensure the future of the union - tell Scotland that whatever it thinks it voted for it can't have it, so get back in line and do what England tell you to.

    How odd that the people on that bus claim to be Unionists.
    No, I’m not on the”uppity” bus

    I’m on the “that’s the law, buddy, and if you don’t like it then campaign for it to be changed” bus
    I mean objectively the Scots don't have the power to change that law through democracy. The SNP already hold pretty much every Scottish Westminster seat.

    I'm afraid you're being very hypocritical here Charles.
    No. The Union doesn’t just involve Scotland. Other parts of the Uk have a say as well.
    No. The European Union doesn’t just involve the UK. Other parts of the EU have a say as well.

    Imagine the prolapses and strokes if some etiolated minor EUrocrat had popped that one out and expected to be taken seriously!
    Indeed. Anyway, I'm being sensible and going to bed now, even if the toddlers won't.
  • Options
    FairlieredFairliered Posts: 3,997

    Starmer needs to find a northern, leave-voting candidate, from a working class background to stand in Batley. Ideally one who does a proper job in the private sector. But before he asks for my number, soz, I don't fancy it.

    Failing that, as I suggested earlier, Caroline Flint.

    How about Dr Paul Williams?
    Laura Pidcock?
    Andy Burnham?
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Dodds sacked
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,430
    tlg86 said:

    This system where some metro mayors are PCCs and some are not is ridiculous. What a mess.

    It all depends on whether the mayoral boundaries match the police force area. West Yorkshire yes, Teesside no.
    We need fewer police forces in my opinion.
    We need more effective police forces, where "effective" is a nuanced term, but I fear proposals to merge forces or combine different emergency services are at best displacement activities. I suppose Police Scotland might provide some evidence one way or the other.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,760
    edited May 2021
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    I suppose you don't want us to point out:

    deliver a fair test and a decisive expression of the views of people in Scotland and a result that everyone will respect. ?

    https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130102230945/http://www.number10.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Agreement-final-for-signing.pdf
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,458
    kle4 said:

    Putin's clearly going for "death by natural causes" here by bumping off any doctors who try and save him:

    https://twitter.com/Billbrowder/status/1391429735419363333?s=20

    Well Russia pulled The Death of Stalin from cinemas, so Putin may not have picked up on some obvious things to avoid should he ever find himself in need of good doctors.
    Georgy Zhukov : That's me told. I'm off to represent the entire Red Army at the buffet. You girls enjoy yourselves.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited May 2021

    As Labour reshuffle continues, some detect hand of Peter Mandelson.

    One senior MP says he’s “actively involved” & encouraging Chapman/McSweeney to “follow his past strategy of isolating the Left.”

    Another party source claims they’re both “enamoured by him”.


    https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/1391491348746866693?s=20

    This desire to repeat 97...It reminds me of teams hiring Jose Morinho, because he had success, but the game has evolved and his tactics are transparent these days and don't work any more even against middle tier opposition.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,980
    Carnyx said:

    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    Salmond and Sturgeon, last time around.
    Well? Not legislation.

    And diffferent parliamentary terms.
    Legislation doesn't exist in a vacuum. How many do you think actually read legislation, vs. read/listen to the news on the tv or internet?
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    "Who gives a monkey's about generations?"

    Debretts? House of Lords? Geneticists? And fruit flies?

    And of course Charles & HYUFD! For somewhat different but convergent reasons.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,030
    edited May 2021
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Fascinating
    It also falls down as a comparison because there is this teensy weeeeeensy difference between federation and powers-retained devolution UK style. Is HYUFD advocating the breakup of England into provinces of equal status and roughjly equal size with Wales, etc.?
    No, though an English Parliament is fine with me as is devomax for Holyrood.

    Your point is also wrong, Ontario, the largest Canadian province, has a population of 14 million, Quebec has a population of 8 million, Nunavut, the smallest Canadian province by population, has a population of just 35,944
  • Options
    RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 27,263
    Floater said:

    Dodds sacked

    As if we will notice the difference.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    Floater said:

    Dodds sacked

    To which 99% of the public say who?
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,980
    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    The number of MSPs is relevant to the mandate. Whether the mandate should be denied by Westminster on arcane legal grounds is a separate question. My opinion is it could be but shouldn't be. For 2 reasons, one of principle, one pragmatic. The principle is the right of the Scottish people to decide whether they wish to stay a part of the union. The pragmatism is that to deny and delay would make an acrimonious split more likely. Remain would be favourite if the vote were held soon. Respect democracy, win the vote, secure the union. That's the right way, the honest way, the best way. So I suppose Johnson won't do it. Or might he? In truth I'm not so sure.
    And that’s exactly the point:

    The MSP mandate explicitly doesn’t include a referendum under the terms of the law that established the Scottish Parliament

    The right of the Scottish people to determine their future is more strongly demonstrated by the share of the vote which was about 50/50. If it had been 60/40 then I would have happily argued that Westminster should listen to that demand. But 50/50 doesn’t demonstrate a desire to go through the trauma of a further referendum
    Glad that Charles is on the "uppity Scotch were too stupid to know what they were voting for" bus. That is how you ensure the future of the union - tell Scotland that whatever it thinks it voted for it can't have it, so get back in line and do what England tell you to.

    How odd that the people on that bus claim to be Unionists.
    No, I’m not on the”uppity” bus

    I’m on the “that’s the law, buddy, and if you don’t like it then campaign for it to be changed” bus
    I mean objectively the Scots don't have the power to change that law through democracy. The SNP already hold pretty much every Scottish Westminster seat.

    I'm afraid you're being very hypocritical here Charles.
    No. The Union doesn’t just involve Scotland. Other parts of the Uk have a say as well.
    No. The European Union doesn’t just involve the UK. Other parts of the EU have a say as well.

    Imagine the prolapses and strokes if some etiolated minor EUrocrat had popped that one out and expected to be taken seriously!
    Indeed. Anyway, I'm being sensible and going to bed now, even if the toddlers won't.
    Except the Union was formed as a complete merger of the two states. The two states were dissolved, leaving a single state. The EU is very, very different, much like how you complained about the situation in Quebec being nothing like in Scotland.
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    algarkirk said:

    Just had a wild thought -

    WHOM among the PB hordes would make the BEST independent/mini-party by-election candidate?

    My nomination is for Leon.

    Articulate, amusing, passionate, intelligent, determined (any book author has some grit in their gizzard).

    PLUS he'd be sure to snap up the votes of

    a) fellow flint knappers (who feel themselves seriously unrepresented in parliament)
    b) connoisseurs of his fine handcrafted flint dildos (a significant & varied slice of the electorate)
    c) drunken PBers (ditto)

    Pronoun alert.

    Did NOT realize you are a school marm?

    But thanks (I guess) for slapping me across the fingers with your ruler!
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    https://twitter.com/siennamarla/status/1391493099394830346

    Nick Brown and Anneliese Dodds were both representatives of party unity in big roles

    Fight Fight
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    Salmond and Sturgeon, last time around.
    I mean, that's completely meaningless, considering a "generation" is not defined anywhere other than what is convenient in @HYUFD 's head. I'm sure even if it was 15 years on "generation" would be redefined to mean 40 years.
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,714
    edited May 2021
    "Gabriel Pogrund
    @Gabriel_Pogrund
    Anneliese Dodds has been sacked as shadow chancellor, a senior party source confirms. She will be offered a new role within the shadow cabinet."

    https://twitter.com/Gabriel_Pogrund/status/1391492353731538949
  • Options
    squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,360

    It's not what the leader looks like but what the leader does that's the issue.

    The former only helps you with a temporary bit of publicity at the start.

    I dont think it helped 'two kitchens ' Ed Miliband
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    Floater said:

    Dodds sacked

    Huzzah
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,980
    edited May 2021

    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    Salmond and Sturgeon, last time around.
    I mean, that's completely meaningless, considering a "generation" is not defined anywhere other than what is convenient in @HYUFD 's head. I'm sure even if it was 15 years on "generation" would be redefined to mean 40 years.
    I think we can all agree seven years is not a generation. ;)
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195

    Floater said:

    Dodds sacked

    As if we will notice the difference.
    Labour will hope we do......
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412
    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    The number of MSPs is relevant to the mandate. Whether the mandate should be denied by Westminster on arcane legal grounds is a separate question. My opinion is it could be but shouldn't be. For 2 reasons, one of principle, one pragmatic. The principle is the right of the Scottish people to decide whether they wish to stay a part of the union. The pragmatism is that to deny and delay would make an acrimonious split more likely. Remain would be favourite if the vote were held soon. Respect democracy, win the vote, secure the union. That's the right way, the honest way, the best way. So I suppose Johnson won't do it. Or might he? In truth I'm not so sure.
    And that’s exactly the point:

    The MSP mandate explicitly doesn’t include a referendum under the terms of the law that established the Scottish Parliament

    The right of the Scottish people to determine their future is more strongly demonstrated by the share of the vote which was about 50/50. If it had been 60/40 then I would have happily argued that Westminster should listen to that demand. But 50/50 doesn’t demonstrate a desire to go through the trauma of a further referendum
    Glad that Charles is on the "uppity Scotch were too stupid to know what they were voting for" bus. That is how you ensure the future of the union - tell Scotland that whatever it thinks it voted for it can't have it, so get back in line and do what England tell you to.

    How odd that the people on that bus claim to be Unionists.
    No, I’m not on the”uppity” bus

    I’m on the “that’s the law, buddy, and if you don’t like it then campaign for it to be changed” bus
    I mean objectively the Scots don't have the power to change that law through democracy. The SNP already hold pretty much every Scottish Westminster seat.

    I'm afraid you're being very hypocritical here Charles.
    No. The Union doesn’t just involve Scotland. Other parts of the Uk have a say as well.
    No. The European Union doesn’t just involve the UK. Other parts of the EU have a say as well.

    Imagine the prolapses and strokes if some etiolated minor EUrocrat had popped that one out and expected to be taken seriously!
    Indeed. Anyway, I'm being sensible and going to bed now, even if the toddlers won't.
    If you give me my milk bottle and dummy and then tuck me in, I might.
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Reeves takes Dodds place
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Dodds to party chair LMAO
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285

    Floater said:

    Dodds sacked

    As if we will notice the difference.
    They need somebody with more presence, but also more nuance than after Sunak announces £200 trillionn of new emergency spending to stand up and say well that's not enough.
  • Options
    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    The Quebec comparison may well not apply here, primarily because the nationalist side in Scotland is effectively united (pro-secession voters can game the system by voting Green on the lists, which is just one of the reasons why the Alba Party was utterly pointless,) whereas the unionist parties are hopelessly split and at least a large fraction of their supporters refuse to vote tactically to help the others out.

    My concern is what happens if the second referendum takes place, produces another No vote, and then the Scots simply keep on returning masses of SNP politicians to power. First of all, they will manufacture excuses to hold more referendums until they get the result they want (for, if you follow the logic that a pro-independence majority at Holyrood was not only entitled to demand one in 2011 but is also entitled to demand it again in 2021, then why not in 2031, 2041 and 2051 as well?) Secondly, they may at some point end up holding the balance of power at Westminster, and then we are all in danger from their meddling.

    It's quite plausible to argue that the risk of a second referendum isn't that the Scots vote to go, it's that they vote to hang about.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,458

    An anecdote on racial bias in voting patterns.

    Two wards round here were electing two councillors.

    Bingley Rural: Three parties fielded a Muslim and a non-Muslim candidate. In all three cases the non-Muslim outpolled their colleague.

    Keighley Central: The reverse - Labour and Conservative each had their Muslim candidate elected, with the non-Muslim trailing. Indeed, third place went to an Independent who was also a Muslim.

    So it cuts both ways, but in both cases I find it depressing.

    The entire point of modern sectional politics is that we carefully define the population in terms of a matrix of identities.

    It then comes as a surprise to people who have PhDs in sociology that people then see themselves in terms of a series of identities which results in social separatism.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,760
    Sources confirm Annelise Dodds the Shadow Chancellor is being demoted to become Party Chair

    https://twitter.com/bbclaurak/status/1391493283034058755?s=20
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    Floater said:

    Reeves takes Dodds place

    Yvette muat really really really not be popular.
  • Options
    SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 15,612
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Fascinating
    It also falls down as a comparison because there is this teensy weeeeeensy difference between federation and powers-retained devolution UK style. Is HYUFD advocating the breakup of England into provinces of equal status and roughjly equal size with Wales, etc.?
    No, though an English Parliament is fine with me as is devomax for Holyrood.

    Your point is also wrong, Ontario, the largest Canadian province, has a population of 14 million, Quebec has a population of 8 million, Nunavut, the smallest Canadian province by population, has a population of just 35,944
    Nunavut is a territory, like Yukon and Northwest Territory.

    Though distinction between Canadian province and territory is pretty academic these days, as both are (mostly) self-governing in local matters AND are represented in federal parliament.
  • Options
    FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    Bastani says Reeves appointment means he can't vote for Labour

    A Nation weeps ....
  • Options
    maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,391
    If Rachel Reeves is the answer, you're asking the wrong question.

    Performance on current brief makes pretty clear she's a cypher able to fake the mannerisms of intelligence without actually possessing it.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,820
    Floater said:

    Bastani says Reeves appointment means he can't vote for Labour

    A Nation weeps ....

    She's a step too far? Why?
  • Options
    FairlieredFairliered Posts: 3,997
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Cookie said:

    eek said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Does anyone believe Keir Starmer could remain as leader if Batley & Spen is also lost at a by-election?

    Yes, if only because his opponents would die laughing...
    Why - labour haven't got a chance of keeping that seat
    Are you serious? I thought it would be a tougher hill to climb than Hartlepool, but I'm happy to defer to local knowledge.
    B/S is not Hartlepool. Much more Muslim, for a start, and not as working class. Also held by the Conservatives within living memory (held in 1992, IIRC). Once upon a time the latter would have been a distinct positive indicator for the Tories, but I'm not sure if it is any more.
    Are there any prices for it yet? My guess is Lab about 60% likely to win, Con about 40%.
    I think it is much more important for SKS to retain it than the Tories to take it. The pressure is all on Labour.

    It is like a relegation battle on the last day for SKS, any mistake can't be recovered from. And ... err ... won't there be some in his party who want him to fail ?

    The constituency seems to be 60 per cent leave. It is certainly more ethnically mixed than Hartlepool, but that also has potential pitfalls for Labour as well.

    I'd probably make Labour very slight favourites -- but then I made Labour favourites to hold Hartlepool.

    Overall, a knife-edge by-election in the midst of party disarray is not really what SKS needs right now.
    Kirklees local authority though, which contains Batley and Spen, was only 54.7% Leave which is significantly less than Hartlepool which was 69.6% Leave and there will be less BXP vote for the Tories to squeeze, though the blue vote should still be up.

    The LDs will also fancy their chances of making inroads into the Tory majority in Chesham and Amersham as the seat was in Chiltern local authority area (which was in Bucks) which was 55% Remain.

    The top Tory only beat the top LD by 2% in Amersham and Chesham Bois on Thursday with the top Green on 6%.

    In Chesham the top Tory got 15% with the top LD on 9% and the top Labour candidate on 10% and the top Green on 6%

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=17&RPID=3792032

    https://buckinghamshire.moderngov.co.uk/mgElectionAreaResults.aspx?XXR=0&ID=2&RPID=3791902
    "The most overwhelming support for Brexit came from the Batley and Spen constituency with a 60% ‘Leave’ result."

    Source is here:

    https://www.examinerlive.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/kirklees-constituency-voted-against-brexit-12593757

    Still about 10% less Leave than Hartlepool even then, though I would not rule out the Tories gaining Batley and Spen from Labour but losing Chesham and Amersham to the LDs
    Which of the two do you think the most likely?
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,412

    Floater said:

    Aaron Bastani waxing lyrical about China - the most negative thing he could bring himself to say

    "They aren't perfect - they don't have the NHS"

    Lisa Nandy now being crapped all over by them - apparently she is a neocon.......

    He isn't worried about the low pay and terrible working conditions ? And by low, I mean in some cases no pay, as it is slave labour.
    You've got to understand that his concern about injustice is utterly narcisstic - it's so he can feel good about himself and raise his virtuous status in the eyes of others.

    It's not, you know, actually about fighting injustice because that would involve a lot of hard work and contesting its most serious forms would require him to do some hard thinking about his warped ideology.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,081
    RobD said:

    RobD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    Carnyx said:

    Charles said:

    Charles said:

    kinabalu said:

    Sir John Curtice:

    This, however, does not necessarily mean that, as the first minister claims, holding another referendum is now clearly the "will of the people" in Scotland.

    Rather, the outcome of the election confirms that Scotland is evenly divided on the constitutional question.

    The three main pro-union parties won 50.4 per cent of the constituency vote, but the three main list parties secured 50.1 per cent of the list vote. The pro-independence majority is a consequence of the limitations of Holyrood’s supposedly proportional electoral system (devised over twenty years ago by Labour and the Liberal Democrats) rather than evidence of a clear majority in favour of another referendum.


    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/scottish-independence-referendum-boris-johnson-b1844552.html

    It's not the Will of the People, but there's a clear democratic mandate for it. Both these things are true at the same time.
    The number of MSPs is irrelevant - you don’t elect a representative to represent you in something that is outwith their powers
    But they just did
    No, they didn’t. The SNP candidates promised* to hold a referendum on independence. But it is not in their power to grant a legal referendum. They can only try to put pressure on the Westminster parliament to grant one.** It would like a Mayor of London promising to declare war on France - it might win votes but doesn’t change the scope of their power

    * I haven’t read their manifesto so don’t know precisely what they promised

    ** the share of the vote is a better argument - although only for putting pressure on Westminster - but I understand (saw some debate between @DavidL & @RochdalePioneers this afternoon) that was pretty close up 50/50 so not an overwhelming demand
    DAvidL and RP were both in agreement that it was over the 50% mark. It's HYUFD who was using the psephological equivalent of creative bistromathics.
    Yes - I don’t recall the details but think it was around 50.1/50.4? Hence my comment that it wasn’t “overwhelming demand”.

    Highest ever turnout
    Highest ever SNP vote
    Highest ever number of MSPs elected on a Yes platform who now have a clear majority
    Yes took more votes than No

    So obviously it is still up in the air...
    Turnout - relevant but not decisive
    SNP vote - not a majority
    MSPs - not relevant as it’s not in their remit
    majority of votes cast - only marginally so not a decisive argument

    Read the spectator article @CarlottaVance linked to. It puts the argument on mandates better than I can
    Charles. You are (I assume) a Unionist. Is your plan to maintain the union to tell Scotland that despite them electing a clear majority of MSPs pledged to a referendum that (a) they didn't and (b) that they can't have it anyway?

    Do you think this goes away if you sit in England if you tell Scotland they have no way to leave however they vote? If you want to preserve the union then you need to face into the problem not waft it away. It won't waft away. It needs to be defeated head on.

    A 2nd referndum - as polls suggest - could be a comfortable win for No. At which point the clause barring a repeat for x period which I assume would have been inserted into the agreement comes into effect.
    I’m a federalist.

    But there was a vote in 2014. Independence was rejected. You don’t get a do over - the winners of that vote have the right to a period of stability
    You do get a do over. It's called democracy. If the Scottish people wanted "a period of stability" they wouldn't keep voting for the SNP, would they?
    I think two things can be true at the same time here, though.

    You're right but at the same time every time there's a referendum on the horizon it depressed sterling and dips investment a bit as it throws the whole future of the UK into doubt - that affects all of us.
    That's why it's in our interest to sort this out one way or the other. By denying the SNP you're just delaying the issue and keeps their voting coalition together.

    You call Nicola's bluff - you have IndyRef2, the Scots will in all likelihood vote to stay in the UK, and then realistically that's it for the foreseeable future. There's no huge political or societal change like Brexit on the horizon, the SNP cannot get any stronger, the only way is down.

    It's Quebec v2.

    And if, by some miracle, they vote to leave, well then rUK's stability is confirmed longterm anyway.
    Quebec's indyref2 was held in 1995, 15 years after the first in 1980 ie a genuine generation, not just 7 years after
    Who gives a monkey's aboiut generations? You show us all where the word is in the legislation.
    Salmond and Sturgeon, last time around.
    I mean, that's completely meaningless, considering a "generation" is not defined anywhere other than what is convenient in @HYUFD 's head. I'm sure even if it was 15 years on "generation" would be redefined to mean 40 years.
    I think we can all agree seven years is not a generation. ;)
    You've missed the point. The point is that a "generation" is meaningless because it has no agreed definition. It's just a tool to justify ignoring the Scottish people's vote for a referendum.
This discussion has been closed.