The first polling has BoJo’s speech rated lower than Starmer’s – politicalbetting.com
Exclusive: Voters think Keir Starmer's speech was better than Boris Johnson's – new poll for Opiniumhttps://t.co/kcZlnbqEkM pic.twitter.com/UWpB7nH42a
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I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.0
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Oh was that a first?
Absolute no inside information either.0 -
Poor you. Was that experiment trotted past an ethics committee?TheScreamingEagles said:I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.
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Not gone down well with Metro. But I guess Johnson lost London a long time ago.
Neil Henderson
@hendopolis
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4m
METRO: Build back banter #TomorrowsPapersToday0 -
I once took part in a focus group that involved listening to clips of Ed Miliband for over an hour.Carnyx said:
Poor you. Was that experiment trotted past an ethics committee?TheScreamingEagles said:I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.
After that you get immune to these things.
Edit - I also once partook in a focus group about Scottish independence in the summer of 2014.3 -
I wonder whether Johnson will want to do a leaders debate with Starmer.0
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If we go downhill, Keir Starmer will be perfectly placed but it's a big if0
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Paging @Leon
Andrew Lilico
@andrew_lilico
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39s
When is China going to take over Taiwan?
https://twitter.com/andrew_lilico/status/14458538999156817970 -
Probably Starmer edged it but he needed to. Boris as PM has a poll lead midterm which is above average for PMs at this stage so as long as he did not completely bomb today, which he didn't, he would not suffer much damage0
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GenuineLostPassword said:I wonder whether Johnson will want to do a leaders debate with Starmer.
Erm... Nope.0 -
BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his1 -
How London-biased is Metro these days? When I was posted to Yorkshire, they had boxes of them on the local buses.rottenborough said:Not gone down well with Metro. But I guess Johnson lost London a long time ago.
Neil Henderson
@hendopolis
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4m
METRO: Build back banter #TomorrowsPapersToday1 -
Opinium are also the only pollster that has Sir Keir ahead of Boris in either net or gross positives0
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I was once polled (as a random member of the public) about what I thought about Ed Miliband. It was at the Labour conference and in the middle Ed strolled up, saw I was on the phone, and waved and silently moved on. I marked him one point higher for that.TheScreamingEagles said:
I once took part in a focus group that involved listening to clips of Ed Miliband for over an hour.Carnyx said:
Poor you. Was that experiment trotted past an ethics committee?TheScreamingEagles said:I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.
After that you get immune to these things.
Edit - I also once partook in a focus group about Scottish independence in the summer of 2014.5 -
Lots of chatter at Tory conference about election dates. Most people I spoke to there assume it will come a year early.
I’m told Oliver Dowden told a Yorkshire Tories reception not to rule out a winter poll, as turn-out would be lower for Labour. Next election in Dec 2023?
https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/14458551946553139211 -
No, he didn't want one with Corbyn, so why would he with Starmer?LostPassword said:I wonder whether Johnson will want to do a leaders debate with Starmer.
He even did a runner from Andrew Neil. He prefers photo-stunts to real discussion of policy.0 -
"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there1 -
Ha, ha.Scott_xP said:Lots of chatter at Tory conference about election dates. Most people I spoke to there assume it will come a year early.
I’m told Oliver Dowden told a Yorkshire Tories reception not to rule out a winter poll, as turn-out would be lower for Labour. Next election in Dec 2023?
https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/1445855194655313921
More like May 2022.
Seriously though, Labour need to get cracking on setting their core vote up as postal ballots.0 -
Without being played the clips from it, would anyone have remembered Starmer's speech?0
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I will eat a baseball cap if there is a leaders debate next time.Foxy said:
No, he didn't want one with Corbyn, so why would he with Starmer?LostPassword said:I wonder whether Johnson will want to do a leaders debate with Starmer.
He even did a runner from Andrew Neil. He prefers photo-stunts to real discussion of policy.0 -
No, I was a Tory canvasser in the cold and wet in Dec 2019, never again. We have spring elections for a reason, plus pensioners will have less incentive to come out in the cold next time given Brexit has been done and there is no threat of Corbyn becoming PMScott_xP said:Lots of chatter at Tory conference about election dates. Most people I spoke to there assume it will come a year early.
I’m told Oliver Dowden told a Yorkshire Tories reception not to rule out a winter poll, as turn-out would be lower for Labour. Next election in Dec 2023?
https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/14458551946553139210 -
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.0 -
The jokes are serious.CorrectHorseBattery said:Can I have an honest assessment on BoJo's speech from those here
That's Johnson's brand, which means there's nothing there now apart from anecdotes, slogans and narratives.
Which I think is what Cummings is thinking of when he says Johnson is unfit for office. Cummings is malign in my view but he is results driven and a good project manager. His slogans "take back control", "get Brexit done" etc served a purpose - to get majorities for Leave and the Conservatives. Now the slogans and narratives are the end purpose.1 -
You are all heart.NickPalmer said:
I was once polled (as a random member of the public) about what I thought about Ed Miliband. It was at the Labour conference and in the middle Ed strolled up, saw I was on the phone, and waved and silently moved on. I marked him one point higher for that.TheScreamingEagles said:
I once took part in a focus group that involved listening to clips of Ed Miliband for over an hour.Carnyx said:
Poor you. Was that experiment trotted past an ethics committee?TheScreamingEagles said:I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.
After that you get immune to these things.
Edit - I also once partook in a focus group about Scottish independence in the summer of 2014.0 -
Nice, I lived in the most heavily polled constituency of GE2015, I got polled a lot.NickPalmer said:
I was once polled (as a random member of the public) about what I thought about Ed Miliband. It was at the Labour conference and in the middle Ed strolled up, saw I was on the phone, and waved and silently moved on. I marked him one point higher for that.TheScreamingEagles said:
I once took part in a focus group that involved listening to clips of Ed Miliband for over an hour.Carnyx said:
Poor you. Was that experiment trotted past an ethics committee?TheScreamingEagles said:I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.
After that you get immune to these things.
Edit - I also once partook in a focus group about Scottish independence in the summer of 2014.
Was useful for PB purposes as well.
I should clarify the Scottish Independence focus group was an England & Wales thing asking how we felt about the referendum and what the result would mean for us.0 -
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh0 -
I did remember the 'level up? you can't even fill up' line.BlancheLivermore said:Without being played the clips from it, would anyone have remembered Starmer's speech?
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Yes, used to get given out in Leicester too, at the railway station, and at the hospital. There used to be copies of the Metro in our staffroom.Stuartinromford said:
How London-biased is Metro these days? When I was posted to Yorkshire, they had boxes of them on the local buses.rottenborough said:Not gone down well with Metro. But I guess Johnson lost London a long time ago.
Neil Henderson
@hendopolis
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4m
METRO: Build back banter #TomorrowsPapersToday0 -
Yeah I'm not sure how they came up with those figures. I am of the opinion that boring is an underrated virtue in a politician. Starmer is very virtuous in that respect.BlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there1 -
I remember him describing his very sick mother lying in a hospital bed and some Corbyn Cult twat started heckling about Palestine or whatever.TheScreamingEagles said:
I did remember the 'level up? you can't even fill up' line.BlancheLivermore said:Without being played the clips from it, would anyone have remembered Starmer's speech?
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How intriguingly tedious of himFarooq said:
28%.BlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
Starmer was more interesting and more boring.1 -
Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?0 -
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh0 -
UC cut leads my local news.
Not good for Johnson.0 -
I want to see a poll where they had to watch the entire thing, not just parts broadcasters selected.1
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I haven't seen my local petrol station have fuel for a week, but there is no queue a couple of miles away. So still rather patchy here.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.0 -
Just watched it. I thought it was all over the place. It wasn't overlong, his style is hard to follow but generally engaging, but with that it didn't seem structured so I found it hard to focus on what his key points were - long diversions followed by a whiplash inducing turn to a suddenly important point or theme eg when suddenly bigging up capitalism. Surprised he left it til about 3/4 through to bring up the Labour position around Covid.CorrectHorseBattery said:Can I have an honest assessment on BoJo's speech from those here
I thought his many shout outs to Cabinet Members interesting, as I don't remember as many references in Starmer's speech, though they may have slipped by.
Overall C+. It got the job done, nothing obviously wrong with it. But I'd not have known the theme was 'Build Back Better' without it written in front of him.0 -
It says in the linked article that the clips were chosen by the broadcaster, not Opinium.isam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
It's hard to draw many conclusions without knowing what clips were chosen0 -
Agreed. I'm just saying it's a strange poll, almost meaningless, in fact probably bogusisam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
Either you show the voters the snatches they actually get on TV news, or show the whole thing. Who decides the "edit" they get to view? What bits do the pollsters choose, and why?
Absurd. Voodoo polling. Ignore2 -
And? We all have mothers. They all die, his in 2015.rottenborough said:
I remember him describing his very sick mother lying in a hospital bed and some Corbyn Cult twat started heckling about Palestine or whatever.TheScreamingEagles said:
I did remember the 'level up? you can't even fill up' line.BlancheLivermore said:Without being played the clips from it, would anyone have remembered Starmer's speech?
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It was a news clip which showed parts of the speech.BlancheLivermore said:
It says in the linked article that the clips were chosen by the broadcaster, not Opinium.isam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
It's hard to draw many conclusions without knowing what clips were chosen0 -
One of ours was closed yesterday, back open today. No real issues round here now. Annoying as it was, it was a massive over reaction to a tiny problem. Inevitably all those panic buyers who aren’t actually using their full tanks, are not needing to fill them yet.Foxy said:
I haven't seen my local petrol station have fuel for a week, but there is no queue a couple of miles away. So still rather patchy here.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.1 -
??IshmaelZ said:
And? We all have mothers. They all die, his in 2015.rottenborough said:
I remember him describing his very sick mother lying in a hospital bed and some Corbyn Cult twat started heckling about Palestine or whatever.TheScreamingEagles said:
I did remember the 'level up? you can't even fill up' line.BlancheLivermore said:Without being played the clips from it, would anyone have remembered Starmer's speech?
Yes, we all have mothers and they will all die. It's poor timing for a heckler to pick a moment when he's talking about that though, even if that was not the point they were heckling about.2 -
Would your party take into account your voters being more likely to have postal votes than their Labour and Lib Dem counterparts, though?HYUFD said:
No, I was a Tory canvasser in the cold and wet in Dec 2019, never again. We have spring elections for a reason, plus pensioners will have less incentive to come out in the cold next time given Brexit has been done and there is no threat of Corbyn becoming PMScott_xP said:Lots of chatter at Tory conference about election dates. Most people I spoke to there assume it will come a year early.
I’m told Oliver Dowden told a Yorkshire Tories reception not to rule out a winter poll, as turn-out would be lower for Labour. Next election in Dec 2023?
https://twitter.com/PippaCrerar/status/14458551946553139210 -
So they saw about 40 seconds? The stuff shown on, say, BBC News at Ten?TheScreamingEagles said:
It was a news clip which showed parts of the speech.BlancheLivermore said:
It says in the linked article that the clips were chosen by the broadcaster, not Opinium.isam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
It's hard to draw many conclusions without knowing what clips were chosen
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What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.1 -
More like 3/4 minutes, the sort of thing that Sky News/BBC News at Ten show.Leon said:
So they saw about 40 seconds? The stuff shown on, say, BBC News at Ten?TheScreamingEagles said:
It was a news clip which showed parts of the speech.BlancheLivermore said:
It says in the linked article that the clips were chosen by the broadcaster, not Opinium.isam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
It's hard to draw many conclusions without knowing what clips were chosen0 -
So he phoned it in?kle4 said:
Just watched it. I thought it was all over the place. It wasn't overlong, his style is hard to follow but generally engaging, but with that it didn't seem structured so I found it hard to focus on what his key points were - long diversions followed by a whiplash inducing turn to a suddenly important point or theme eg when suddenly bigging up capitalism. Surprised he left it til about 3/4 through to bring up the Labour position around Covid.CorrectHorseBattery said:Can I have an honest assessment on BoJo's speech from those here
I thought his many shout outs to Cabinet Members interesting, as I don't remember as many references in Starmer's speech, though they may have slipped by.
Overall C+. It got the job done, nothing obviously wrong with it. But I'd not have known the theme was 'Build Back Better' without it written in front of him.0 -
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.1 -
Speaking of boring, saw The Dig on Netflix - one of the most tremendously dull things I've ever seen, why it was a movie at all baffled me.0
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Crass.IshmaelZ said:
And? We all have mothers. They all die, his in 2015.rottenborough said:
I remember him describing his very sick mother lying in a hospital bed and some Corbyn Cult twat started heckling about Palestine or whatever.TheScreamingEagles said:
I did remember the 'level up? you can't even fill up' line.BlancheLivermore said:Without being played the clips from it, would anyone have remembered Starmer's speech?
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Though in terms of public impact, the clips are closer to what most of the voting public will have seen- the speech is just a ritual to get your soundbite on the evening news, where you might get 10 million viewers across all the bulletins on all the channels.Leon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
(This might turn into a bee in my bonnet. Without getting too Reithian about it, a nation where most adults are exposed to a news bulletin which at least aspires to be broadly balanced is likely to be better-run than one where they aren't. No way of solving that problem, of course, but hey ho.)
It takes an awful lot to yank the dial these days. Dom in Durham might not have done it had we not all been stuck at home at the time it came out.0 -
Johnson is a seducer. He promises whatever his audience wants, as a means to his objective. There is neither a plan nor an intent to do more than words.DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.0 -
Seven messages I got from Starmer:DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
1 He's serious about kicking out the Left
2 He's a hypocrite (2nd vote stuff)
3 He's humourless and dull
4 He has no policies - yet
5 He's got a backbone
6 He understands the need for Labour to seem patriotic, and he personally is patriotic
7 He'd probably be a decent prime minister, but his party is still badly divided
Seven messages I got from Boris:
1 He's serious about "levelling up" - but WTF is it?
2 He's a pretty shameless dissembler
3 He's still funny and he's regained his vim
4 He has no new policies, right now
5 He's adored by his party even tho he waffles
6 He understands the need for Tories to keep winning the WWC
7 He's probably going to win the next GE6 -
I am surprised also that people have not noticed any shortages in supermarkets. Maybe Scotland is at the end of long supply chains or something but more often than not there are shortages. It doesn't bother me most of the time because I find what I need from what is available, but it is noticeable.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
So today in Sainsbury's about half of vegetable lines were out of stock, one third of meat, one half of milk types, which is unusual. Not much bread, but that might be end of day. Most dry goods available. Fairly typical, but it wasn't like this before.0 -
He may be a seducer but I don't agree with the rest of this. There will be lots of activity, make work and dodgy statistics generated. Some of it may do some good. Some of it will be a waste of public money. The general direction or focus will be more than a tad amorphous but who cares? Onward.Foxy said:
Johnson is a seducer. He promises whatever his audience wants, as a means to his objective. There is neither a plan nor an intent to do more than words.DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.0 -
Sky just showed the whole speechStuartinromford said:
Though in terms of public impact, the clips are closer to what most of the voting public will have seen- the speech is just a ritual to get your soundbite on the evening news, where you might get 10 million viewers across all the bulletins on all the channels.Leon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
(This might turn into a bee in my bonnet. Without getting too Reithian about it, a nation where most adults are exposed to a news bulletin which at least aspires to be broadly balanced is likely to be better-run than one where they aren't. No way of solving that problem, of course, but hey ho.)
It takes an awful lot to yank the dial these days. Dom in Durham might not have done it had we not all been stuck at home at the time it came out.0 -
I’ve said before, if I hadn’t seen on pb or the news about shortages, I would£ not have noticed anything. I also would suggest it is not that big an issue in most places - where are the real photos of empty shelves?FF43 said:
I am surprised also that people have not noticed any shortages in supermarkets. Maybe Scotland is at the end of long supply chains or something but more often than not there are shortages. It doesn't bother me most of the time because I find what I need from what is available, but it is noticeable.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
So today in Sainsbury's about half of vegetable lines were out of stock, one third of meat, one half of milk types, which is unusual. Not much bread, but that might be end of day. Most dry goods available. Fairly typical, bit out wasn't like this before.1 -
Yes, I agree that was his objective and I think he succeeded. The real test will be delivery.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.0 -
I haven't seen much missing in supermarkets either on the IoW or Leicester, but what I do notice is how quickly things with a short shelf life go off within days. I see this as a sign that farm to fork times are being quite stretched.FF43 said:
I am surprised also that people have not noticed any shortages in supermarkets. Maybe Scotland is at the end of long supply chains or something but more often than not there are shortages. It doesn't bother me most of the time because I find what I need from what is available, but it is noticeable.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
So today in Sainsbury's about half of vegetable lines were out of stock, one third of meat, one half of milk types, which is unusual. Not much bread, but that might be end of day. Most dry goods available. Fairly typical, bit out wasn't like this before.0 -
Then let us await the polls. As I've said, I doubt the Tories will get a bounce, just as Labour haven'tTheScreamingEagles said:
More like 3/4 minutes, the sort of thing that Sky News/BBC News at Ten show.Leon said:
So they saw about 40 seconds? The stuff shown on, say, BBC News at Ten?TheScreamingEagles said:
It was a news clip which showed parts of the speech.BlancheLivermore said:
It says in the linked article that the clips were chosen by the broadcaster, not Opinium.isam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
It's hard to draw many conclusions without knowing what clips were chosen0 -
Boris brings optimism and hope. Keir brings the old LAB message of negatively and entitlement to welfare rather than people standing on their own two feet.
Boris to win #GE2023. Might be Spring 20240 -
I'm very glad we now know that Levelling Up, Housing and Communities means Livin' On A Prayer with Jon Bon Govi1
-
I'm impressed at the Schleswig-Holstein Question being solved in the last thread.0
-
Wrt the next Tory leadership contest, if the final three are Sunak, Patel and Truss, what would the result of the final vote of MPs be? I'm guessing if either Sunak or Truss had "votes to spare" there'd be an attempt at tactical voting to make sure Priti Patel didn't get through to the final round, a bit like with Gove last time.0
-
Polls only matter when the GE is called. Until then LAB can keep dreaming.Leon said:
Then let us await the polls. As I've said, I doubt the Tories will get a bounce, just as Labour haven'tTheScreamingEagles said:
More like 3/4 minutes, the sort of thing that Sky News/BBC News at Ten show.Leon said:
So they saw about 40 seconds? The stuff shown on, say, BBC News at Ten?TheScreamingEagles said:
It was a news clip which showed parts of the speech.BlancheLivermore said:
It says in the linked article that the clips were chosen by the broadcaster, not Opinium.isam said:
They were shown clips, I presume the highlights, from both, so Sir Keir’s speech going on for twice as long wouldn’t have been a factorLeon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
It's hard to draw many conclusions without knowing what clips were chosen0 -
I'm sure they have, but hardly anyone watches Sky News. 100k or so?Big_G_NorthWales said:
Sky just showed the whole speechStuartinromford said:
Though in terms of public impact, the clips are closer to what most of the voting public will have seen- the speech is just a ritual to get your soundbite on the evening news, where you might get 10 million viewers across all the bulletins on all the channels.Leon said:
None of these people saw the entire speechesBlancheLivermore said:"Also, 40% said Mr Johnson was interesting and 22% said boring."
"More people even thought Sir Keir was interesting, with 41% saying that about his speech."
I find it interesting that Starmer's boring number isn't there
If they had forced them to sit through all 90 minutes of Starmer's desperate if wrothy droneathon then I reckon the stats would be very different
I don't think either of these speeches will shift the dial. But Boris made me laugh
(This might turn into a bee in my bonnet. Without getting too Reithian about it, a nation where most adults are exposed to a news bulletin which at least aspires to be broadly balanced is likely to be better-run than one where they aren't. No way of solving that problem, of course, but hey ho.)
It takes an awful lot to yank the dial these days. Dom in Durham might not have done it had we not all been stuck at home at the time it came out.0 -
An interesting graph of fuel stock levels from Sky. You can see that stock levels had been falling for some time prior to the panic and that they are still nowhere near back to normal. How long until the next panic?turbotubbs said:
One of ours was closed yesterday, back open today. No real issues round here now. Annoying as it was, it was a massive over reaction to a tiny problem. Inevitably all those panic buyers who aren’t actually using their full tanks, are not needing to fill them yet.Foxy said:
I haven't seen my local petrol station have fuel for a week, but there is no queue a couple of miles away. So still rather patchy here.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
https://e3.365dm.com/21/10/2048x1152/skynews-graph-fuel_5536612.png?bypass-service-worker&202110060658390 -
You could make a movie about such, it's why I tuned in to watch it, but the performances were dull, the writing was dull, there was no narrative just...stuff happening, it was lifeless and monotone all the way through. If it was about emerging from class strictures that went right over my head - I wish it had hit that note harder, it might have made an impression at least.Farooq said:
Oh it wasn't that bad. Good that someone had a go at making a movie about archaeology without it being all Indiana Jones. They got some of the detail badly wrong, tried to turn the sexiness up from 0 to 1/10 which was silly, but it's a nice little vignette of a country struggling to slowly emerge from class strictures in a slow and gradual way, like the reverse of the process of digging up the past layer by painstaking layer.kle4 said:Speaking of boring, saw The Dig on Netflix - one of the most tremendously dull things I've ever seen, why it was a movie at all baffled me.
it's not everyone's cup of mead, but it's hardly worthless.
A Meh movie can be much harder to take than something actually bad, which can at least entertain. And it's not because I wanted it to be Indiana Jones.0 -
Anyone like to guess how many genuinely undecided voters decided to sit through both speeches?
I'm going with seven.
So, that's probably four votes for Mr Starmer and three for Mr Johnson.0 -
Will Alba field General Election candidates? It's performance at the Scottish elections was pretty execrable, so I'm far from convinced they'll still be a thing.Fairliered said:Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?
0 -
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.1 -
Would be interesting to see a more extensive dataset. That could entirely be down to seasonal variations, for example.FeersumEnjineeya said:
An interesting graph of fuel stock levels from Sky. You can see that stock levels had been falling for some time prior to the panic and that they are still nowhere near back to normal. How long until the next panic?turbotubbs said:
One of ours was closed yesterday, back open today. No real issues round here now. Annoying as it was, it was a massive over reaction to a tiny problem. Inevitably all those panic buyers who aren’t actually using their full tanks, are not needing to fill them yet.Foxy said:
I haven't seen my local petrol station have fuel for a week, but there is no queue a couple of miles away. So still rather patchy here.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
https://e3.365dm.com/21/10/2048x1152/skynews-graph-fuel_5536612.png?bypass-service-worker&202110060658390 -
Well Alba have TWO sitting MPs so it is likely they will run some general election candidates.rcs1000 said:
Will Alba field General Election candidates? It's performance at the Scottish elections was pretty execrable, so I'm far from convinced they'll still be a thing.Fairliered said:Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?1 -
It’s quite a pitch. You can see a twisted logic though. The log jam of the Parliament from 2017 to 2019 really did need sweeping away, and Johnson will feel as if he did bring about a change. No doubt that role that Keir Starmer played in trying to frustrate Brexit adds to this too. He was not PM, not even leader of the opposition, but he was key to the remainder 2nd (overturning) referendum campaign.Northern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.1 -
They have 2 MPs, they are almost as significant as the Lib Dems!rcs1000 said:
Will Alba field General Election candidates? It's performance at the Scottish elections was pretty execrable, so I'm far from convinced they'll still be a thing.Fairliered said:Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?0 -
I think supermarkets have adapted to the shortages so they maybe aren't missing whole loads as when this kicked off but perhaps making them less frequently or using one lorry to service two stores and delivering less to each. So you don't so often get category shortages - no cheese for example - but they have run out of lines across the store so only three of the normal five types of Cheddar is available and you can get courgettes but not aubergines. The effect is like after a busy Saturday before they have had the chance to restock the shelves, but it is like that most of the time now, round here at leastturbotubbs said:
I’ve said before, if I hadn’t seen on pb or the news about shortages, I would£ not have noticed anything. I also would suggest it is not that big an issue in most places - where are the real photos of empty shelves?FF43 said:
I am surprised also that people have not noticed any shortages in supermarkets. Maybe Scotland is at the end of long supply chains or something but more often than not there are shortages. It doesn't bother me most of the time because I find what I need from what is available, but it is noticeable.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
So today in Sainsbury's about half of vegetable lines were out of stock, one third of meat, one half of milk types, which is unusual. Not much bread, but that might be end of day. Most dry goods available. Fairly typical, bit out wasn't like this before.0 -
Where are you? Just not seeing that here, other than a bizarre lack of replacement razor blades last week.FF43 said:
I think supermarkets have adapted to the shortages so they maybe aren't missing whole loads as when this kicked off but perhaps making them less frequently or using one lorry to service two stores and delivering less to each. So you don't so often get category shortages - no cheese for example - but they have run out of lines across the store so only three of the normal five types of Cheddar is available and you can get courgettes but not aubergines. The effect is like after a busy Saturday before they have had the chance to restock the shelves, but it is like that most of the time now, round here at leastturbotubbs said:
I’ve said before, if I hadn’t seen on pb or the news about shortages, I would£ not have noticed anything. I also would suggest it is not that big an issue in most places - where are the real photos of empty shelves?FF43 said:
I am surprised also that people have not noticed any shortages in supermarkets. Maybe Scotland is at the end of long supply chains or something but more often than not there are shortages. It doesn't bother me most of the time because I find what I need from what is available, but it is noticeable.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
So today in Sainsbury's about half of vegetable lines were out of stock, one third of meat, one half of milk types, which is unusual. Not much bread, but that might be end of day. Most dry goods available. Fairly typical, bit out wasn't like this before.0 -
O/T. I look after the energy supply deals for my mum and for Mrs P's dad (both in their 80s), as well as ours of course. I've just calcluated what will happen when the current fixes come to an end, and assuming the Ofgem price cap rates are the best we can get. It's quite startling.
Ours will rise by 90%. (It probably already has as PFP have gone bust and we're being transferred to BG.)
My mum's will rise by 37.6% and my father-in-law's will rise by 35.2%, although these aren't until next spring and summer respectively.
I suspect our situation is extreme - we got a really good deal last November which was due to run out next month anyway.
But the impact of these sort of increases over the coming year is going to be very uncomfortable for a lot of people. It will also suck money out of the economy and stoke inflation of course.
Just an observation - I am not expecting anyone to get the violins out for us. ;-)
0 -
Northern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.
The trick in the under the radar social media targetted ads has been to blame Labour Councils for Nationa Government policies.
So "lack of funding for the NHS" is blamed on the local Labour Council.
It has shown to be remarkably effective.
Whether it can work at a second election in a row will be interesting to see...3 -
Yes, at the next election a key to understanding levelling up would be who the electorate blames for the levelling down. Most of which happened under the Coalition and Conservative governments.Northern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.
I think rather early to see if Johnsons Chutzpah carries on. There is too the small matter of the economy, which does look rather fragile, infested with inflation and lacking in confidence.
I think quite a major market correction is on its way this autumn. In part domestic, but both the Chinese and American situations look dicey to me too. I have cashed in my more exposed equities until I see which way the wind is blowing.0 -
Assuming the ConHome polling is correct (and it may well not be), Patel would really struggle against either of those two.Andy_JS said:Wrt the next Tory leadership contest, if the final three are Sunak, Patel and Truss, what would the result of the final vote of MPs be? I'm guessing if either Sunak or Truss had "votes to spare" there'd be an attempt at tactical voting to make sure Priti Patel didn't get through to the final round, a bit like with Gove last time.
I also don't know if Patel has a powerbase in the party. One of the slightly unique things about this government is that the three most senior Cabinet ministers (Truss, Patel, Sunak) are all fairly new to the jobs, and haven't built up loyal followings in Parliament or the country. Nor are any of them leaders of a strand of conservative thinking.1 -
I would expect Alba to at least contest the seats they currently hold, East Lothian and Kirkcaldy. I would hope they would stand candidates against Pete Wishart in Perth, John Nicolson in Ochil, Alyn Smyth in Stirling, Kirsty Blackman in Aberdeen North, Alison Thewliss in Glasgow Central and Patrick Grady in Glasgow North, as they are the most extreme Sturgeon loyalists.rcs1000 said:
Will Alba field General Election candidates? It's performance at the Scottish elections was pretty execrable, so I'm far from convinced they'll still be a thing.Fairliered said:Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?0 -
Scotland.turbotubbs said:
Where are you? Just not seeing that here, other than a bizarre lack of replacement razor blades last week.FF43 said:
I think supermarkets have adapted to the shortages so they maybe aren't missing whole loads as when this kicked off but perhaps making them less frequently or using one lorry to service two stores and delivering less to each. So you don't so often get category shortages - no cheese for example - but they have run out of lines across the store so only three of the normal five types of Cheddar is available and you can get courgettes but not aubergines. The effect is like after a busy Saturday before they have had the chance to restock the shelves, but it is like that most of the time now, round here at leastturbotubbs said:
I’ve said before, if I hadn’t seen on pb or the news about shortages, I would£ not have noticed anything. I also would suggest it is not that big an issue in most places - where are the real photos of empty shelves?FF43 said:
I am surprised also that people have not noticed any shortages in supermarkets. Maybe Scotland is at the end of long supply chains or something but more often than not there are shortages. It doesn't bother me most of the time because I find what I need from what is available, but it is noticeable.Northern_Al said:
But there isn't a fuel shortage. I've been told that thousands of times on here. It's just panic buying.Leon said:BUT Labour has got virtually no Conference bounce, so far - and this during a fuel shortage?
That said, I'll be surprised if the Tories get a bounce. The entire nation is distracted, understandably. That will suit the Tories just fine. They are ahead, mid term, despite very heavy weather, and Boris has given more of a fillip to his troops than Starmer gave to his
PS: Anecdote: my local petrol station was closed again today. No fuel. It opens for a few hours, long queues, sells out, closes again until it restocks. It is a fairly small petrol station. Same cycle now for 10 days. I must be very unlucky.
So today in Sainsbury's about half of vegetable lines were out of stock, one third of meat, one half of milk types, which is unusual. Not much bread, but that might be end of day. Most dry goods available. Fairly typical, bit out wasn't like this before.0 -
Decades ago, even before Maggie, I used to spend hours while working for BBC News watching speeches like this in their entirety and trying to identify newsworthy clips. But I was getting paid.rcs1000 said:Anyone like to guess how many genuinely undecided voters decided to sit through both speeches?
I'm going with seven.
So, that's probably four votes for Mr Starmer and three for Mr Johnson.1 -
Cruelty to animals!TheScreamingEagles said:I took part in this poll and we were shown parts of the speech.
0 -
I am here to tell you that the Rightful King of France, Louis XX, has his own Twitter account
https://twitter.com/louisducdanjou1 -
Yes, that was really clear from the vox pops I've seen from 'Red Wall' seats in the north and midlands. People were blaming everything on their Labour councils - hilariously, in some cases, when they didn't even have Labour councils any more.Alistair said:Northern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.
The trick in the under the radar social media targetted ads has been to blame Labour Councils for Nationa Government policies.
So "lack of funding for the NHS" is blamed on the local Labour Council.
It has shown to be remarkably effective.
Whether it can work at a second election in a row will be interesting to see...
"I've had to wait 4 years for my hip operation, thanks to my Labour council", and stuff like that.0 -
Well, we'll see. Personally I wouldn't be surprised if Alba disbanded before the next GE.Fairliered said:
I would expect Alba to at least contest the seats they currently hold, East Lothian and Kirkcaldy. I would hope they would stand candidates against Pete Wishart in Perth, John Nicolson in Ochil, Alyn Smyth in Stirling, Kirsty Blackman in Aberdeen North, Alison Thewliss in Glasgow Central and Patrick Grady in Glasgow North, as they are the most extreme Sturgeon loyalists.rcs1000 said:
Will Alba field General Election candidates? It's performance at the Scottish elections was pretty execrable, so I'm far from convinced they'll still be a thing.Fairliered said:Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?0 -
Would be hilarious if pro-indy infighting in the GE between SNP and Alba enabled Labour to come through the middle in their Scottish target seats, thwarting indyref2 as SKS wouldn't need the SNP's support.Fairliered said:
I would expect Alba to at least contest the seats they currently hold, East Lothian and Kirkcaldy. I would hope they would stand candidates against Pete Wishart in Perth, John Nicolson in Ochil, Alyn Smyth in Stirling, Kirsty Blackman in Aberdeen North, Alison Thewliss in Glasgow Central and Patrick Grady in Glasgow North, as they are the most extreme Sturgeon loyalists.rcs1000 said:
Will Alba field General Election candidates? It's performance at the Scottish elections was pretty execrable, so I'm far from convinced they'll still be a thing.Fairliered said:Copied from the previous thread - sorry!
I see the usual Scottish Independence Referendum arguments are being rehashed again. As long as Sturgeon continues to lead the SNP, there won’t be a referendum, or even a request for one.
Assuming Sturgeon is still SNP leader at the time of the next General Election, I can forsee three things happening.
Some SNP voters will switch to Alba.
Some will return to Labour.
Some will stay at home.
If this happens, how many seats will the SNP lose? My estimate is that they will lose around 10 seats to Labour and fail to win any seats from any of the other parties.
Would it be enough for Sturgeon to be replaced?
Would it be enough to prevent another Conservative government?2 -
I’m sure there is much of this going on. But there is also a sense that labour took Scotland’s voters for granted, until they were swept away. And then they still had the red wall in the north... until that was swept away. With too many in labour more interested in Palestine than in Peterborough they won’t win those voters back.Northern_Al said:
Yes, that was really clear from the vox pops I've seen from 'Red Wall' seats in the north and midlands. People were blaming everything on their Labour councils - hilariously, in some cases, when they didn't even have Labour councils any more.Alistair said:Northern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.
The trick in the under the radar social media targetted ads has been to blame Labour Councils for Nationa Government policies.
So "lack of funding for the NHS" is blamed on the local Labour Council.
It has shown to be remarkably effective.
Whether it can work at a second election in a row will be interesting to see...
"I've had to wait 4 years for my hip operation, thanks to my Labour council", and stuff like that.0 -
I didn't see either of the speeches, and I don't care to watch them either. And I'm someone who's very interested in politics.
No normal people will either.
People are worried about fuel, gas, electricity, economic recovery, their jobs, Covid and Christmas.
They couldn't give a rat's ass about party conference speeches.2 -
He is probably trying to draw a line between Leave and Remain - Sir Keir’s Labour being associated with the low wage, high immigration era whilst his Tories want to train our youngsters and see wages increase etcNorthern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.1 -
No normal people cares about any political minutiae, therefore none of it matters at all? I'd say no. Small things add up, affect party unity or morale, which impacts the actions they take which the public might notice, even if they won't on the fine details.Casino_Royale said:I didn't see either of the speeches, and I don't care to watch them either. And I'm someone who's very interested in politics.
No normal people will either.
People are worried about fuel, gas, electricity, economic recovery, their jobs, Covid and Christmas.
They couldn't give a rat's ass about party conference speeches.1 -
Rees-Mogg is now more likely to be the candidate of the traditional Tory right than Patel. Though I doubt he would stand unless the Tories lost the next general election.rcs1000 said:
Assuming the ConHome polling is correct (and it may well not be), Patel would really struggle against either of those two.Andy_JS said:Wrt the next Tory leadership contest, if the final three are Sunak, Patel and Truss, what would the result of the final vote of MPs be? I'm guessing if either Sunak or Truss had "votes to spare" there'd be an attempt at tactical voting to make sure Priti Patel didn't get through to the final round, a bit like with Gove last time.
I also don't know if Patel has a powerbase in the party. One of the slightly unique things about this government is that the three most senior Cabinet ministers (Truss, Patel, Sunak) are all fairly new to the jobs, and haven't built up loyal followings in Parliament or the country. Nor are any of them leaders of a strand of conservative thinking.
Truss would be the candidate of the libertarian right, Sunak the candidate of the Tory centre and Tory left1 -
I agree with your Scotland point. But your last sentence is just a facile Daily Mail-type myth. What's more, Peterborough isn't anywhere near 'the red wall in the north'.turbotubbs said:
I’m sure there is much of this going on. But there is also a sense that labour took Scotland’s voters for granted, until they were swept away. And then they still had the red wall in the north... until that was swept away. With too many in labour more interested in Palestine than in Peterborough they won’t win those voters back.Northern_Al said:
Yes, that was really clear from the vox pops I've seen from 'Red Wall' seats in the north and midlands. People were blaming everything on their Labour councils - hilariously, in some cases, when they didn't even have Labour councils any more.Alistair said:Northern_Al said:
Yes, the entire rhetoric is remarkable. What the Tories are doing is pretending that Labour was in power until 2019, when Boris took over. Astonishingly, quite a lot of voters seem to think that this is true, and any current woes should be blamed on the Labour government 2010-2019. Things haven't got better yet because of Labour's misrule - but now Boris is in charge. It takes some brass neck, but it seems to work.kle4 said:
Don't all political parties want things to be better? Has any conference speech stated they want transport and education to get worse?DavidL said:What I got from Boris's speech is what he wanted me to get. This is a government on a mission and with a hugely ambitious program to change this country for the better. He wants better transport, education, skills, education, law and order, the list went on and on.
Will he be able to deliver? Who knows, certainly not on all of it but maybe on some. If he does he will have done better than most of his recent predecessors. The message from his speech is that this is not a government blundering around not knowing what it wants to do. I think he succeeded in that.
What I got from the speech was not that the Tories want to change the country for the better, but to impress upon people that they are still energetic and coming up with ideas (he talked about 'tired old Labour'), rather than a sclerotic 11 year old government paddling along.
The trick in the under the radar social media targetted ads has been to blame Labour Councils for Nationa Government policies.
So "lack of funding for the NHS" is blamed on the local Labour Council.
It has shown to be remarkably effective.
Whether it can work at a second election in a row will be interesting to see...
"I've had to wait 4 years for my hip operation, thanks to my Labour council", and stuff like that.1 -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pYqm3-KDPjUkle4 said:Speaking of boring, saw The Dig on Netflix - one of the most tremendously dull things I've ever seen, why it was a movie at all baffled me.
Could have saved you some time...0