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Foreign Sec Raab now 19% second favourite in the next Cabinet exit betting – politicalbetting.com

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  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    kjh said:

    You have not the foggiest idea what was happening, just like none of us do. And from your earlier post today, and previous posts made, you come to some spectacular ill founded conclusions on no evidence at all. For instance you seem to think politicians organise the logistics of an evacuation. What? Just recalling today you think Foxy is one of the richest people who post to this site. He maybe but based upon what? I can see no evidence whatsoever for that statement of 'fact'. That is just today. Previously you have rattled off stats on mask wearing that people with knowledge of maths have told you is just nonsense and yet you keep doing it.

    Your posts are some of the most ill informed on this site.
    Thanks
  • Leon said:

    My family in Cornwall is freaking out about the crazy rise in cases down there. Previously optimistic fam members are now predicting a bad 4th wave and maybe another lockdown

    May St Piran preserve us

    Cases per 100k during pandemic:

    Cornwall 5,235
    South-West 6,793
    England 9,866

    A lot of gaps to be filled in Cornwall and even more in rural Devon.

    Delta is going to infect everyone at some point.

    For the vaccinated that's not likely to be a problem.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    edited August 2021

    https://twitter.com/DailyMirror/status/1428650262315470851?s=20
    Wow and yes look at the age profile. Risk extremely low quite right they are allowed to party.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,011
    kjh said:

    Why would you assume he is lying, in particular for no good reason. People who are interested know if this is useful or not. You really do have a bee in your bonnet about several types of posts on this site. Just go elsewhere if you are not happy.
    If you dont like the way I post, there are other sites...
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    Totally surprised by the PBers forming a square around the Raabster. Breath taken away.

    They’re nothing if not predictable.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Pulpstar said:

    Pray for Raab

    Why? Is his soul headed for “the wrong place”?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited August 2021

    The US ended up not being given a choice on that, what with Pearl Harbour and Germany declaring war on them.
    It also took 9/11 to get the US to intervene in Afghanistan against the Taliban and Al Qaeda and to enable Bush to move to interventionism.

    The US is not a natural global policeman, much of its population is isolationist, if it now retreats back into itself for the next decade or two then the main beneficiaries will be Xi and Putin
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,505

    Thanks
    Sorry to offend but it frustrates me. I am normally very polite, but really. As I posted on this theme to someone else about your posts it drives me to irrational thoughts in the opposite direction and then tend not to give Raab any benefit of the doubt. You do him no favours.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,778
    eek said:

    Utterly offtopic but from my visit to the Lakes yesterday ( a damp Thursday in August)

    1) I've never seen it so full
    2) a fair number of pubs were closed due to pings
    3) a lot of places are still short staffed but have stopped recruiting because the people don't exist (and once September arrives it's going to be easier to just close a few rooms off).

    Same down here in my south coast holiday city. Virtually every restaurant and café has a notice in the window asking for staff. My daughter, a chef, has just secured a job paying £500 per shift (12 hours). This is untold riches for her - I think her previous highest was £200 per shift. This must have an effect on consumer prices, surely.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,194

    Raab's deeply unimpressive.

    But he's just the figurehead for the FO rot and incompetence.
    Hmm, what other incompetents had been in charge of the FCO over the last 5 years? 🤔
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702

    Do folk in the services actually respect the politicians who control them? Maybe in the old days, but I find it very hard to believe that in the age of social media there are any officers or sailors/soldiers/aircrew who respect Raab and Johnson. HMQ maybe, but not the Cabinet. That must be a problem surely? How do they keep motivated and risk their lives and health when they know those in charge to be idiots, buffoons, cads, bounders, liars and sneeks who give government contracts to their pals? And pay women cash to keep their gobs shut?
    For most squaddies most figures of authority are regarded with deep suspicion and disdain.

    And as for motivation, they are not doing it for the politicians they are doing it for their mates/unit, which is a strongly inculcated culture in HMF.

    As someone or other once said: "I didn't join the British Army I joined the 10th Hussars."
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,727
    edited August 2021
    I find it hard to give a damn about Raab either way, and I suspect 80% of Britain feels the same. This is an SW1 bubble story confected by bored or biased media. There are so many bigger things going on

    And now, I must get my antigen test then my last Greek lunch
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,379

    And stiffed for the privilege, win-win, or lose-lose as it's known north of Carlisle.


    "Scotland" pays nothing. SSEN pay more because they produce excess capacity for the local circuit & therefore make more use of the UK Transmission network. Aim is to have generation close to consumption. System is being reviewed in light of remoteness of most renewable sources

    https://twitter.com/LeRef5/status/1427902952900071435?s=20

    Mind you, when you're independent you won't have to worry about transmission charges....
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454
    Infratest dimap

    Union: 23 % (-4)
    SPD: 21 (+3)
    GRN: 17% (-2)

    Changes from 05.08.2021

    https://www.wahlrecht.de/umfragen/dimap.htm
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    Leon said:

    I find it hard to give a damn about Raab either way, and I suspect 80% of Britain feels the same. This is an SW1 bubble story confected by bored or biased media. There are so many bigger things going on

    And now, I must get my antigen test then my last Greek lunch

    Just got mine. Thorough it was not.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,304

    If you dont like the way I post, there are other sites...
    Stick with it rooty, every village needs an...
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    kle4 said:

    So this not-a-coalition coalition between SNP and the Scottish Greens, the write up on the BBC seems to suggest its basically a coalition but the Greens dont have to support some specific policies and can still criticise the government.

    Is the little bit of extra stability worth the SNP giving them that latitude, above more regular minority gov or confidence and supply arrangements? It seems pretty generous.

    Yes.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,727
    TOPPING said:

    Just got mine. Thorough it was not.
    They are very casual. A gesture, really
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,505

    If you dont like the way I post, there are other sites...
    Not very rational. You see I like the way (almost) everyone posts even if I disagree (you know politics and betting). It is you that has the problem with lots of others post, you know on politics and betting.

    I just don't know why you want to stay if you don't want people to post things about politicians and betting, it seems weird. Up to you though obviously.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,505
    Oh I'm grumpy today
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    eek said:

    In which case we reduce our military budget below what NATO expects so would need to spend more on the military to ensure we met those rules.

    And as both DuraAce and myself have pointed out you don't want your typical sailor doing the work as they won't really help the locals and may end up traumatised by it
    The spending would be additional - rather than inventing space in the existing MOD budget. Which is what currently happens. Or the government transfers some extra money (never enough) from Emergency funds elsewhere.

    What I am talking about is the logistical stuff that the Americans often turn up and do - provide helicopters, water and food etc. Which the UK military does already. Not trying to turn the RN into Unicef.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    Leon said:

    They are very casual. A gesture, really
    They can't have thousands of tourists banged up in quarantine hotels. Who would come back if there was a real risk.

    The planet needs to sort out its approach to leisure travel. This one isn't particularly working. Or it is but in the breach not the adherence.

    How many people I wonder will actually take their Day 2 tests?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,522
    Leon said:

    I find it hard to give a damn about Raab either way, and I suspect 80% of Britain feels the same. This is an SW1 bubble story confected by bored or biased media. There are so many bigger things going on

    And now, I must get my antigen test then my last Greek lunch

    Enjoy. Last time I was dining under the Acropolis was with a work colleague, who I discovered after a few drinks was a remarkably unforgiving Christian. All other faiths doomed to the fiery pits of hell.

    Didn't do much for my digestion....
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Leon said:

    I find it hard to give a damn about Raab either way, and I suspect 80% of Britain feels the same. This is an SW1 bubble story confected by bored or biased media. There are so many bigger things going on

    And now, I must get my antigen test then my last Greek lunch

    I think people care about our country's reputation and if the Foreign Sec can't be arsed to help, people do not take kindly to that.

    Quite frankly, if he given half the energy to his job as he has directed to saving his skin he wouldn't be in this mess.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    Scott_xP said:
    Scottish sub-sample:

    SNP 53%
    SGP 3%
    Pro-independence government 56%

    SCon 22%
    SLab 15%
    SLD 5%
    BetterTogether2 42%

    oth 1% (presumably Alba)

    Then factor in that 40% of SLab voters are pro-independence.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992

    Infratest dimap

    Union: 23 % (-4)
    SPD: 21 (+3)
    GRN: 17% (-2)

    Changes from 05.08.2021

    https://www.wahlrecht.de/umfragen/dimap.htm

    Union + FDP + AfD = 47%.

    SPD + Green + Linke = 45%.

    So a Union + SPD + Green coalition on 61% combined or a Union + SPD + FDP coalition on 57% combined still looks most likely
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,522
    Oh, and we have agreed the deal to develop a writing project of mine as animation. Whether as TV or cinema is still under consideration. Will keep you posted....
  • I thought polling subsamples were verboten?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,304
    edited August 2021

    "Scotland" pays nothing. SSEN pay more because they produce excess capacity for the local circuit & therefore make more use of the UK Transmission network. Aim is to have generation close to consumption. System is being reviewed in light of remoteness of most renewable sources

    https://twitter.com/LeRef5/status/1427902952900071435?s=20

    Mind you, when you're independent you won't have to worry about transmission charges....
    Cool, Scotland fulfilling all its own needs with renewables sounds good. Wangland meanwhile will have to up its consumption from..er..less remote Norway and Denmark.

    Liking the 'when' not 'if' Scotland is independent btw, at least your subconscious is getting with the programme.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,011

    Stick with it rooty, every village needs an...
    Is that why you have never left yours?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,996
    edited August 2021
    eek said:

    Utterly offtopic but from my visit to the Lakes yesterday ( a damp Thursday in August)

    1) I've never seen it so full
    2) a fair number of pubs were closed due to pings
    3) a lot of places are still short staffed but have stopped recruiting because the people don't exist (and once September arrives it's going to be easier to just close a few rooms off).

    People always exist at the right rate of pay. North sea oil rigs didn't have a population bobbing up and down on a rowing boat waiting to be hired once the rig exists, but the pay attracts the people from all over the world. Nor was there a huge unemployed population in walking distance from Shoe Lane hoping for a financial services outfit called Goldman Sachs to turn up.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited August 2021

    Scottish sub-sample:

    SNP 53%
    SGP 3%
    Pro-independence government 56%

    SCon 22%
    SLab 15%
    SLD 5%
    BetterTogether2 42%

    oth 1% (presumably Alba)

    Then factor in that 40% of SLab voters are pro-independence.
    And you will still lose indyref2

    and also Scots are opposed to increases in fuel bills to pay for green energy

    Oppose 53%

    Support 30%

    Good start for the SNP-Green whatever it is
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    AlistairM said:

    It is, unfortunately, not surprising given half the country and their dogs have gone to Cornwall on their holidays this year. We do have to try and get away from using cases to determine policy but it is difficult given how ingrained we have been in the last 18 months.

    I still think that we need to crack on giving the oldies booster jabs. I think it would also be useful, but less of a priority, to jab the 12-15yos to help reduce transmission.
    Hmm. Eldest Granddaughter and her Significant Other, plus his parents have just gone there. Newquay, I think!
    However, all double vaccinated.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    Some of us are.

    'Scotland has narrowly missed a target to generate the equivalent of 100% of its electricity demand from renewables in 2020. New figures reveal it reached 97.4% from renewable sources.'

    'Renewables provided a record 43% of the UK’s electricity last year, up from 37% in 2019, according to UK Government statistics.'
    Strip out Scotland and the England-only figure is even worse.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    algarkirk said:

    People always exist at the right rate of pay. North sea oil rigs don't have a population bobbing up and down on a rowing boat waiting to be hired once the rig exists, but the pay attracts the people from all over the world. Nor was there a huge unemployed population in walking distance from Shoe Lane hoping for a financial services outfit called Goldman Sachs to turn up.
    Exactly. It's like when people ponder how conducive to poppy growing Afghan's climate and terroir is. Overlooking the fact that it is more the governance that is the deciding factor.

    As for your point it would mean inflationary pressures build which, according to many on here, is a good thing but I'm not so sure
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,611

    Cases per 100k during pandemic:

    Cornwall 5,235
    South-West 6,793
    England 9,866

    A lot of gaps to be filled in Cornwall and even more in rural Devon.

    Delta is going to infect everyone at some point.

    For the vaccinated that's not likely to be a problem.
    I’m double jabbed and currently have COVID. It is currently like a bad cold.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    And stiffed for the privilege, win-win, or lose-lose as it's known north of Carlisle.


    That’ll be one of those “Union Dividends”.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    Taz said:

    I’m double jabbed and currently have COVID. It is currently like a bad cold.
    Glad to hear it's not too bad hope the missus is ok too.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    algarkirk said:

    People always exist at the right rate of pay. North sea oil rigs didn't have a population bobbing up and down on a rowing boat waiting to be hired once the rig exists, but the pay attracts the people from all over the world. Nor was there a huge unemployed population in walking distance from Shoe Lane hoping for a financial services outfit called Goldman Sachs to turn up.
    They turn up eventually, sure. But not immediately, and not necessarily with the right skills.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,379
    AstraZeneca will move to seek regulatory approval of its antibody cocktail after a study showed the drug significantly reduced the risk of developing symptomatic Covid-19

    https://twitter.com/FinancialTimes/status/1428650534953705472?s=20
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992

    Scottish sub-sample:

    SNP 53%
    SGP 3%
    Pro-independence government 56%

    SCon 22%
    SLab 15%
    SLD 5%
    BetterTogether2 42%

    oth 1% (presumably Alba)

    Then factor in that 40% of SLab voters are pro-independence.
    It could be 100% SNP and Green it would not make any difference as the UK government has the final say on the Union under the Scotland Act 1998 and this Tory government will refuse indyref2. Unless there is a Labour led government reliant on SNP support after the next general election you will not get indyref2.

    The last actual independence poll of course was 47% No and only 44% Yes

    https://redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/scottish-independence-referendum-voting-intention-4-5-august/
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    And you will still lose indyref2

    and also Scots are opposed to increases in fuel bills to pay for green energy

    Oppose 53%

    Support 30%

    Good start for the SNP-Green whatever it is
    Maybe. Maybe not.

    But Johnson is too big a scaredy cat to find out.

    Who’d’ve thought Gove had the bigger cajones?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559

    Same down here in my south coast holiday city. Virtually every restaurant and café has a notice in the window asking for staff. My daughter, a chef, has just secured a job paying £500 per shift (12 hours). This is untold riches for her - I think her previous highest was £200 per shift. This must have an effect on consumer prices, surely.
    Younger Grandson has just visited (with his mother) the university in the city where he will be from September onwards, went into a cafe/restaurant and in the course of discussion told them he was currently a waiter in a similar establishment, and had just been promoted. They offered him part-time work immediately.
    In a University City! Surely they'll have folk queueing up for such work.
  • AstraZeneca will move to seek regulatory approval of its antibody cocktail after a study showed the drug significantly reduced the risk of developing symptomatic Covid-19

    https://twitter.com/FinancialTimes/status/1428650534953705472?s=20

    In before Macron calls it quasi-effective and the German FT claims it is really only 8% effective.
  • They turn up eventually, sure. But not immediately, and not necessarily with the right skills.
    Talking of oil rigs our nephew was one of the 167 killed on the Pipa Alfa disaster in 1988
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005

    Enjoy. Last time I was dining under the Acropolis was with a work colleague, who I discovered after a few drinks was a remarkably unforgiving Christian. All other faiths doomed to the fiery pits of hell.

    Didn't do much for my digestion....
    I've met a few like that. In most cases they genuinely believe it but have so much fear of offending anyone or being impolite that they have to be pushed quite hard to admit it. I think it is because doing so would conflict with some of their other Christian values. I wish some others could learn from it.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,379
    SINGAPORE — The arrival of the Chinese vaccines was supposed to help stop the spread of the coronavirus in Southeast Asia.

    Instead, countries across the region are quickly turning elsewhere to look for shots.

    Residents in Thailand vaccinated with one dose of China’s Sinovac are now given the AstraZeneca shot three to four weeks later. In Indonesia, officials are administering the Moderna vaccine as a booster to health care workers who had received two doses of Sinovac.

    Malaysia’s health minister said the country would stop using Sinovac once its supply ran out. Even Cambodia, one of China’s strongest allies, has started using AstraZeneca as a booster for its frontline workers who had taken the Chinese vaccines.


    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/20/business/economy/china-vaccine-us-covid-diplomacy.html?smtyp=cur&smid=tw-nytimes
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,978

    Maybe. Maybe not.

    But Johnson is too big a scaredy cat to find out.

    Who’d’ve thought Gove had the bigger cajones?
    Possibly he is a scaredy cat and no wonder. The defining moment of his political career was Cameron's career-ending Brexit referendum misjudgement. All else follows from that. No way BoJo will repeat that mistake, whatever other mistakes he may make. Simples.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,304
    At least he didn't burst forth from someone's chest.

    https://twitter.com/matthewchampion/status/1428625208018153475?s=20
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Maybe. Maybe not.

    But Johnson is too big a scaredy cat to find out.

    Who’d’ve thought Gove had the bigger cajones?
    I think most people? Whatever one thinks of Gove (and I think he is a bit of a King Cnut), he is actually competent. Johnson is a hopeless case. Doesn't make him wrong on the "once in a generation vote" thing though. A lot of us that thought Brexit was a pointless and foolhardy policy have accepted the democratic vote. You nats should do the same. Oh, but hang on, the words "nationalist" and democracy don't really have a great history together do they?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559

    SINGAPORE — The arrival of the Chinese vaccines was supposed to help stop the spread of the coronavirus in Southeast Asia.

    Instead, countries across the region are quickly turning elsewhere to look for shots.

    Residents in Thailand vaccinated with one dose of China’s Sinovac are now given the AstraZeneca shot three to four weeks later. In Indonesia, officials are administering the Moderna vaccine as a booster to health care workers who had received two doses of Sinovac.

    Malaysia’s health minister said the country would stop using Sinovac once its supply ran out. Even Cambodia, one of China’s strongest allies, has started using AstraZeneca as a booster for its frontline workers who had taken the Chinese vaccines.


    https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/20/business/economy/china-vaccine-us-covid-diplomacy.html?smtyp=cur&smid=tw-nytimes

    AIUI from my son, who lives in Thailand and needs, soon, to travel again to China, the Chinese authorities will only accept as vaccinated, those who have had one of the Chinese vaccines.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    Scottish sub-sample:

    SNP 53%
    SGP 3%
    Pro-independence government 56%

    SCon 22%
    SLab 15%
    SLD 5%
    BetterTogether2 42%

    oth 1% (presumably Alba)

    Then factor in that 40% of SLab voters are pro-independence.
    That would make for 63% in favour of Independence - which we know is currently way off. Possible explanations:
    1. Single sub-samples taken in isolation are almost worthless.
    2. A substantial proportion of SNP/Green voters are pro-Union.

    Which explanation do you think is closer to the mark?
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    HYUFD said:

    It could be 100% SNP and Green it would not make any difference as the UK government has the final say on the Union under the Scotland Act 1998 and this Tory government will refuse indyref2. Unless there is a Labour led government reliant on SNP support after the next general election you will not get indyref2.

    The last actual independence poll of course was 47% No and only 44% Yes

    https://redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/scottish-independence-referendum-voting-intention-4-5-august/
    On behalf of my fellow Untermenschen, I apologise for my ignorance. I hadn’t heard your novel point of view before.

    Please don’t send in the tanks.
    image

    Is that your baldy heid poking out?
  • Maybe. Maybe not.

    But Johnson is too big a scaredy cat to find out.

    Who’d’ve thought Gove had the bigger cajones?
    For all our disagreements I think we agree there is no certainty over indyref2 and to be honest I just do not see it is difficult for Boris or any PM to defer to post the 2024 election, as we still have covid and the huge costs to be mitigated before it is even sensible to consider independence

    Indeed I understand most Scots are not in favour of an early referendum
  • Cases per 100k during pandemic:

    Cornwall 5,235
    South-West 6,793
    England 9,866

    A lot of gaps to be filled in Cornwall and even more in rural Devon.

    Delta is going to infect everyone at some point.

    For the vaccinated that's not likely to be a problem.
    Covid? No. Long Covid? Yes.

    I Do Not want to catch Covid. However inconvenient my partial withdrawal from consumerism may be for the right wing.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    Younger Grandson has just visited (with his mother) the university in the city where he will be from September onwards, went into a cafe/restaurant and in the course of discussion told them he was currently a waiter in a similar establishment, and had just been promoted. They offered him part-time work immediately.
    In a University City! Surely they'll have folk queueing up for such work.
    Not yet as Students will only arrive in September. So all your Grandson has done is get in early.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    edited August 2021

    Hmm. Eldest Granddaughter and her Significant Other, plus his parents have just gone there. Newquay, I think!
    However, all double vaccinated.
    Newquay is an interesting place. About 20 years ago I had a friend who ran a surf lodge there (long since sold for housing development) and I had a number of fun stays there off-season. Stunning coastal scenery and beaches. However, there was a lot of depravation there as outside the season there were very few decent jobs. Hopefully it has improved since I was last there.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,978

    That would make for 63% in favour of Independence - which we know is currently way off. Possible explanations:
    1. Single sub-samples taken in isolation are almost worthless.
    2. A substantial proportion of SNP/Green voters are pro-Union.

    Which explanation do you think is closer to the mark?
    I seem to remember seeing a poll that indicated that a substantial proportion of Scottish Green supporters are not in favour of independence. Robin Harper, the former leader of the Scottish Greens, was warning fairly recently against the Green preoccupation with Indy. I think he has a point. They seem far more energised by that and trans issues then they do with the environment.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,815

    Infratest dimap

    Union: 23 % (-4)
    SPD: 21 (+3)
    GRN: 17% (-2)

    Changes from 05.08.2021

    https://www.wahlrecht.de/umfragen/dimap.htm

    Could we be heading for an SPD led government? A couple of extra points and they'll be the senior partner in the Bundestag.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    They turn up eventually, sure. But not immediately, and not necessarily with the right skills.
    And there is a great difference between skilled finance and oil rig jobs and a minimum wage low skilled job.

    For the past 15 years prior to Covid large parts of this country used Eastern Europe as a source of those workers but that isn't currently an option - which is why things are in the state they are in.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,208

    In before Macron calls it quasi-effective and the German FT claims it is really only 8% effective.
    France is going to overtake us on % of population 1st dosed shortly.
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    TOPPING said:

    For most squaddies most figures of authority are regarded with deep suspicion and disdain.

    And as for motivation, they are not doing it for the politicians they are doing it for their mates/unit, which is a strongly inculcated culture in HMF.

    As someone or other once said: "I didn't join the British Army I joined the 10th Hussars."
    Somehow 5th Battalion The Rifles doesn’t have the same ring to it as the Hussars.
  • QuincelQuincel Posts: 4,042
    MaxPB said:

    Could we be heading for an SPD led government? A couple of extra points and they'll be the senior partner in the Bundestag.
    Scholz's personal ratings are climbing pretty swiftly throughout the campaign, too.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,304
    Raab not as bad as the Taliban shock.

    Well, they seem to be ruthlessly successful apart from anything else.

  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,844
    edited August 2021

    "Scotland" pays nothing. SSEN pay more because they produce excess capacity for the local circuit & therefore make more use of the UK Transmission network. Aim is to have generation close to consumption. System is being reviewed in light of remoteness of most renewable sources

    https://twitter.com/LeRef5/status/1427902952900071435?s=20

    Mind you, when you're independent you won't have to worry about transmission charges....
    Transmission charges aren't an issue with natural gas. Prety sure that St Fergus would count as "remote", gas in a pipe more of a faff than power through a cable yet the "remoteness" of the main import terminal isn't seen as the same issue as renewable locations.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    AlistairM said:

    Newquay is an interesting place. About 20 years ago I had a friend who ran a surf lodge there (long since sold for housing development) and I had a number of fun stays there off-season. Stunning coastal scenery and beaches. However, there was a lot of depravation there as outside the season there were very few decent jobs. Hopefully it has improved since I was last there.
    I think that that applies to much of Mid- and Western Cornwall. The East, close to the Tamar valley, has more scope for agriculture.
    Brexit has done nothing good for the Cornish fishing industry, either.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    Pressure grows on UK foreign secretary over handling of Afghanistan crisis https://on.ft.com/37XOsGX
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    Theoretical laws for Cabinet resignations:
    1. General rule - Cabinet Ministers survive most calls to resign
    2. Blair's law - if survival depends on a good Commons performance, they will perform well & survive
    3. Campbell's law - a bad splash is survivable but not 3 days in a row
    4. Brown's law - conspiracies among Cabinet Ministers are common but unreliable and bound to fail
    5. Rule of 4 Backbenchers - if 4 sensible, named backbenchers from the Minister's own party (but not from an opposing bloc within that party) go on the record, resignation is likely
    6. Focus is Deadly - no matter how bad something smells it can be survived unless media focus falls on an unanswerable single point of failure
    7. Fallacy of Complexity - Ministers mistakenly believe complexity will protect them but resignation issues are usually complex & obscure


    https://twitter.com/theobertram/status/1428662314371371008
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    I seem to remember seeing a poll that indicated that a substantial proportion of Scottish Green supporters are not in favour of independence. Robin Harper, the former leader of the Scottish Greens, was warning fairly recently against the Green preoccupation with Indy. I think he has a point. They seem far more energised by that and trans issues then they do with the environment.
    In the latest opinion poll on Scottish Independence 11% of those who said they voted SNP in the 2021 Holyrood constituency vote said that they would vote against Scottish Independence.
  • Scott_xP said:

    Pressure grows on UK foreign secretary over handling of Afghanistan crisis https://on.ft.com/37XOsGX

    Strange that you did not comment on my post earlier this morning considering your repetitive posting on Raab



    I commented yesterday on the tragedy of the 5 year old Afghan refugee child that had fallen from a hotel in Sheffield having just arrived from Afghanistan

    Further details emerged today that the child died on the 18th August 4 days from arriving in the UK via the Foreign Office evacuation scheme for qualifying Afghans and that his father had worked at the British Embassy

    It follows that this flight must have left around the Friday before the weekend collapse of the regime and therefore it appears the Foreign Office were already repatriating Afghans to the UK

    This does not fit with the narrative that a phone call on the Saturday would have achieved anything as repatriation was already taking place
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,815
    Quincel said:

    Scholz's personal ratings are climbing pretty swiftly throughout the campaign, too.
    Laschet is a complete idiot as well which will hurt the Union and help the SPD.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819

    I think most people? Whatever one thinks of Gove (and I think he is a bit of a King Cnut), he is actually competent. Johnson is a hopeless case. Doesn't make him wrong on the "once in a generation vote" thing though. A lot of us that thought Brexit was a pointless and foolhardy policy have accepted the democratic vote. You nats should do the same. Oh, but hang on, the words "nationalist" and democracy don't really have a great history together do they?
    The winning 2014 vote was a campaign which promised to stay in the single market. A single throwaway remark from the former first minister doesn't matter a jot in comparison.
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,207

    Covid? No. Long Covid? Yes.

    I Do Not want to catch Covid. However inconvenient my partial withdrawal from consumerism may be for the right wing.
    Why the hell did you need to bring right wing into that?

    I am to the right of you but have absolutely no problem with people making their own decisions on how best to manage risk
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702

    Somehow 5th Battalion The Rifles doesn’t have the same ring to it as the Hussars.
    There has been a lot of reorganisation but the members of that regiment will be drilled in the customs and history of 1LI.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    HYUFD said:

    I have said Romney, who opposed the withdrawal, would be a better President than both Trump and Biden, as indeed would Hillary Clinton who was also wary about withdrawal.

    As it is though 58% of Republicans now oppose the Afghanistan withdrawal so the GOP is becoming more interventionist again at last....
    I think that seriously misinterprets the poll.
    What it means is they think Biden was wrong, no more than that - I doubt more than a fraction of them are more interventionist / inclined to go back in again.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,530

    Covid? No. Long Covid? Yes.

    I Do Not want to catch Covid. However inconvenient my partial withdrawal from consumerism may be for the right wing.
    Well, no one is stopping you from doing what you think is necessary to not catch COVID.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,978

    Scottish sub-sample:

    SNP 53%
    SGP 3%
    Pro-independence government 56%

    SCon 22%
    SLab 15%
    SLD 5%
    BetterTogether2 42%

    oth 1% (presumably Alba)

    Then factor in that 40% of SLab voters are pro-independence.
    Meanwhile, back in the real world, the Tories gain a Council seat from the SNP. No evidence here of a huge Pro-Indy swing. The baseline is the 2017 council elections which took place a few weeks before the General Election when the SNP lost over 20 seats and knocked back Nicola's indyref plans.

    Mid-Formartine (Aberdeenshire) by-election, first preferences:

    Conservative ~ 1480 (45.7%, +11.1)
    SNP ~ 1205 (37.2%, +11.4)
    Lib Dem ~ 412 (12.7%, +3.3)
    Green ~ 144 (4.4%, +4.4)

    (Note: Candidates from 2017 not present had 30.1%)

  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,702
    tlg86 said:

    Well, no one is stopping you from doing what you think is necessary to not catch COVID.
    There will soon be a name for the long term psychological damage from over-caution resulting from an irrational fear of Covid.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    There’s a world of difference politically if we fail to evacuate Afghan translators and support staff, and fail to evacuate British and Americans citizens. Hangs in the balance looks like.

    Taliban chances of getting a bung for hostages are presumably at their greatest right now, when it can be done cash in hand by special forces on the ground, rather than diplomatically when it’s a global news event.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9911163/Afghanistan-evacuation-not-going-save-want-UK-admits.html

    Armed Forces Minister James Heappey: ‘The air bridge could last two more days, five more days, ten more days,' he added, insisting that the armed forces are 'working hard to maximise capacity' on every flight while revealing 963 people were taken out of Kabul on British flights yesterday with 1,000 expected to be flown out today.

    Meanwhile a Pentagon spokesman said the US has evacuated some 7,000 people since Sunday, bringing the total since July to 12,000 with a target of at least 22,000 - though aid groups had said 80,000 would need to be flown out to keep Biden's promise to provide sanctuary to all those who helped US forces.

    The UK will not be able to evacuate everyone it has promised sanctuary to from Afghanistan and the air bridge to Kabul airport may remain open for just a few more days, the armed forces minister has admitted today.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    TOPPING said:

    As a poster pointed out yesterday, the US is slammed for being a global policeman and for not being a global policeman.
    I think it fairly clear that the US (and this goes for any likely future Republican administration) has gone a long way to abandoning its role as a global policeman.

    That doesn't mean it won't remain a the world's most powerful military power - or that it will abandon alliances with fellow democracies - but it's probably going to avoid intervening anywhere which isn't in its clear interest.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    armchairs = bad
    deckchairs = good
    https://twitter.com/henrymance/status/1428664264814956548/photo/1

    Joy makes a good point, which is that, if Dominic Raab is sacked, he shouldn’t be replaced by the Taliban.
    https://twitter.com/henrymance/status/1428665037883953153
  • Nigelb said:

    I think that seriously misinterprets the poll.
    What it means is they think Biden was wrong, no more than that - I doubt more than a fraction of them are more interventionist / inclined to go back in again.
    If you notice that @HYUFD is so ready to support militarily intervention, he even gives away his position by saying the GOP is becoming more interventionist again AT LAST........

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,533

    Yes.
    Yes it is worth the stability or yes it is generous? Or both?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited August 2021

    Meanwhile, back in the real world, the Tories gain a Council seat from the SNP. No evidence here of a huge Pro-Indy swing. The baseline is the 2017 council elections which took place a few weeks before the General Election when the SNP lost over 20 seats and knocked back Nicola's indyref plans.

    Mid-Formartine (Aberdeenshire) by-election, first preferences:

    Conservative ~ 1480 (45.7%, +11.1)
    SNP ~ 1205 (37.2%, +11.4)
    Lib Dem ~ 412 (12.7%, +3.3)
    Green ~ 144 (4.4%, +4.4)

    (Note: Candidates from 2017 not present had 30.1%)

    Were labour absent from the ballot
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785
    Tres said:

    The winning 2014 vote was a campaign which promised to stay in the single market. A single throwaway remark from the former first minister doesn't matter a jot in comparison.
    I assume by the throw away remark you mean the one by the chap since referred to as "a bully and a sex pest" by his QC.

    Either way, my point is that there were all sorts of things promised in the 2016 referendum in favour of Leave that were misleading. Nonetheless a vote was held and the result is now respected by most. No-one seriously expects a further referendum on Europe for a generation. The Scots should also respect the same principle. It was a once in a generation referendum. It should remain that way.
  • Executioners of Geronimo, the condemned alpaca, may arrive to find it hidden among four identical animals in a field

    https://twitter.com/Telegraph/status/1428422171664306177?s=20

    Who presumably may have become infected and also need to be culled?

    Whoever thought that was a good idea
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,533

    Executioners of Geronimo, the condemned alpaca, may arrive to find it hidden among four identical animals in a field

    https://twitter.com/Telegraph/status/1428422171664306177?s=20

    Who presumably may have become infected and also need to be culled?

    At a certain point one can cross the line from affection for a pet into something a bit weird.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,379
    Guess which one the EU is suing:

    Wow. COVAX - the great hope for global vaccination - is a f*cking travesty.

    Here’s the percentage of supply promises that have actually been met:

    J&J - 0%
    Moderna - 0%
    Novavax - 0%
    Pfizer - 4%
    Serum Inst (AZ) - 15%
    Astra-Zeneca - 38%


    https://twitter.com/davidrkadler/status/1428436495673831424?s=20

    Outside COVAX purchases there have been some (eg Moderna) donations
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,533

    Raab not as bad as the Taliban shock.

    Well, they seem to be ruthlessly successful apart from anything else.

    We should all be grateful they exist, as it means we will never be the most awful people around.

    Though some say we should aim a little higher, pah.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,208

    Whoever thought that was a good idea
    He's still on his own.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,727
    TOPPING said:

    Exactly. It's like when people ponder how conducive to poppy growing Afghan's climate and terroir is. Overlooking the fact that it is more the governance that is the deciding factor.

    As for your point it would mean inflationary pressures build which, according to many on here, is a good thing but I'm not so sure
    Opium poppies are notably easy to grow and even easier to harvest. A perfect crop. So it’s much more about the legal situation/lawlessness of any locale

    They grow particularly well in East Anglia and the Fens, and in the 16th-18th centuries there was a big fenland tradition of ‘poppy tea’ - to take away the agues and tediums of their watery lifestyle

  • It must have been said, but I'll say it anyway

    Surely there must be some kind of tipping point looming up, where this government's accumulation of appaling administrative incompetences catches up with it to the point that it shows in the polls. Whatever you think of policies - good or bad - is almost irrelevant. They are just abysmal at execution. Reflecting the personna of the PM?

    As the impact thus far on the popularity of the Cons has been minimal, it is actually more a crushing indictment of the official opposition as much as anything else, even allowing for Covid. It is difficult not to conclude that John Smith, Tony Blair (or Gordon Brown had he become leader in 1994) would have pulled way ahead by now.

    The electors are not stupid. They can spot a dud, and have concluded that Labour are more incomptent than BJ's govt.

    Heaven help us....
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,450
    edited August 2021
    Covid-19 drug Donald Trump called "a blessing from God" approved for use in the UK @theipaper

    Health Secretary @sajidjavid said approval of Ronapreve is “fantastic news” and he hopes it can be rolled out for patients on the NHS “as soon as possible”.

    https://twitter.com/PMGallagher1/status/1428663270630699014?s=20
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,785

    Whoever thought that was a good idea
    Animal rights activists/sentimentalists really are the most stupid of our species.
  • TheWhiteRabbitTheWhiteRabbit Posts: 12,454

    Whoever thought that was a good idea
    Did they stop watching Spartacus twenty minutes before the end?
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146

    For all our disagreements I think we agree there is no certainty over indyref2 and to be honest I just do not see it is difficult for Boris or any PM to defer to post the 2024 election, as we still have covid and the huge costs to be mitigated before it is even sensible to consider independence

    Indeed I understand most Scots are not in favour of an early referendum
    To defer the next Scottish independence referendum is not in the gift of Boris Johnson. The Scots have expressed their will at the ballot box.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,533
    edited August 2021

    Covid-19 drug Donald Trump called "a blessing from God" approved for use in the UK @theipaper

    Health Secretary @sajidjavid said approval of Ronapreve is “fantastic news” and he hopes it can be rolled out for patients on the NHS “as soon as possible”.

    https://twitter.com/PMGallagher1/status/1428663270630699014?s=20

    God stealing the credit of scientists yet again! Dude's such a glory hog, and on an ego trip to boot.
  • To defer the next Scottish independence referendum is not in the gift of Boris Johnson. The Scots have expressed their will at the ballot box.
    I am afraid it is
This discussion has been closed.