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Where the Slippery Slope Leads – politicalbetting.com

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  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561
    The evidence either way looks very dodgy, to be fair.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    edited December 2021
    TOPPING said:

    I mean I don't necessarily agree with all this but it does make sense. You don't shut the whole economy you pick and choose. Arbitrarily. It is all aimed at reducing the spread. Will it? Who knows - it doesn't seem to in Europe but I get the aim.
    I get the aim, but you are much closer to other people in a pub than you are in a shop. Plan B will make absolutely no difference. I was in a hotel in Wales in October, you had to wear a mask in the corridors but not in the bar area or the dining area, so whilst walking to the bar with friends you all wore masks but as soon as you got there the masks came off.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    Indeed. Which is pretty much exactly what the South Africans have been saying. Similarly, the Batswana.
    While this is encouraging, we shouldn't forget that most of the world is seeing waves of Delta, not omicron (at least yet).
  • Farooq said:

    Welcome back.
    The bad news for everyone is that I wasn't going to post on here again if they didn't reinstate you. So they've got you back, yay. But that means you've still got me, boo.
    Great to have you both back. I look forward to insulting the pair of you presently.
  • Found Dom's alt account. Definitely found Dom's alt account.
    One the other hand, Dom really isn't a Prole (one of the fatal things about that thing in the Downing St garden was hearing how posh he is).

    On the other other hand, he probably really thinks he is a Prole, because he's less posh than (say) JRM.
  • Paul Waugh
    @paulwaugh
    ·
    1h
    The correct response by
    @BBCr4today
    , inviting a Labour shadow cabinet minister onto the prime 810 slot after govt refused to put up a minister.
    And
    @wesstreeting
    creates news by confirming Labour will vote for the new Plan B on Covid
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561

    It is complex but he does not seem to have recovered fully from covid, he presents himself as a shambles which he is, and now he has a baby in the family

    The sheer torrent of attacks coming from across the spectrum has to be draining his mental health, and of course he may see the inevitable coming and decides for the sake of his family and his well being he leaves before he is pushed
    He has never left a job as a result of being pushed. If he wants it he stays. No matter what.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,094
    The most revealing sound on @BBCr4today this morning was the sound of the pause - the sound of Tory MPs calculating whether they should defend or distance themselves from @BorisJohnson

    I asked Foreign Secretary @trussliz whether she had a Christmas Party last year. She paused then said no as she & her team were busy working

    I asked the Vice Chair of the Tory 1922 Committee @Nus_Ghani whether the PM would have to “pay a price” if he knew about Xmas parties inside No 10. She paused & said she’d agreed to be interviewed about something else. She then added “let’s see what the investigation finds out”


    https://twitter.com/bbcnickrobinson/status/1469237752826900484
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,926

    Wes Streeting who is only 38 looks like a future leader and PM

    Wes's handicap is that he's audibly from London. And being from London seems to be toxic in political leaders at the moment. That Londoners don't count and are out of touch with "real people" seems to be the one thing everyone on in the country outside the capital can safely unite on. No doubt the Tories would go one further and claim he's from Islington.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624
    Farooq said:

    Welcome back.
    The bad news for everyone is that I wasn't going to post on here again if they didn't reinstate you. So they've got you back, yay. But that means you've still got me, boo.
    Can I just say, you've only been on PB a short time, but you have rapidly become part of the furniture. Happy that you won't need to recuse yourself!
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,841
    I see weirdo and bully John Bercow was on GMB sticking the boot in to Boris this morning... If people like Bercow start appearing regularly to stick the boot in that could give Boris a bit of a repreieve with a lot of Con 2019 voters.

    If it all starts looking like an orchestrated attack by the Forces Of Remainistan a lot of Con 2019 voters will hold their nose and start to rally round...
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited December 2021
    GIN1138 said:

    I see weirdo and bully John Bercow was on GMB sticking the boot in to Boris this morning... If people like Bercow start appearing regularly to stick the boot in that could give Boris a bit of a repreieve with a lot of Con 2019 voters.

    If it all starts looking like an orchestrated attack by the Forces Of Remainistan a lot of Con 2019 voters will hold their nose and start to rally round...

    Note 59% of Leavers still backed the Tories with Yougov last night, even if the Tories were miles behind Labour and only 1% ahead of the LDs with Remainers. Plus slightly more 2019 Tories had gone ReformUK than Labour
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624

    I get the aim, but you are much closer to other people in a pub than you are in a shop. Plan B will make absolutely no difference. I was in a hotel in Wales in October, you had to wear a mask in the corridors but not in the bar area or the dining area, so whilst walking to the bar with friends you all wore masks but as soon as you got there the masks came off.
    We have something similar at the uni. Masks in all corridors but able to meet colleagues in offices without.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited December 2021
    I am not sure if my view is shared, but when you go and do something and come back an hour later you are not sure if the Prime Minister is still in office

    The change since the Paterson idiotic decision has sent an earthquake through politics and in such a short time
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,624
    Pulpstar said:
    Justice for Rinka Geronimo...
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,703

    I get the aim, but you are much closer to other people in a pub than you are in a shop. Plan B will make absolutely no difference. I was in a hotel in Wales in October, you had to wear a mask in the corridors but not in the bar area or the dining area, so whilst walking to the bar with friends you all wore masks but as soon as you got there the masks came off.
    Oh yes it's all theatre just that there is method in the madness.

    They presumably deemed that the effect on people's mental health (which finally is now part of the conversation, even the Scottish woman and Wes acknowledged it) is less to shop in a mask than to be in a hospitality venue in one. Plus you might still go to Tesco's if you have to wear a mask but might give the pub a miss so it works for the economy also.

    Is what they are probably thinking.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,094
    Boris Johnson is right to take a cautious approach to omicron but he’s lost the moral authority to make the case for tighter restrictions. That’s not an argument for dumping the restrictions but for dumping the Prime Minister. Me for ⁦@NewStatesman⁩. https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/conservatives/2021/12/boris-johnson-has-lost-the-credibility-to-lead-britain-through-another-covid-wave
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,094
    - Angela Rayner has written to Independent Adviser on Ministers’ Interests, Lord Geidt, outlining inconsistencies between his report on 28th May 2021, and Electoral Commission’s findings

    - wouldn't be surprising if Geidt either quits or re-opens his inquiry as early as today

    - https://twitter.com/PickardJE/status/1469239494054498304
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited December 2021

    I had a bit to do with lobbying over the Afghan pet rescue operation (I'm an animal welfare campaigner, so it's what I do), and have good reason to think that Carrie wasn't involved in that particular decision. In general I agree with Carnyx - it's pathetic for loyalists to defend the PM on the basis that "he's a great guy really, so it must be his wife that persuaded him". If you want to be supportive, fine, defend him directly, as I did with Corbyn.
    It's simply the latest variant on the well known historical phenomenon of blaming the Tsar's advisers.

    Russians used to write to Stalin about their imprisoned relatives thinking, 'if only the man at the top knew what was going on....'.

    Incidentally I read your charity's mag for the first time in literally years this week; going back well over a decade (indeed probably over two) it used to contain so many photos of and horror stories about tortured animals that I've always routinely thrown the envelopes away unopened. Nowadays it seems really well designed and written and focused on the campaigning and action rather than obsessing over what most supporters will already understand is the problem.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,346

    What mistakes did he make? He was in an utterly impossible position facing first-term Blair 1997-2001. You need to remember that the Tories were facing an apparently existential crisis which lasted beyond 2001. I remember it looking like a potential meltdown even in 2005 when the Tories were faced with the LibDems' decapitation strategy which could have removed a whole swathe of frontbenchers. (In the event they only got the Shadow Education Secretary, removed by Tim Farron. Forgotten his name, but also called Tim, I think.)
    I actually agree with much of that, but I also think it's untrue to say he did not make mistakes. For one thing, I'd argue his media handling was terrible (although arguably against a rather pro-Blair media).

    I actually rate Hague fairly highly; he played a terrible hand reasonably well. The Conservative Party could have been destroyed under him, but he steadied the ship somewhat.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561
    edited December 2021
    TimS said:

    Wes's handicap is that he's audibly from London. And being from London seems to be toxic in political leaders at the moment. That Londoners don't count and are out of touch with "real people" seems to be the one thing everyone on in the country outside the capital can safely unite on. No doubt the Tories would go one further and claim he's from Islington.
    I'm not sure that being audibly from London is as much of a handicap as 'sounding posh'. Look at, or rather listen to, Priti Patel. She 'sounds' OK in Witham, accent-wise. Lots of missing G's hereabouts.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    edited December 2021
    TimS said:

    Wes's handicap is that he's audibly from London. And being from London seems to be toxic in political leaders at the moment. That Londoners don't count and are out of touch with "real people" seems to be the one thing everyone on in the country outside the capital can safely unite on. No doubt the Tories would go one further and claim he's from Islington.
    I think he'd be OK on that particular aspect, grew up in a council flat in Stepney; represents Ilford North. It's London but it's not "Islington".
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561
    Farooq said:

    And so easily avoidable. It's all piled up so quickly the PM can't dig himself out. He needs help, and I'm not sure where it's going to come from.
    Come back Dom, all is forgiven?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    David Gauke
    @DavidGauke
    ·
    54m
    .
    @wesstreeting
    struck exactly the right tone on
    @BBCr4today
    . Has to be said that Labour coming across as grown-up and responsible on tackling omicron.


    ===

    Exactly the kind of response that winds the left up about Streeting.

    Oh, there's no doubt that the left hate Streeting. I remember that clearly when we were on the council together.

    His answers to the question about the by-election were interesting; you could really hear the pull-and-push between his Labour Party tribalism, having spent almost his entire life within it, and his centrist views and awareness of how defeating the Tories is more important than left-wing purism.
  • Farooq said:

    And so easily avoidable. It's all piled up so quickly the PM can't dig himself out. He needs help, and I'm not sure where it's going to come from.
    I have no idea how he turns this around, and for his own mental health and his young families, he would be best to resign at a time of his choosing then be forced out either by his transgressions or his colleagues
  • Lib Dems now favourite (1.83) on Betfair in North Shropshire.
  • Thanks Cyclefree for another superb piece. I always read them even if I do not always comment.

    May I ask the PB Brains Trust for clarification in respect of two related questions?

    First, Mrs PtP was born in the UK of Canadian parents. The family moved back to Canada when she was eight and she was educated there until she was sixteen. Thereafter she resided at various times in the USA and France, but mostly in the UK where she now lives with me. (Lucky girl, eh?) She has dual citizenship, Canada/UK - and a passport from both countries. Is she affected by this damn legislation?

    Secondly, Brexit caused me to encourage both my children to avail themselves of the Irish passport to which they are entitled by virtue of their grandmother's country of origin. Again, could they now be deprived of UK citizenship?

    I know it is vanishly unlikely that any of these would be victimised by the Home Office but the mere fact that in theory they could is a sorry indictment of where our politicians (both sides of the House) have led us.

    I thank you all in advance for your assistance.
  • Lib Dems now favourite (1.83) on Betfair in North Shropshire.

    I expect it to be a landslide for them
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    TimS said:

    Wes's handicap is that he's audibly from London. And being from London seems to be toxic in political leaders at the moment. That Londoners don't count and are out of touch with "real people" seems to be the one thing everyone on in the country outside the capital can safely unite on. No doubt the Tories would go one further and claim he's from Islington.
    As I recall, he grew up in Tower Hamlets. So close, in one sense, if not the other.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    TimS said:

    Wes's handicap is that he's audibly from London. And being from London seems to be toxic in political leaders at the moment. That Londoners don't count and are out of touch with "real people" seems to be the one thing everyone on in the country outside the capital can safely unite on. No doubt the Tories would go one further and claim he's from Islington.
    Yes, you see that sort of moronic prejudice on PB. @SandyRentool is a prime example of it.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    Farooq said:

    Thinking back to Wednesday... I don't usually watch PMQs but I did watch the replay this week to see Sunak's reactions (not as interesting as some made out). But something struck me. The apology Boris made whilst leaning over the dispatch box has really stuck in my head. It almost felt like he was apologising to Starmer.
    Is it normal for a minister to apologise like that before a question time? It seems like a risky time to do it, and it didn't pay off.

    Making a statement like that before PMQs is certainly unusual (technically I think he was 'answering' the first formal question about his engagements - which in the old days used to be read out - since formally almost all the questions being asked are supplementaries, I believe). He was avoiding having to apologise right after Starmer's first question - which very likely would have asked him to do so.
  • Why you are all surprised by the awesomeness of Wes Streeting?

    He read history at Cambridge, albeit at a JCL college.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    Thanks Cyclefree for another superb piece. I always read them even if I do not always comment.

    May I ask the PB Brains Trust for clarification in respect of two related questions?

    First, Mrs PtP was born in the UK of Canadian parents. The family moved back to Canada when she was eight and she was educated there until she was sixteen. Thereafter she resided at various times in the USA and France, but mostly in the UK where she now lives with me. (Lucky girl, eh?) She has dual citizenship, Canada/UK - and a passport from both countries. Is she affected by this damn legislation?

    Secondly, Brexit caused me to encourage both my children to avail themselves of the Irish passport to which they are entitled by virtue of their grandmother's country of origin. Again, could they now be deprived of UK citizenship?

    I know it is vanishly unlikely that any of these would be victimised by the Home Office but the mere fact that in theory they could is a sorry indictment of where our politicians (both sides of the House) have led us.

    I thank you all in advance for your assistance.

    I think that they could be so victimised under the *existing* law. The argument that the Home Office (just) won over Begum, was that her Bangladeshi citizenship was inherent. Even though she didn't actually have the passport.

    If she'd had formal paperwork from Bangladesh declaring her a citizen and a passport, there would have been no case....
  • IanB2 said:

    Oh, there's no doubt that the left hate Streeting. I remember that clearly when we were on the council together.

    His answers to the question about the by-election were interesting; you could really hear the pull-and-push between his Labour Party tribalism, having spent almost his entire life within it, and his centrist views and awareness of how defeating the Tories is more important than left-wing purism.
    He is in a good position, isn't he?

    If the Corbyn era had one valuable outcome it was that it demonstrated beyond dispute that Labour cannot win from the left; it has to win from the centre.

    Like it or loathe it, it's a fact.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,979

    I am not sure if my view is shared, but when you go and do something and come back an hour later you are not sure if the Prime Minister is still in office

    The change since the Paterson idiotic decision has sent an earthquake through politics and in such a short time

    The whole Boris thing is curious.

    The three things that have so damaged him will seem though the lens of history pretty inconsequential.

    1) Cummings
    2) Paterson
    3) Party-Gate

    The first two decisions look like misplaced loyalty (more conventional PMs would have thrown both under a bus) and the latter one is, no doubt, owing to people taking their lead from BJ's obvious personal lack of time for the personal Covid stuff (masks, distancing, etc). So he's certainly culpable.

    But what about the three big things that he, and no-one else could have delivered.

    1) Brexit
    2) Covid vaccine programme
    3) Levelling - up Agenda (alright not delivered, but understood and articulated).

    The same Boris. This time generating outcomes which are also directly linked to his unique persona.

    I understand the fury of those who consider him a fraud/liar. He sort of is. But then all memorable PMs put on a show. The "unflappable" Macmillan, Tony and his estuarine drawl, even the Iron Lady.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188
    IanB2 said:

    It's simply the latest variant on the well known historical phenomenon of blaming the Tsar's advisers.

    Russians used to write to Stalin about their imprisoned relatives thinking, 'if only the man at the top knew what was going on....'.

    Incidentally I read your charity's mag for the first time in literally years this week; going back well over a decade (indeed probably over two) it used to contain so many photos of and horror stories about tortured animals that I've always routinely thrown the envelopes away unopened. Nowadays it seems really well designed and written and focused on the campaigning and action rather than obsessing over what most supporters will already understand is the problem.
    My Russian friends tell me the Putinist types say that. My Chinese friends say that there is an equivalent for Xi, as well. "If only the big boss knew"....
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,302
    Carnyx said:

    Woman-blaming. Edit: Even if you yourself don't intend that, it reads very easily as that and will upset half the population so is not a good argument in politics. And in any case, every single case, he only had to say no. He's the PM. She isn't.
    It is possible, even in this day and age, that a woman can be at fault. This isn't misogyny - I would have said the same about Philip May had I thought he was the cause of May's useless tenure.

    Boris's main fault is that he's weak and tends to bear the impression of whoever sat on him last. That didn't necessarily mean disaster - when he came to power I rather hoped he would have someone sane sit on him and get him to do sensible stuff, but it seems instead he mostly listened to Carrie Antoinette.
  • Only downside to Wes Streeting, like Phil Woolas, he’s a former President of the NUS.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    He is in a good position, isn't he?

    If the Corbyn era had one valuable outcome it was that it demonstrated beyond dispute that Labour cannot win from the left; it has to win from the centre.

    Like it or loathe it, it's a fact.
    I think there are a fair few on the left who wouldn't accept that it has been so demonstrated, even on here.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Yes, just listened to the Today programme – brilliant from Streeting.

    Was masterful in ensuring that Labour isn't the fun killer party – backs Christmas parties and says people need to enjoy themselves.

    Fair play to him.
  • Mr. NorthWales, I have refrained from betting on it.

    Mr. Prole, I'd add that people said the PM was being led around by Cummings before he went, so it's just swapping one person doing the PM's thinking for another. I fail to see why one criticism is fine and the other should be frowned upon. The fault remains the PM's for not having a functioning brain and having to subcontract out his thinking.
  • Lib Dems now favourite (1.83) on Betfair in North Shropshire.

    Tories to come third might be a good bet if anyone is offering it.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited December 2021

    The whole Boris thing is curious.

    The three things that have so damaged him will seem though the lens of history pretty inconsequential.

    1) Cummings
    2) Paterson
    3) Party-Gate

    The first two decisions look like misplaced loyalty (more conventional PMs would have thrown both under a bus) and the latter one is, no doubt, owing to people taking their lead from BJ's obvious personal lack of time for the personal Covid stuff (masks, distancing, etc). So he's certainly culpable.

    But what about the three big things that he, and no-one else could have delivered.

    1) Brexit
    2) Covid vaccine programme
    3) Levelling - up Agenda (alright not delivered, but understood and articulated).

    The same Boris. This time generating outcomes which are also directly linked to his unique persona.

    I understand the fury of those who consider him a fraud/liar. He sort of is. But then all memorable PMs put on a show. The "unflappable" Macmillan, Tony and his estuarine drawl, even the Iron Lady.

    Your 2 and 3 are absurd. Johnson had to be told to keep his fingers off the vaccination programme, and allow it to be delivered by the experts, without the political meddling that had wrecked the PPE procurement. Thus it was delivered by someone else, and there's nothing about it tied uniquely to him. Ditto levelling up, which is not delivered but also not articulated or planned.

    And being a fraud and liar is not a show, but his essence.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    edited December 2021

    I expect it to be a landslide for them
    From 10% in 2019? Where is the landslide coming from? Big Brexit area - for many there the LDs are regarded as the worst of the worst.

    Tactical voting and Tories not turning out sure - a LD win is not inconceivable given the narrative of the past few days - but no landslide surely.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    edited December 2021

    Tories to come third might be a good bet if anyone is offering it.
    If Yougov is correct and the Tories are still on 59% with Leavers and the LDs are on just 2% with Leavers, then the Tories won't come third in North Shropshire. Given Shropshire was 57% Leave they might even hold it as Labour take more of the anti Tory vote in this strongly Leave seat than expected
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    IanB2 said:

    As I recall, he grew up in Tower Hamlets. So close, in one sense, if not the other.
    Are we now to measure Labour MPs by the distance of their birthplace to N1? Probably some of the sad anti-London nutters on here think we should.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    GIN1138 said:

    I see weirdo and bully John Bercow was on GMB sticking the boot in to Boris this morning... If people like Bercow start appearing regularly to stick the boot in that could give Boris a bit of a repreieve with a lot of Con 2019 voters.

    If it all starts looking like an orchestrated attack by the Forces Of Remainistan a lot of Con 2019 voters will hold their nose and start to rally round...

    All politics is relative. The Tories have lost my GE vote support for now (I don't usually vote Tory in local elections) but if it were Boris v Jezza I would still vote for Boris, if it were Boris v Rejoin, ditto, Boris v Left Wing Labour ditto, Boris v Scottish separatism ditto. All through gritted teeth of course.

    I think Boris is now on the way out, it is when not if, (unless more Black Swans come along), but my view that there is a nearly 50% chance of the next government being Tory, and nearly 50% of it being a rainbow alliance remains for now.

    To lose the Sun, Telegraph and Mail in a few days looks like carelessness rather then misfortune.

    BTW the Speccie network of Boris (ex editor), Stratton (wife of Forsyth), Cummings (husband of Mary Wakefield) is starting to look a bit odd.

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188

    Yes, you see that sort of moronic prejudice on PB. @SandyRentool is a prime example of it.
    It's a fairly common prejudice around the world - people from the Capital are rich, out of touch arseholes who oppress the Honest Folk in the rest of the country.

    You should hear what the rest of France says about Paris - far harsher.

    Or the rest of Peru vs Lima.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    HYUFD said:

    If Yougov is correct and the Tories are still on 59% with Leavers and the LDs are on just 2% with Leavers, then the Tories won't come third in North Shropshire. Given Shropshire was 57% Leave they might even hold it
    Did you multiply 0.59 by 0.57, just to see what the answer is, before making that post?
  • old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    TimS said:

    Wes's handicap is that he's audibly from London. And being from London seems to be toxic in political leaders at the moment. That Londoners don't count and are out of touch with "real people" seems to be the one thing everyone on in the country outside the capital can safely unite on. No doubt the Tories would go one further and claim he's from Islington.
    He sounds like a spiv from central casting in 1940s London selling dodgy nylons on the black market.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    It's a fairly common prejudice around the world - people from the Capital are rich, out of touch arseholes who oppress the Honest Folk in the rest of the country.

    You should hear what the rest of France says about Paris - far harsher.

    Or the rest of Peru vs Lima.
    The US about Washington is the ultimate.
  • Thanks Cyclefree for another superb piece. I always read them even if I do not always comment.

    May I ask the PB Brains Trust for clarification in respect of two related questions?

    First, Mrs PtP was born in the UK of Canadian parents. The family moved back to Canada when she was eight and she was educated there until she was sixteen. Thereafter she resided at various times in the USA and France, but mostly in the UK where she now lives with me. (Lucky girl, eh?) She has dual citizenship, Canada/UK - and a passport from both countries. Is she affected by this damn legislation?

    Secondly, Brexit caused me to encourage both my children to avail themselves of the Irish passport to which they are entitled by virtue of their grandmother's country of origin. Again, could they now be deprived of UK citizenship?

    I know it is vanishly unlikely that any of these would be victimised by the Home Office but the mere fact that in theory they could is a sorry indictment of where our politicians (both sides of the House) have led us.

    I thank you all in advance for your assistance.

    The quick answer is "Yes - they could be stripped of British citizenship.

    But let us take this to the next level. Under this legislation, the Home Secretary could, in theory, remove British Citizenship from everyone in Northern Ireland.

    It would be a novel solution to the Article 16 and NI Protocol problem....
  • GIN1138 said:

    I see weirdo and bully John Bercow was on GMB sticking the boot in to Boris this morning... If people like Bercow start appearing regularly to stick the boot in that could give Boris a bit of a repreieve with a lot of Con 2019 voters.

    If it all starts looking like an orchestrated attack by the Forces Of Remainistan a lot of Con 2019 voters will hold their nose and start to rally round...

    An argument that may have held water at the start if the year. We are way way past "ignore the evidence of your eyes and ears because they are a remainer"
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,684

    Plan B is do not work in your office but go to your office christmas party.

    Plan B is your must wear a mask in Next but you can stand at the bar in a crowded pub without one on.

    And thats a balanced approach?
    You are of course being rather selective yourself.
    Public transport and shopping are two things a lot of people simply can't avoid. Requiring masks there goes a little way to mitigate risks they can't avoid - unlike the local pub.
    Agreee with it or not, there is a rationale for it.

    Vaxports, in the short period of time the current rules are supposed to be in effect, are pretty nonsensical, I'd agree.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561

    The whole Boris thing is curious.

    The three things that have so damaged him will seem though the lens of history pretty inconsequential.

    1) Cummings
    2) Paterson
    3) Party-Gate

    The first two decisions look like misplaced loyalty (more conventional PMs would have thrown both under a bus) and the latter one is, no doubt, owing to people taking their lead from BJ's obvious personal lack of time for the personal Covid stuff (masks, distancing, etc). So he's certainly culpable.

    But what about the three big things that he, and no-one else could have delivered.

    1) Brexit
    2) Covid vaccine programme
    3) Levelling - up Agenda (alright not delivered, but understood and articulated).

    The same Boris. This time generating outcomes which are also directly linked to his unique persona.

    I understand the fury of those who consider him a fraud/liar. He sort of is. But then all memorable PMs put on a show. The "unflappable" Macmillan, Tony and his estuarine drawl, even the Iron Lady.

    Almost 50% of people were against Brexit, with a higher proportion in the 'chattering classes'. If they (we? me certainly) see what we consider Boris the Destroyer getting his comeuppance, why then we'll drink to that.
    It's not obvious that responsibility for the success of the vaccine and the vaccination programme can be attributed to the government; it also seems that the govt is now intervening and there are complaints.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I expect it to be a landslide for them
    The big risk is splitting the anti Tory vote.

    Labour need to somehow give the Liberals the nod – but it is a against party policy to voucher for the Liberals. This is the one question that Streeting struggled with on the Today programme this morning.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    My Russian friends tell me the Putinist types say that. My Chinese friends say that there is an equivalent for Xi, as well. "If only the big boss knew"....
    There seems to be a human need to believe in a wise leader. Probably stems from the father image, and plays directly into religious belief.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    It's a fairly common prejudice around the world - people from the Capital are rich, out of touch arseholes who oppress the Honest Folk in the rest of the country.

    You should hear what the rest of France says about Paris - far harsher.

    Or the rest of Peru vs Lima.
    Perhaps so – doesn't make it any the less moronic
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    GIN1138 said:

    I see weirdo and bully John Bercow was on GMB sticking the boot in to Boris this morning... If people like Bercow start appearing regularly to stick the boot in that could give Boris a bit of a repreieve with a lot of Con 2019 voters.

    If it all starts looking like an orchestrated attack by the Forces Of Remainistan a lot of Con 2019 voters will hold their nose and start to rally round...

    The attacks can definitely go too far and people feel sorry for the victim, a bit like the Gordon Brown handwriting nonsense.

    In regard to Wes Streeting it is pretty easy to sound good when in opposition, thats why I have not rated SKS over the past couple of years. I remember during the Blair years Ming Campbell was on Newsnight all the time sounding statesmenlike and sensible. He became leader of the Lib Dems and was hopeless.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188
    theProle said:

    It is possible, even in this day and age, that a woman can be at fault. This isn't misogyny - I would have said the same about Philip May had I thought he was the cause of May's useless tenure.

    Boris's main fault is that he's weak and tends to bear the impression of whoever sat on him last. That didn't necessarily mean disaster - when he came to power I rather hoped he would have someone sane sit on him and get him to do sensible stuff, but it seems instead he mostly listened to Carrie Antoinette.
    You are aware that the original Maire Antoinette blaming thing was largely horse manure? Or maybe not.

    The monarchists used her as an excuse "Stupid Austrian" and the revolutionaries use the whole 'Aristocratic Extremist Foreigner making the weak King attack the people" thing as propaganda.
  • Philip_ThompsonPhilip_Thompson Posts: 65,826
    edited December 2021
    IanB2 said:

    Your 2 and 3 are absurd. Johnson had to be told to keep his fingers off the vaccination programme, and allow it to be delivered by the experts, without the political meddling that had wrecked the PPE procurement. Thus it was delivered by someone else, and there's nothing about it tied uniquely to him. Ditto levelling up, which is not delivered but also not articulated or planned.

    And being a fraud and liar is not a show, but his essence.
    2 is not absurd, that he entrusted it to an expert is to his credit. If he'd done nothing and had "kept his fingers off" it would have gone through either the EU procurement process or the normal NHS procurement processes and been much delayed as it was all across Europe. He changed the procedure and the buck stops there.

    The Opposition and opposition media like the Grauniad put the boot into both him and Kate Bingham for what was being done here until it became clear that what happened here was a big success - had it been a disaster you wouldn't be so quick to distance Boris from it.

    It does you no favour not to give credit where credit's due.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,684
    .

    One the other hand, Dom really isn't a Prole (one of the fatal things about that thing in the Downing St garden was hearing how posh he is).

    On the other other hand, he probably really thinks he is a Prole, because he's less posh than (say) JRM.
    He's a scruffy git in a way that even Boris can't get near.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Nigelb said:

    You are of course being rather selective yourself.
    Public transport and shopping are two things a lot of people simply can't avoid. Requiring masks there goes a little way to mitigate risks they can't avoid - unlike the local pub.
    Agreee with it or not, there is a rationale for it.

    Vaxports, in the short period of time the current rules are supposed to be in effect, are pretty nonsensical, I'd agree.
    I see that but why then are fashion stores included in the mask mandate – I mean they are hardly 'essential' – I dare say most PBers manage to avoid them from one year to the next!
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,926
    IanB2 said:

    Oh, there's no doubt that the left hate Streeting. I remember that clearly when we were on the council together.

    His answers to the question about the by-election were interesting; you could really hear the pull-and-push between his Labour Party tribalism, having spent almost his entire life within it, and his centrist views and awareness of how defeating the Tories is more important than left-wing purism.
    Streeting vs Harper as future leaders would be an interesting combination.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,188
    IanB2 said:

    There seems to be a human need to believe in a wise leader. Probably stems from the father image, and plays directly into religious belief.
    More that "At least the guy at the top is good, noble and intelligent. Just badly advised. So there is hope."
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited December 2021
    Pulpstar said:

    I think he'd be OK on that particular aspect, grew up in a council flat in Stepney; represents Ilford North. It's London but it's not "Islington".
    Yes, his real weakness is lack of experience of the working world outside lobbying and politics. Which could play into a similar "out of touch" narrative, but not derived from the geography.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,472
    Morning all :)

    Just dropped in to congratulate @Cyclefree on one of the best thread headers on this site for a very long time.

    I am ashamed, as a Liberal Democrat supporter, that the party of which I was once a member and activist was complicit in this erosion of individual rights, the removal of appropriate scrutiny and accountability and another step in this country's growing centralisation.

    If the LDs want a USP at the next election, rolling back the State and returning power both to locally elected and accountable authorities as well as Parliament but, more important, to the individual citizen would be a good start.

    Thanks again for a profoundly uncomfortable start to the day.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    The quick answer is "Yes - they could be stripped of British citizenship.

    But let us take this to the next level. Under this legislation, the Home Secretary could, in theory, remove British Citizenship from everyone in Northern Ireland.

    It would be a novel solution to the Article 16 and NI Protocol problem....
    Anyone born post 1983 whose parents are not British citizens can now lose their British passport if the Home Secretary doesn’t like you
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    TimS said:

    Streeting vs Harper as future leaders would be an interesting combination.
    I'd take that! I rate both of them quite highly.
  • More that "At least the guy at the top is good, noble and intelligent. Just badly advised. So there is hope."
    The great strength of democracy is that you don't need to sit around waiting for the great man to find better advisers. You can kick the bastard out yourselves.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561
    eek said:

    Anyone born post 1983 whose parents are not British citizens can now lose their British passport if the Home Secretary doesn’t like you
    Is it not that both parents have to be British citizens? (etc).
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,441

    Come back Dom, all is forgiven?
    It's unlikely Dom will return to his crypt until Johnson family friends and sycophants have been well and trully dispatched.

    In the immortal words of Leon ' Ask not for whom the bell tolls Mr Johnson. It tolls for thee.....'
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Mr Eustice definitely off the No 10 Xmas card list, one presumes.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    Only downside to Wes Streeting, like Phil Woolas, he’s a former President of the NUS.

    Although, like you TSE, Streeting has a solid working class background. Council flat, comprehensive school, Cambridge uni.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    Depends *which* failures we're talking about. Her friends having a party in her flat / her friend staying for Christmas is her fault. And if - as seems to be the suggestion - she has been the prime mover behind various oustings of people / puppies from Kabul then that is her fault as well.

    I understand your point though. Throwing Stratton under the bus for her heartfelt grief at the mess whilst all the men involved get to keep their jobs absolutely stinks.
    And is typical Boris - sacrifice Anyone and everyone to protect himself even if it only gives him 30 more seconds
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,684
    IanB2 said:

    Oh, there's no doubt that the left hate Streeting. I remember that clearly when we were on the council together.

    His answers to the question about the by-election were interesting; you could really hear the pull-and-push between his Labour Party tribalism, having spent almost his entire life within it, and his centrist views and awareness of how defeating the Tories is more important than left-wing purism.
    That bit of the interview was piffle.
    If the two major parties are going to insist on retaining FPTP, it's insulting the intelligence of the voters to say that Labour have to fight for every vote in every seat as a matter of principle (which is what I think he was arguing just before I turned the radio off), since that principle renders the votes of a large slug of the elecorate useless.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    Absolute egregious sexism to blame Carrie for Bozza's failures.

    That he is an incompetent fool is down to him and him alone.

    Nothing to do with his wife FFS.

    Rubbish. Are we not allowed to dissect his folly? A key part of it being his thraldom to the revoltingly nasty, selfish bit of work he is married to.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,684

    Thanks Cyclefree for another superb piece. I always read them even if I do not always comment.

    May I ask the PB Brains Trust for clarification in respect of two related questions?

    First, Mrs PtP was born in the UK of Canadian parents. The family moved back to Canada when she was eight and she was educated there until she was sixteen. Thereafter she resided at various times in the USA and France, but mostly in the UK where she now lives with me. (Lucky girl, eh?) She has dual citizenship, Canada/UK - and a passport from both countries. Is she affected by this damn legislation?

    Secondly, Brexit caused me to encourage both my children to avail themselves of the Irish passport to which they are entitled by virtue of their grandmother's country of origin. Again, could they now be deprived of UK citizenship?

    I know it is vanishly unlikely that any of these would be victimised by the Home Office but the mere fact that in theory they could is a sorry indictment of where our politicians (both sides of the House) have led us.

    I thank you all in advance for your assistance.

    In both cases, yes, as far as I understand it.
  • Almost 50% of people were against Brexit, with a higher proportion in the 'chattering classes'. If they (we? me certainly) see what we consider Boris the Destroyer getting his comeuppance, why then we'll drink to that.
    It's not obvious that responsibility for the success of the vaccine and the vaccination programme can be attributed to the government; it also seems that the govt is now intervening and there are complaints.
    I think the vaccination program being directly driven by thankfully competent people was a vital part of its success.

    By contrast in the initial weeks where the NHS was in charge of the booster vaccinations there seemed to be no urgency from it.
  • Stocky said:

    From 10% in 2019? Where is the landslide coming from? Big Brexit area - for many there the LDs are regarded as the worst of the worst.

    Tactical voting and Tories not turning out sure - a LD win is not inconceivable given the narrative of the past few days - but no landslide surely.
    Looking at the polls, last nights locals, and just the firestorm of negative stories adds up to the prospect of a substantial lib dem win

    I would vote for them on this occasion if I had a vote
  • eekeek Posts: 29,732

    Is it not that both parents have to be British citizens? (etc).
    I was being careful because it’s probably you are only a citizen only if both your parents only have British citizenship (no possible claim at all to any other citizenship).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    Nigelb said:

    You are of course being rather selective yourself.
    Public transport and shopping are two things a lot of people simply can't avoid. Requiring masks there goes a little way to mitigate risks they can't avoid - unlike the local pub.
    Agreee with it or not, there is a rationale for it.

    Vaxports, in the short period of time the current rules are supposed to be in effect, are pretty nonsensical, I'd agree.
    The opposite, facemasks will likely do little to stop the spread of Covid, certainly cloth ones. If vaxports for nightclubs and large events encourage more of the unvacinnated who want to go out to get vaccinated and get their boosters that will be far more effective at reducing hospitalisations
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    theProle said:

    It is possible, even in this day and age, that a woman can be at fault. This isn't misogyny - I would have said the same about Philip May had I thought he was the cause of May's useless tenure.

    Boris's main fault is that he's weak and tends to bear the impression of whoever sat on him last. That didn't necessarily mean disaster - when he came to power I rather hoped he would have someone sane sit on him and get him to do sensible stuff, but it seems instead he mostly listened to Carrie Antoinette.
    OK, spouse-blaming. Fair enough. But Mr J is still responsible for the decisions.

    And in his particular context woman-blaming is a serious worry. We've already had the "dumped blonde woman in tears in front garden of London house carrying the blame" thing once already. It's a particularly toxic image for Mr J for very obvious reasons. So toxic I can't imagine what he was thinking.

    'Sit on him' slightly unfortunate (but unintended, one assumes) in the circs, btw ...

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    2 is not absurd, that he entrusted it to an expert is to his credit. If he'd done nothing and had "kept his fingers off" it would have gone through either the EU procurement process or the normal NHS procurement processes and been much delayed as it was all across Europe. He changed the procedure and the buck stops there.

    The Opposition and opposition media like the Grauniad put the boot into both him and Kate Bingham for what was being done here until it became clear that what happened here was a big success - had it been a disaster you wouldn't be so quick to distance Boris from it.

    It does you no favour not to give credit where credit's due.
    Bingham certainly deserves a lot of credit.

    The PPE procurement had been a shambles and a disaster - and probably will come to be seen as a disgrace - and had descended into a scramble-in-panic by Tory ministers and MPs to phone their mates in business (and a fair few who weren't) to get them to bid for contracts; aside from the potential corruption we landed with a load of stuff that was unusable and some that never appeared.

    So the PM was read the riot act by some of the key people in SAGE. That he was in no position to tell them to sod off deserves a smidgin of credit, I guess, but that's as far as it goes. Since his tendency is to bear the imprint of whoever sat on him the latest, it was really a silver lining to one of his principal weaknesses.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    One for RCS100, just because I know he likes to compare Bremen's vaccination rate with the lowest rates in Germany.

    Bremen officially has just 2.5% adults (18+) unvaccinated.
    Surrounding Lower Saxony has 14.9% adults unvaccinated.

    I'm just not buying it. There isn't that much difference between tiny Bremen and surrounding Lower Saxony. Bremen is more urban, and has more immigrants. Maybe they made more effort to reach people to get them vaccinated, but not enough to make that big a difference.

    Then look at the numbers for 12-17 year olds. Bremen has vaccinated 57.7% and Lower Saxony 62.4%. It doesn't make any sense that Bremen would have quite a lot more adults vaccinated and yet fewer teenagers vaccinated.

    Then look at the incidence rates, death rates and hospitalisation rates. All a bit worse in Bremen than in surrounding Lower Saxony. If there were really 6 times as many unvaccinated adults per capita in Lower Saxony you would expect to see it show up at some point in these stats.

    Bremen's 97.5% adults with at least one shot isn't right. The real figure is no doubt much closer to Lower Saxony's.

    source:
    https://www.rki.de/DE/Content/InfAZ/N/Neuartiges_Coronavirus/Daten/Impfquoten-Tab.html
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    IshmaelZ said:

    Rubbish. Are we not allowed to dissect his folly? A key part of it being his thraldom to the revoltingly nasty, selfish bit of work he is married to.
    Have you ever met this lady that you are so horrible and mean about?

    I suspect the answer is – no.
  • Interesting observation:

    I know everyone is excited about the Labour leads but worth noting in the latest @yougov 1 in 4 2019 Conservatives are 'don't knows'

    These polling leads are not (yet) on solid ground.
    https://twitter.com/p_surridge/status/1469239175794860032?s=20
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,441
    edited December 2021
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,561

    Looking at the polls, last nights locals, and just the firestorm of negative stories adds up to the prospect of a substantial lib dem win

    I would vote for them on this occasion if I had a vote
    You have placed yourself in serious danger of a corrective visit from our resident Essex Conservative.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    stodge said:

    Morning all :)

    Just dropped in to congratulate @Cyclefree on one of the best thread headers on this site for a very long time.

    I am ashamed, as a Liberal Democrat supporter, that the party of which I was once a member and activist was complicit in this erosion of individual rights, the removal of appropriate scrutiny and accountability and another step in this country's growing centralisation.

    If the LDs want a USP at the next election, rolling back the State and returning power both to locally elected and accountable authorities as well as Parliament but, more important, to the individual citizen would be a good start.

    Thanks again for a profoundly uncomfortable start to the day.

    Sadly Labour is the party least likely to deliver anything like it. They are centralists to their core - which you can derive directly from socialist or social democratic thinking. Just remember Blair and his avalanche of targets and league tables and government funds that councils and other organisations that needed funding had to bid for, and only got subject to Whitehall approval and conditions
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,010
    IanB2 said:

    Did you multiply 0.59 by 0.57, just to see what the answer is, before making that post?
    The Tories were also still ahead of the LDs with Remainers too on the poll.

    On UNS the Tories would get 46% still in North Shropshire if Yougov is correct which would likely be enough to hold the seat given the division between the Labour and LD vote
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    While this is encouraging, we shouldn't forget that most of the world is seeing waves of Delta, not omicron (at least yet).
    Indeed, although @Alistair was specifically looking at countries where omicron is dominant – that was his point.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830

    I had a bit to do with lobbying over the Afghan pet rescue operation (I'm an animal welfare campaigner, so it's what I do), and have good reason to think that Carrie wasn't involved in that particular decision. In general I agree with Carnyx - it's pathetic for loyalists to defend the PM on the basis that "he's a great guy really, so it must be his wife that persuaded him". If you want to be supportive, fine, defend him directly, as I did with Corbyn.
    If you knew it was a "pet rescue operation" why did you get involved in it?

    Where was the animal welfare deficit in having the animals humanely put down, and attention turned to friends of this country who may be poor and brown but are human and at risk of (indee, now victims of) torture and murder? I don't think "I do animal welfare" is an excuse for this.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited December 2021
    Roger said:

    It's unlikely Dom will return to his crypt until Johnson family friends and sycophants have been well and trully dispatched.

    In the immortal words of Leon ' Ask not for whom the bell tolls Mr Johnson. It tolls for thee.....'
    Is there a new Leon? The one I remember, at least until a day or two back, says that Boris is the consummate political genius
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,378
    Mr Richard,

    BoJo deserves credit for appointing a copetent person to oversee the vaccine programme, and more importantly for leaving her alone to get on with it. Brown would have insisted on micro-meddling. A case from Boris of masterly inactivity.

    He's good at that. Too good.

    It's knowing when to interfere that makes a good PM.
This discussion has been closed.