Howdy, Stranger!

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

Whenever the LDs have issued data like this they’ve won – politicalbetting.com

135

Comments

  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,199

    It must be. If it isn't, it's even more terrifying than I ever dared imagine.
    These people are profoundly mental.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    maaarsh said:

    The latest rumours I'd seen were that Omicron is less intrinsically transmissible, but is less covered by the vaccine - net result it transmits more compared to delta which would spread more in a naive population but not in a vaccinated one.

    Frankly given the current mix of high delta cases and relatively low initial seeding of omicron, hard to see how we're going to get noticible impact on cases from it until well in to next year.
    Exactly, that's my reading of the numbers: nobody is denying that it's an uncertain future threat but there are only 13 (thirteen) confirmed cases in England currently, a fortnight out from the END of the Christmas works party season. What do people expect the prevalence to be by 18 December? This point needs to be made much more strongly.
  • sladeslade Posts: 2,164
    TimS said:

    The rest of the email wasn't hubris, just classic Lib Dem campaigning. Essentially:

    - It's excitingly close
    - The Tories are in trouble and people are saying nice things to us on the doorstep
    - However, it won't be easy and we need to you to pour into the constituency to help close the gap

    I have had 2 phone calls this morning thanking me for already going and asking me to go again. Also telling me to ask all my Lib Dem contacts to go.
  • Mr. Max, Javid's a huge improvement on the restrictions-loving Hancock.
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,682
    Andy_JS said:

    Labour were miles ahead of the LDs at the last election in North Shropshire. Why are they almost certainly going to come third this time? Seems like an interesting question to me.

    I think there has been an interesting de facto deal which (I believe) has never even been discussed privately - the LibDems are standing in Bexley but not trying very hard, and Labour is standing in North Shropshire but likewise not trying very hard. The Greens don't seem to be playing along, perhaps understandably as there isn't a third seat where they are being left to lead the charge, but they will annoy non-Tories generally if their vote happens to be larger than a Tory majority.

    I've been among the sceptics about the Tories losing either seat, so this feels like good news.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,969
    Andy_JS said:

    Labour were miles ahead of the LDs at the last election in North Shropshire. Why are they almost certainly going to come third this time? Seems like an interesting question to me.

    Because they aren't campaigning. Like the LD's in B+OS by tacit agreement?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,322

    How did those who've got such a visa get into Australia though? Was it via boats, or planes, or some other means?

    Nobody surely, least of all me, is suggesting that nobody should be here. Its the method to get here that's under discussion.
    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,657

    I'd just like consistency. Either the government are Following the Science or they are making the decisions where the science is only one consideration. We've been told both depending on circumstances.
    Thats fair criticism. However I think context is important. Back in March 2020 there was only one consideration - it looked like the NHS was in danger of complete collapse in the style of northern Italy. The scientists said that we needed to lock down, and the government did so. This was unprecedented, and the government used the scientific advice to provide the reason/cover for doing such an extreme measure.
    Later on we had options, as the NHS was no longer in imminent danger of collapse, but the best way ahead was no longer so clear cut. We could have tried for zero covid. We could have just said open up, and damn the consequences. Or anything in between. At this stage there was a need for balance of other pressures. The immediate crisis was past, and now other dangers loomed, such as the danger of economic collapse and business failure. If you ask an epidemiologist what to do, its not a surprise that many favour doing everything possible to reduce illness and death. But they are not required to consider what happens if you keep punitive restrictions, businesses fail and consequences ensue. At this point, its no longer possible to just follow the science. Which science? Economics is also (barely) a science.

    So you are both right, in that it has been cynically deployed, but it is understandable too.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,767
    Cicero said:

    Perhaps the rumours in the City are true and RM is facing very serious trouble.
    While borrowing money from your company isn't explicitly breaking Parliamentary rules it definitely broke at a minimum the spirit of them.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited December 2021

    Anna Mikhailova
    @AVMikhailova
    ·
    20m
    NEW: Parliament’s Standards Commissioner launches investigation into Jacob Rees-Mogg


    Somehow priceless, considering his nineteenth-century gentleman's persona. After Covid and the government's potentially lethal infringements on democracy in the Police Bill, finally the week brings some good news.

    Next should be the horrifically fascinating Trump-Farage spectacle, shown tonight. I'm not sure what is, but perhaps it's that these two are now such familiarly contemptible characters, so easy to laugh at, that they've almost become relaxing to watch in their dangerousness.

    Added to which ofcourse, Farage always genuine antennae for what's politically relevant, meaning the grimly amusing spectacle will probably include something or other that has some genuine political significance, at least in the US.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,712
    edited December 2021
    DavidL said:

    Went to see my GP this morning because of headaches. Getting an "emergency" CT scan some time before Christmas and advised to go private for my respiratory issues because nothing is going to happen soon. Told by the GP that the waiting time for gynaecology (not for me, of course) is now 2 years. He sees no prospects of anything improving in the foreseeable.

    My GP is an excellent chap and expressed frustration at how many times he is now recommending private health care. He said he is a strong believer in the NHS but the long term underfunding (in his view) has simply meant it cannot cope with something like Covid and the reductions in capacity that the safeguards bring about.

    Pretty sobering way to start the day.

    Serious Q: How do the protestations about "there is no capacity" from the Drs' organisations match up with the reality that huge numbers of GPs work part time?

    eg https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-59482080

    eg Here is Pulse stating that 90% of salaried GPs work part time.
    https://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/news/workload/nhs-england-says-almost-90-of-gps-work-part-time-in-response-to-pulse-survey/

    Is this really a capacity constraint?

    Perhaps we need a condition to require extra hours in time of need in the GP part time contract?
  • Paper candidate pact between the Lib Dems and Labour is clearly happening.

    Big problems for the Tories next round, IMHO
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,368
    "Covid latest news: Vaccine passports have no impact on reducing infections, experts warn"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-health/science-and-disease/covid-news-cases-deaths-booster-jab-coronavirus-omicron/
  • Foxy said:

    A mixture. About half of asylum seekers go by plane and half by boat.

    Even a significant proportion of those offshored get Bridging Visa E.

    Do you have a source on the number getting BVE via boats?

    My understanding was that the vast bulk (if not nearly all) is from people who'd arrived via legal means then overstayed visas etc rather than arriving via boats.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    What a shame. Eric Zemmours French presidential campaign is crashing and burning , right wing UK political commentators will be most upset .

    The idea that he could win is laughable .
  • Ipsos MORI Scottish independence polling.

    Yes 55 (+5)

    No 45 (-5)

    Changes since May.

    https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/boris-johnsons-ratings-hit-record-low-scotland-snp-support-stays-strong
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited December 2021

    The Labour leadership was branded “pathetic and childish” after it issued an invite for a drinks party jointly hosted by Sir Keir Starmer and his Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves - but not his deputy Angela Rayner

    Deep divisions have emerged at the top of the Labour party at a time when speculation is rife over a fresh civil war within party ranks.

    Labour source: “It’s idiotic, pathetic and childish to send that invite out today, in that way, to 200 lobby hacks hungry for gossip.”

    SKS really is a useless nonentity

    Fantastic news that Labour aren't buckling to the zerocovidians and are hosting their Christmas party. I hope they all enjoy themselves and have a great night.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,969
    MattW said:

    Serious Q: How do the protestations about "there is no capacity" from the Drs' organisations match up with the reality that huge numbers of GPs work part time?

    eg https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-59482080

    eg Here is Pulse stating that 90% of salaried GPs work part time.
    https://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/news/workload/nhs-england-says-almost-90-of-gps-work-part-time-in-response-to-pulse-survey/

    Is this really a capacity constraint?

    Perhaps we need a condition to require extra hours in time of need in the GP part time contract?
    How does forcing folk to work hours they don't choose to (or are incapable of) fit with the bleatings about encroachment on our precious liberties?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    MattW said:

    Serious Q: How do the protestations about "there is no capacity" from the Drs' organisations match up with the reality that huge numbers of GPs work part time?

    eg https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-59482080

    eg Here is Pulse stating that 90% of salaried GPs work part time.
    https://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/news/workload/nhs-england-says-almost-90-of-gps-work-part-time-in-response-to-pulse-survey/

    Is this really a capacity constraint?

    Perhaps we need a condition to require extra hours in time of need in the GP part time contract?
    Quite a few will be parents with young children and others winding down en route to retirement. Others may be working privately in the rest of the working week. None of those change the underlying capacity.

    There are also potential capacity constraints in terms of offices, support staff, and so on.
  • Farooq said:

    It's one thing in a couple of by elections. It won't happen in a GE
    It did in 1997.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,368
    edited December 2021
    theakes said:

    This fits in with my pretty close observations of the scene.
    People are talking about the election in shops and win or lose you get the firm impression the Lib Dems are doing well, borne out by the betting which still has them coming in well.
    However anything can happen, bad weather on polling day, a Labour win tomorrow to stiffen their vote, a Conservative hard campaign in the last week, many factors at play.

    I think we can discount a Labour victory in Old Bexley & Sidcup tomorrow. This is one of the most Tory and most pro-Brexit seats in the London suburbs. The Tory share will probably be down by 15 to 20 percentage points though IMO, leaving them on perhaps around 45%.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Ipsos MORI Scottish independence polling.

    Yes 55 (+5)

    No 45 (-5)

    Changes since May.

    https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/boris-johnsons-ratings-hit-record-low-scotland-snp-support-stays-strong

    Hmm. And a clear majority for independence parties, not even counting Labour pro-indy voters, in the Holyrood VIs too.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,712

    I think there has been an interesting de facto deal which (I believe) has never even been discussed privately - the LibDems are standing in Bexley but not trying very hard, and Labour is standing in North Shropshire but likewise not trying very hard. The Greens don't seem to be playing along, perhaps understandably as there isn't a third seat where they are being left to lead the charge, but they will annoy non-Tories generally if their vote happens to be larger than a Tory majority.

    I've been among the sceptics about the Tories losing either seat, so this feels like good news.
    Who has the better end of that one?
  • Sunak's look to Johnson as the PM was saying there was no 'red flag' on a Treasury report on new hospitals looked a lot to me like 'why on earth is he lying on this one'.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842

    As I recall it, life is a sexually transmitted, terminal condition.
    Bit edgy, that, for a Christmas cracker, OKC. Can't see my Auntie Flo reading that out.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,253
    edited December 2021
    rcs1000 said:

    The new data on the Merck drug looks pretty depressing: https://arstechnica.com/science/2021/11/womp-womp-efficacy-of-mercks-thor-inspired-covid-pill-crumbles-vexing-experts/

    Let's hope that the Pfizer pill does not suffer similarly.

    I don't want to trigger anyone but "pregnant people" ?!!
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Ipsos MORI Scottish independence polling.

    Yes 55 (+5)

    No 45 (-5)

    Changes since May.

    https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/boris-johnsons-ratings-hit-record-low-scotland-snp-support-stays-strong

    Surely it's high time for a Scottish thread?

    (Sorry I was rude to you the other day, by the way. By way of an explanation, the threat of restrictions makes me extremely anxious, and I lashed out)
  • Let's face it, would you want to invite Angela Rayner to a Christmas party?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,682



    In this particular case, I think Harries just went rogue. I'm not at all certain that the government knew much about it until she piped up on Radio 4 and her comments went viral.

    I'm not sure they've cut through particularly - the only references I've seen to it until today were on PB. I'm sure Twitter has had lots, but that's not the general public. Most people won't even know who Harries is.

    The issue is more that the majority of the population has always been more prone to caution than the Government, and any new development like Omicron triggers the oo-er response. Sitting in Whitehall, it may make sense to say "Go forth and mingle, it's good for the economy and you're not at much risk if you're vaccinated", but if you're an individual you may well conclude that taking any non-trivial risk is not worth it for the sake of a curry. My neighbours (highly vulnerable elderly folk) have cancelled a family Christmas meal for that reason.

    I'm not talking my book here - I've got a few people coming to dinner next week, and am going to someone else's dinner as well. As I'm triple-vaccinated I feel I can reasonably risk it. But I understand people who take a different view, and it's not because of Harries.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,716
    edited December 2021
    Carnyx said:

    Hmm. And a clear majority for independence parties, not even counting Labour pro-indy voters, in the Holyrood VIs too.
    Why do you Nats always bang on about pro-Indy Labour voters and never the pro-Union Nats which can be often a similar percentage?

    It's positively HYUFDian.

  • Paul Waugh
    @paulwaugh
    ·
    49s
    Starmer sounds onto something with this spin document that urges staff to call "refurbishment" of hospitals "new hospitals".
    Would be interesting to see the actual document
    #PMQs
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,540

    Let's face it, would you want to invite Angela Rayner to a Christmas party?

    Actually, I think she would be pretty good company, certainly more interesting than some politicians.
  • I'm not sure they've cut through particularly - the only references I've seen to it until today were on PB. I'm sure Twitter has had lots, but that's not the general public. Most people won't even know who Harries is.

    The issue is more that the majority of the population has always been more prone to caution than the Government, and any new development like Omicron triggers the oo-er response. Sitting in Whitehall, it may make sense to say "Go forth and mingle, it's good for the economy and you're not at much risk if you're vaccinated", but if you're an individual you may well conclude that taking any non-trivial risk is not worth it for the sake of a curry. My neighbours (highly vulnerable elderly folk) have cancelled a family Christmas meal for that reason.

    I'm not talking my book here - I've got a few people coming to dinner next week, and am going to someone else's dinner as well. As I'm triple-vaccinated I feel I can reasonably risk it. But I understand people who take a different view, and it's not because of Harries.
    Yes, I'm sure that's right.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,368

    Ipsos MORI Scottish independence polling.

    Yes 55 (+5)

    No 45 (-5)

    Changes since May.

    https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/boris-johnsons-ratings-hit-record-low-scotland-snp-support-stays-strong

    Contradicts most of the recent polling on the subject.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Anna Mikhailova
    @AVMikhailova
    ·
    20m
    NEW: Parliament’s Standards Commissioner launches investigation into Jacob Rees-Mogg

    Not just Mr R-M but also Mr Ross, though the situation is somewhat different (albeit no obvious reason for not being arsed to do his declarations properly).

    https://www.thenational.scot/news/19754489.douglas-ross-faces-investigation-parliamentary-commissioner-standards/?ref=ebbn
  • nico679 said:

    What a shame. Eric Zemmours French presidential campaign is crashing and burning , right wing UK political commentators will be most upset .

    The idea that he could win is laughable .

    Is it? Do you have a link? I've not seen this news.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    It did in 1997.
    In 1997 Labour had a charismatic leader with a whole raft of fresh ideas and Cons were a divided factional rag bag of squabbling schoolboys.

    In 2024 SKS is the complete opposite completely lacking in charisma and any policies and it is Labour via Starmer that is divided and factional ragbag of squabblers.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,767

    In 1997 Labour had a charismatic leader with a whole raft of fresh ideas and Cons were a divided factional rag bag of squabbling schoolboys.

    In 2024 SKS is the complete opposite completely lacking in charisma and any policies and it is Labour via Starmer that is divided and factional ragbag of squabblers.
    Should we put you do as a maybe?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Why do you Nats always bang on about pro-Indy Labour voters and never the pro-Union Nats which can be often a similar percentage?

    It's positively HYUFDian.
    In this case, I am actually excluding them!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842

    The Labour leadership was branded “pathetic and childish” after it issued an invite for a drinks party jointly hosted by Sir Keir Starmer and his Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves - but not his deputy Angela Rayner

    Deep divisions have emerged at the top of the Labour party at a time when speculation is rife over a fresh civil war within party ranks.

    Labour source: “It’s idiotic, pathetic and childish to send that invite out today, in that way, to 200 lobby hacks hungry for gossip.”

    SKS really is a useless nonentity

    My hunch is that Starmer is getting the politics right from the electoral perspective but OJ is more in agreement with you:
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/30/starmer-labour-rightwingers-control-factional-vendettas
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,280
    tlg86 said:

    Actually, I think she would be pretty good company, certainly more interesting than some politicians.
    I think she'd have her tits out on the photocopier in no time.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    Andy_JS said:

    Contradicts most of the recent polling on the subject.
    OTOH the Holyrood Vis reported at the same time are consistent. Though the data would not be independent of each other if you were working from the same sample, so that doesn't seem to mean much.
  • Looking at voting intention of the those voting in the constituency.

    10% of Scottish Labour voters would vote Yes in Indyref2

    and

    9% of SNP voters would vote No in Indyref2
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Looking at voting intention of the those voting in the constituency.

    10% of Scottish Labour voters would vote Yes in Indyref2

    and

    9% of SNP voters would vote No in Indyref2

    Is that percentage points or percentages of all X voters?
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,280

    It did in 1997.
    Yes but then there was Blair and now, unlike then, there are serious reasons to be repelled by the party.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    edited December 2021
    eek said:

    Should we put you do as a maybe?
    If you wish and I am

    Maybe i will vote Green maybe I will vote Tory.

    My MP will lose Chesterfield thats far less a maybe and more a nailed on certainty if Boris is still leader.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    tlg86 said:

    Actually, I think she would be pretty good company, certainly more interesting than some politicians.
    Yeah, I reckon she's a right raver. Probably top of my guestlist from the Labour frontbench if I wanted to properly large it.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,102

    Good morning bugs and drugs dot com 🤦‍♀️

    ON TOPIC. I’m already on Libdems at 3-1 for North Salop. I don’t think it’s certain to be a winning bet. But I have been told on this forum I have wasted my money because it will be such a big deal for Conservatives to lose such a safe seat.

    But my point is I don’t think it is such a big deal. Think of it like the rugby or football, after an inept performance certainly football fans can boo manager or team, but the fans are not abandoning the club. So making comparisons what happens at general elections in a seat ignores how by elections are different, the voters know it’s about booing current manager or team performance not switching to a new club or seeing arch rivals take power.

    So the more relevant guide here may not be where party’s are in latest polls but where Boris or governments satisfaction ratings are.

    Since I placed the bet, to emphasise how weeks can be long time in politics, there has been a big development I think, how Reform might be emerging as a slick outfit good a siphoning away disgruntled, populist right wing, anti immigration voters who conservatives owned at last election.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited December 2021
    Carnyx said:

    Hmm. And a clear majority for independence parties, not even counting Labour pro-indy voters, in the Holyrood VIs too.
    I wonder if Johnson's corruption and over-confident, indifferent arrogance earlier in the month cut through, combining with the economic bumps. That has a particular resonance across the border.

    If the Policing Bill threats to legitimate protest also get cut-through, Scots could be even keener to shake off what is seen as arrogant and overbearing Westminster.
  • The Labour leadership was branded “pathetic and childish” after it issued an invite for a drinks party jointly hosted by Sir Keir Starmer and his Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves - but not his deputy Angela Rayner

    Deep divisions have emerged at the top of the Labour party at a time when speculation is rife over a fresh civil war within party ranks.

    Labour source: “It’s idiotic, pathetic and childish to send that invite out today, in that way, to 200 lobby hacks hungry for gossip.”

    SKS really is a useless nonentity

    I think its the opposite. He's realised that he can bin off and ignore the left. Hence the removal of their remaining element from the Shadow Cabinet and the utter marginalisation of the deputy leader.

    Before anyone says "how beastly" in reference to the leader's treatment of the deputy, think back to the conference where they tried to remove Tom Watson and failed miserably.

    If the hard left don't want to vote Labour there are a plethora of splinter groups out there, including the laughably named "left unity".
  • tlg86 said:

    Actually, I think she would be pretty good company, certainly more interesting than some politicians.
    She'd make grab a granny night interesting.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,102

    Yeah, I reckon she's a right raver. Probably top of my guestlist from the Labour frontbench if I wanted to properly large it.
    Lol. Is there any picture anywhere at all anywhere of Angela Rayner actually smiling let alone laughing.
  • Carnyx said:

    Is that percentage points or percentages of all X voters?
    The latter.
  • Ipsos MORI Scottish independence polling.

    Yes 55 (+5)

    No 45 (-5)

    Changes since May.

    https://www.ipsos.com/ipsos-mori/en-uk/boris-johnsons-ratings-hit-record-low-scotland-snp-support-stays-strong

    Despite this, if we have a referendum in the near future No would win. The longer that wazzocks try to deny democracy and refuse a referendum the greater the chances that lead increases and beds in.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    The latter.
    Thanks!
  • I think its the opposite. He's realised that he can bin off and ignore the left. Hence the removal of their remaining element from the Shadow Cabinet and the utter marginalisation of the deputy leader.

    Before anyone says "how beastly" in reference to the leader's treatment of the deputy, think back to the conference where they tried to remove Tom Watson and failed miserably.

    If the hard left don't want to vote Labour there are a plethora of splinter groups out there, including the laughably named "left unity".
    He can't entirely ignore the left. It's not 1997. If he does, he'll lose.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,170

    How busy would it normally be on a cold Tuesday night in November?
    I didn't go to knit group on Monday. In the end only one person did, and they obviously didn't stay long in the pub on their own.

    Pre-pandemic 8-12 people was the normal range.

    I stayed away because I'm prioritising my trip to Bath, and I don't want to catch anything that would put that at risk beforehand. Completely bizarre, but necessary precaution in the circumstances, while we're still doing mass testing.

    Our work decided a while ago to make the Christmas do online again. Pretty sure the lack of the novelty value will mean it suffers, but work were good about posting us all a drink beforehand last year so fingers crossed for small mercies.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    The

    She'd make grab a granny night interesting.
    Thoughts and prayers with @IshmaelZ @Ishmael_Z who is probably in raptures right now.
  • Carnyx said:

    Hmm. And a clear majority for independence parties, not even counting Labour pro-indy voters, in the Holyrood VIs too.
    Excited to hear HYUFD's analysis!
  • isamisam Posts: 41,353
    AlistairM said:

    If the Lib Dems do win then in my view it shows that Boris has stopped being pull-factor for the Tories and instead is holding them back. If I were a Conservative MP I would be starting very much to think of how to replace Boris with someone more appealing.

    Governments do not go one forever and the Tories will lose at some point. Personally I think that the next election after having been in power for ~14 years is one that would not be bad for the Tories to lose so long as they keep it close. There is no Corbyn as the alternative now.

    The Tories won a much bigger majority than anyone predicted, so shedding a few seats in by elections shouldn’t really be a big deal.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842
    Here's a more positive spin on the SKS reshuffle. Notable for the sentiment that Lab think the election will be May 23:
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/30/keir-starmer-reshuffle-general-election-2023-labour
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Despite this, if we have a referendum in the near future No would win. The longer that wazzocks try to deny democracy and refuse a referendum the greater the chances that lead increases and beds in.
    That refusal hasn't happened formally yet, either - as opposed to on PB.
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,107

    I wonder if Johnson's corruption and over-confident, indifferent arrogance earlier in the month cut through, combining with the economic bumps. That has a particular resonance across the border.

    If the Policing Bill threats to legitimate protest also get cut-through, Scots could be even keener to shake off what is seen as arrogant and overbearing Westminster.
    Has HYUFD sent in the tanks yet?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,272
    edited December 2021

    Is it? Do you have a link? I've not seen this news.
    I did notice this morning that he's been drifting out on Smarkets, now tied with Le Pen again. But, like you, not seen any news other than him actually announcing that he will stand (which might/may already have brought his odds back in a bit).

    Edit: And this: https://www.france24.com/en/europe/20211130-zemmour-s-fall-in-polls-signals-lack-of-presidential-credibility-amid-campaign-launch
    (falling poll ratings, apparently)

    Suits my betting for him to crash and burn (although I'm fine as long as he doesn't actually win the thing!)
  • He can't entirely ignore the left. It's not 1997. If he does, he'll lose.
    I think he can - "the left" are still foaming on about the Forde report, Jezbollah and witchhunts. Irrelevant to the real needs.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Lol. Is there any picture anywhere at all anywhere of Angela Rayner actually smiling let alone laughing.
    Yes, absolutely loads of them.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,149

    Excited to hear HYUFD's analysis!
    I am sure that HY will dispassionately analyse the data and reach the unavoidable conclusion that the more our PM makes a tit of himself and by extension our country, the less the Scots fancy sticking around?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,767
    edited December 2021
    kinabalu said:

    Here's a more positive spin on the SKS reshuffle. Notable for the sentiment that Lab think the election will be May 23:
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/30/keir-starmer-reshuffle-general-election-2023-labour

    In which case they are completely useless - Boris / no Tory leader is going to hold an election under the existing boundaries. And they don't change to October 23.

    I can see the logic for May 23 but only because they are missing a fundamental fact.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842

    Yeah, I reckon she's a right raver. Probably top of my guestlist from the Labour frontbench if I wanted to properly large it.
    Now that Gardiner is gone, yes.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited December 2021

    I think he can - "the left" are still foaming on about the Forde report, Jezbollah and witchhunts. Irrelevant to the real needs.
    Rayner and Miliband represent a broad soft-left constituency in the party, rather than the further left. If he consciously antagonises them, as he appears to be doing in at least one case, and possibly at the behest of some of his team with links to a 1990's approach, he could have big trouble.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I didn't go to knit group on Monday. In the end only one person did, and they obviously didn't stay long in the pub on their own.

    Pre-pandemic 8-12 people was the normal range.

    I stayed away because I'm prioritising my trip to Bath, and I don't want to catch anything that would put that at risk beforehand. Completely bizarre, but necessary precaution in the circumstances, while we're still doing mass testing.

    Our work decided a while ago to make the Christmas do online again. Pretty sure the lack of the novelty value will mean it suffers, but work were good about posting us all a drink beforehand last year so fingers crossed for small mercies.
    Zoom 'parties' are the very definition of the First Circle of Hell.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,102

    At least in that case they have effectively ben forced into it by the reluctance of their guests.

    My question is why are the guests cancelling? Nothing has materially changed since this time last week, when presumably they were happy to attend? Omicron poses an uncertain threat for the future but not an immediate threat, as far as I can see. Works parties will be done and dusted within a fortnight, So the Christmas thing is a charade. Presumably the rational concern is for what might happen later in the winter?
    This post didn’t have a like so I liked it as it deserved.

    “ Omicron poses an uncertain threat for the future but not an immediate threat “.

    Nothing has really changed has it? We should shop and party as intended before omicron still shouldn’t we?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    I think its the opposite.
    Shocked of Chesterfield
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,645
    edited December 2021
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    kinabalu said:

    Now that Gardiner is gone, yes.
    Yeah, reckon Gurning Gardo is a shape-throwing podium kinda geezer.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842
    Stocky said:

    Yes but then there was Blair and now, unlike then, there are serious reasons to be repelled by the party.
    If you mean "the Left" I'd say they have no more power in the party now than they had back then.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,102

    She'd make grab a granny night interesting.
    LOL. Although you are completely filthy Eagles, overall on balance it’s still better when are you posting than when you are having weekend away.
  • Rayner and Miliband represent a broad soft-left constituency in the party. If he consciously antagonises them, as he appears to be doing in at least one case, and possibly at the behest of some of his team with links to a 1990's approach, he could have big trouble.
    What's he doing to Ed? I agree that both are soft left, and frankly they aren't the target. The reality is that Rayner - a proud Blairite remember, just listen to her passionate description of how His government transformed her life chances - is the remaining totem of the hard left.

    She seems to enjoy that role as she indulges in mouth-foaming rants about Tory scum which cause the Labour party considerable harm. That one speech alone was enough for Starmer to bin her off.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842
    eek said:

    In which case they are completely useless - Boris / no Tory leader is going to hold an election under the existing boundaries. And they don't change to October 23.

    I can see the logic for May 23 but only because they are missing a fundamental fact.
    I agree with you. May 24 for me. Outsider late 23. May 23 - No.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,767
    kinabalu said:

    I agree with you. May 24 for me. Outsider late 23. May 23 - No.
    November 23 is my favourite - waiting until May 24 just adds extra risk that you wouldn't want to take.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited December 2021

    What's he doing to Ed? I agree that both are soft left, and frankly they aren't the target. The reality is that Rayner - a proud Blairite remember, just listen to her passionate description of how His government transformed her life chances - is the remaining totem of the hard left.

    She seems to enjoy that role as she indulges in mouth-foaming rants about Tory scum which cause the Labour party considerable harm. That one speech alone was enough for Starmer to bin her off.
    The makeup of the party is such that Starmer just can't do that. The membership is further to the left than in the late 1990's, quite clearly, and she and Miliband link the left, the soft-left, and Starmer and the right of the party. He antagonises them at his party's, and electoral prospect's, peril.
  • We do have to laugh at the stupidity of the Tories continuing to claim 40 new hospitals.

    https://twitter.com/Davewwest/status/1430868484104368128

    A new building at an existing hospital is not a new hospital no matter how stupid the government think people are.

  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,657

    SKS going on " did you have a Christmas Party last year" as his first question with everything else thats going on.

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,842

    Rayner and Miliband represent a broad soft-left constituency in the party, rather than the further left. If he consciously antagonises them, as he appears to be doing in at least one case, and possibly at the behest of some of his team with links to a 1990's approach, he could have big trouble.
    It's important Ed remains with Climate. He's becoming slightly totemic. If Ed's still there, and not sidelined, it means something.
  • The makeup of the party is such that Starmer just can't do that. The membership is still further to the left than in the late 1990's, quite clearly, and she and Miliband link the left, the soft-left and Starmer. He antagonises them at his party's, and electoral prospect's, peril.
    Naah. The people who do all the work are in the centre or the right of the party. So its no cost to activists. And the members elected Starmer on a huge majority so the job is his as long as he wants to keep it.

    The voters - the people who matter - do not back hard left lunacy. Elections are always won from the centre ground.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,567
    edited December 2021

    I think that's overegging it.

    I expect those who've been spooked would surely be those who were already guarded and easily spooked and so probably weren't going to be engaged much with hospitality anyway.

    I expect those who were keen on hospitality would quite rightly be taking her comments with the pinch of salt they very much deserve.
    I don't know. The public seem to lurch from one extreme to the other. We seem to go from lockdown all down yesterday, its a disgrace the government haven't done it yet, they are killing everybody, to what Boris said the pubs can reopen, sporting events are able to have crowds, but please try and be responsible....NAAA NAAA DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB...TIME TO HUG EVERYBODY IN THE PUB.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,676
    eek said:

    November 23 is my favourite - waiting until May 24 just adds extra risk that you wouldn't want to take.
    November 23rd will always be a very special day. The birthday of the long running TV series, Dr Who
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,657


    Paul Waugh
    @paulwaugh
    ·
    49s
    Starmer sounds onto something with this spin document that urges staff to call "refurbishment" of hospitals "new hospitals".
    Would be interesting to see the actual document
    #PMQs

    This is truly stupid politics from the Tories. People know what a hospital is. They believe, I think, that a new hospital does not equal a new ward/facility at an existing hospital. Calling it a new hospital doesn't make it one.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,170
    eek said:

    In which case they are completely useless - Boris / no Tory leader is going to hold an election under the existing boundaries. And they don't change to October 23.

    I can see the logic for May 23 but only because they are missing a fundamental fact.
    The election will be in October 2023. New boundaries. Additional pretext to refuse IndyRef 2 on timing grounds. Avoids running down the clock and being caught out by events.

    Caveat that if the Tories are behind by double digits in mid-2023 then running down the clock and hoping for a narrative-changing event will be all they have left.
  • [snip]

    I stayed away because I'm prioritising my trip to Bath, and I don't want to catch anything that would put that at risk beforehand. Completely bizarre, but necessary precaution in the circumstances, while we're still doing mass testing.

    [snip]

    Actually I think that is a key point: people do, very sensibly, want to try to avoid putting at risk the highest priority events and trips they've got planned. So it's entirely natural to ditch the less important ones if they might be a bit risky in terms of getting infected, even mildly.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,180

    We do have to laugh at the stupidity of the Tories continuing to claim 40 new hospitals.

    https://twitter.com/Davewwest/status/1430868484104368128

    A new building at an existing hospital is not a new hospital no matter how stupid the government think people are.

    I hate shameless embarrassing stuff like this. It’s like @HYUFD trying to claim that raising NI isn’t a tax rise.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,280
    kinabalu said:

    If you mean "the Left" I'd say they have no more power in the party now than they had back then.
    Well, kind of. Starmer has IMO done a first-rate job in many ways. I don't think anyone could have done better. But it's illiberal aspects; I mean the ease at which the party accepts state restrictions on liberties and the identity politics-cancel culture stuff. I sense that many are on a knife-edge about changing their Tory votes but are very conscious of these two things.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,170

    Zoom 'parties' are the very definition of the First Circle of Hell.
    I'm expecting to be on the M6 and M5 for this one, so I'll have an excuse for dropping out if it's intolerable.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I think that was a bad call by Starmer. Be serious. Of course they had an illegal party last year. So what? I suspect most people did not fully comply with all the regulations in the last 18 months. Big deal.
    Exactly right – I have said before that Labour has too be very careful not to side with the joyless and judgmental.
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    Mayor of Tel Aviv believes there are alternative metropolitan areas to London in the UK!

    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-59489259
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I don't know. The public seem to lurch from one extreme to the other. We seem to go from lockdown all down yesterday, its a disgrace the government haven't done it yet, they are killing everybody, to what Boris said the pubs can reopen, sporting events are able to have crowds, but please try and be responsible....NAAA NAAA DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB, DOWN THE PUB...TIME TO HUG EVERYBODY IN THE PUB.
    Yes, you keep saying this, but I see no evidence that that's the case. What exactly do you have against pubs by the way? You seem obsessed with them Francis!
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375

    This is truly stupid politics from the Tories. People know what a hospital is. They believe, I think, that a new hospital does not equal a new ward/facility at an existing hospital. Calling it a new hospital doesn't make it one.
    At Southampton General Hospital the maternity building is called Princess Anne Hospital. It is on the same site as the General Hospital and has been there since 1981, yet it is a different Hospital (even though its not).
  • AslanAslan Posts: 1,673
    Stocky said:

    Well, kind of. Starmer has IMO done a first-rate job in many ways. I don't think anyone could have done better. But it's illiberal aspects; I mean the ease at which the party accepts state restrictions on liberties and the identity politics-cancel culture stuff. I sense that many are on a knife-edge about changing their Tory votes but are very conscious of these two things.
    The combination of expanding immigration and backing identity politics makes a lot of voters worry. It is effectively saying to people "we will bring in a lot of people to your country, and then berate you for it being your fault when they don't do well."
This discussion has been closed.