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Has Campbell got this right – Hunt’s now PM in all but name – politicalbetting.com

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  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,453

    I want to know what happened to David Cameron's 24/7 NHS.

    We're not far off.
  • So did Truss.

    Hunt has never been a dick and tried to reverse Brexit.

    I accept that, for some reason, people don't warm to him.

    I quite like him.
    So do I.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393
    Ishmael_Z said:

    What is the relevance? Nobody is trying to have him retrospectively declared winner of that contest. The fact he has virtually no faction behind him actually strengthens his value as a compromise caretaker.
    Something everyone conveniently forgets iis that Boris decided not to even enter the 2016 contest, therefore he should really not have been allowed to enter the 2019 contest at all. Past performance is everything.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    ydoethur said:

    Nah, everyone knows I got sol.
    Hot & Buttered

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCzElCx_LK8
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,031
    Watch a special edition of the #AndrewNeilShow asking Can Liz Truss Survive?

    Joining @AfNeil, @EdBalls and @George_Osborne is former minister and Sunak backer @MattHanfock for his thoughts on the new Chancellor and Truss' chaotic first 40 days in office

    Channel 4, 6.15pm https://twitter.com/Channel4/status/1581309319131197440/photo/1
  • Tactical voting is well-implanted here with an amicable LD-Lab relatioonship and Hunt will do well if he holds on. I spent the last election in Portsmouth South, where an altogether less scrupulous LibDem effort was being made to suggest that only they could beat the Tories, even though there was a Labour MP (he survived).
    Portsmouth South was,of course, a big shock in 2017 with Labour coming from 3rd place to win the seat. Since Mike Hancock's by election win there in 1984 Labour's vote had been depressed by tactical anti-Tory voting on a massive scale. Following Hancock's defeat in 2015, the Labour vote returned home and the seat moved much further in Labour's direction in 2019 - against the national trend!
    I do wonder whether Labour has the potential to see similar progress in Carshalton & Wallington - which back in the 1970s had been a Tory/Labour marginal. The Alliance moved into 2nd place in 1983 and managed to hold on to that position - probably due to strength at Local Elections. Labour failed to recover sufficiently there - despite a stronger result in 1997 when Tom Brake won the seat for the LDs. He was defeated in 2019 and is not standing again , and it occurs to me that this might present Labour with an opportunity to make up lost ground.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,347

    All that investment in renewables is beginning to pay off, despite the naysayers. Britain has a tremendous advantage in wind (and, if we could be bothered) tidal reserves. We need to keep incentivising the exploitation of it.

    I do wonder if in 20 years time there will be so much renewable energy around the world we won't be worrying about energy costs at all.
    Not until we solve the storage part of the problem.

    That said I roll my eyes whenever I hear anyone say "Britain's done nothing", we have changed our electricity generation by a huge amount in a relatively short time, and it's going to keep growing. This is one of those areas where for once I think we can say we are doing about as well or better than any similar country.

    As an aside, we making a lot of progress with fibre broadband now. Multiple huge projects are under way, and we now have a very fast deployment programme.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,571

    I want to know what happened to David Cameron's 24/7 NHS.

    A 24/7 NHS? Does that mean you have to wait 24 months for a hospital appointment and 7 days for a GP appointment?
  • Manchester United footballer Mason Greenwood has been charged with attempted rape, engaging in controlling behaviour and assault, the CPS has said.

    Prosecutors said the charges all related to the same complainant.

    The 21-year-old footballer will face his first court appearance at Greater Manchester Magistrates' Court on 17 October, the CPS added.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-63272019
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393

    A 24/7 NHS? Does that mean you have to wait 24 months for a hospital appointment and 7 days for a GP appointment?
    7 days would be an improvement!
  • londonpubmanlondonpubman Posts: 3,641

    So do I.
    I think he's ok too 👍
  • ydoethur said:

    No, he was ill at the time he resigned. He just didn't realise with what, or that it would be terminal. That wasn't found out until later.

    The pain he was in was one reason that he mishandled the debate.

    As with Eden 15 years later, whose severed bile duct was leading him to take something ridiculous like 15 aspirins a day at the height of the Suez crisis.
    "The pain he was in was one reason that he mishandled the debate."

    Might be true, BUT do you have a source for this?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263

    Up Their Own Arsehole Remainer.
    Er, thanks. But shouldn't that have an @ sign in front of it if you're addressing me?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,291

    "The pain he was in was one reason that he mishandled the debate."

    Might be true, BUT do you have a source for this?
    Not offhand. If you are interested I would advise you to check out David Dutton's biography.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    glw said:

    Not until we solve the storage part of the problem.

    That said I roll my eyes whenever I hear anyone say "Britain's done nothing", we have changed our electricity generation by a huge amount in a relatively short time, and it's going to keep growing. This is one of those areas where for once I think we can say we are doing about as well or better than any similar country.

    As an aside, we making a lot of progress with fibre broadband now. Multiple huge projects are under way, and we now have a very fast deployment programme.
    Yes, we need to develop more storage solutions. But ultimately, if you put in enough wind and tidal around Britain, and couple it with good links to the continent, storage requirements would be minimal.

    There is always somewhere around Britain where the wind is blowing. And tidal is of course continuous on a national scale.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,226
    glw said:

    Not until we solve the storage part of the problem.

    That said I roll my eyes whenever I hear anyone say "Britain's done nothing", we have changed our electricity generation by a huge amount in a relatively short time, and it's going to keep growing. This is one of those areas where for once I think we can say we are doing about as well or better than any similar country.

    As an aside, we making a lot of progress with fibre broadband now. Multiple huge projects are under way, and we now have a very fast deployment programme.
    Even if energy storage consisted of nothing other than keeping three months of gas stored in a few old gas fields, that would still be a significant increase in resilience.
  • stjohnstjohn Posts: 1,897

    I think he's ok too 👍
    And me.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    From the snippets I've seen two poor articles from Jonathan Freedland and Charles Moore this weekend. Freedland seems to think sovereignty is all about being able to borrow lots of money at favourable rates of interest and Moore bemoans the generic 'blob' controlling everything, not realising that if you want to usurp the establishment there isn't much point unless you can display a basic amount of competence yourself.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,347
    rcs1000 said:

    Even if energy storage consisted of nothing other than keeping three months of gas stored in a few old gas fields, that would still be a significant increase in resilience.
    That is true, but ideally we will one day have better options that don't require any fossil fuel generating capacity.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    So did Truss.

    Hunt has never been a dick and tried to reverse Brexit.

    I accept that, for some reason, people don't warm to him.

    I quite like him.
    The reality is that Sunak and Hunt are the only ones likely to 'rescue' Brexit. Have the hardcore forgotten that Sunak was a Brexiteer himself?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,263
    rcs1000 said:

    That's the silver bullet fallacy. We don't need to do it all in one go, we need to do it little bit by little bit, month by month, and year by year.
    True. And we clearly are doing so. Hence my conjecture that in 20 years time we won't be worrying about energy costs at all.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    DavidL said:

    It's not a lot of fun walking about in it but it has its uses. I think the problems with supply are mainly in the south.
    Yorkshire has been very dry. Reservoirs about 50pc full I think with localised hosepipe bans.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    Use of the term “UTOAR” is one step away from peppering your arguments with reference to the WEF.

    Probably best avoided.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393

    True. And we clearly are doing so. Hence my conjecture that in 20 years time we won't be worrying about energy costs at all.
    No, we'll be worrying about which Tory MP will take over for their mandatory 3 month period as PM, in the 33rd year of their government.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,650

    Yorkshire has been very dry. Reservoirs about 50pc full I think with localised hosepipe bans.
    All of Yorkshire has a hosepipe gan, doesn't it?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,133
    Andy_JS said:
    While Cruella DeVil remains Home Secretary, I wish Mr Halfon good luck with that one.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507

    All of Yorkshire has a hosepipe gan, doesn't it?
    It maybe does still. We have a first floor flat so haven't followed the details.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,650
    rcs1000 said:

    That's the silver bullet fallacy. We don't need to do it all in one go, we need to do it little bit by little bit, month by month, and year by year.
    I'm not saying all in one go. For example, switching to hydrogen would be done one Local Distribution Zone at a time, switching to heat pumps can be a rolling programme.

    But ultimately we need to have fully decarbonised heat, and ideally in a way that doesn't lock us in to energy imports, such as CCGT with CCS or Blue Hydrogen.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,905

    Yorkshire has been very dry. Reservoirs about 50pc full I think with localised hosepipe bans.
    Yes, we still have a hosepipe ban.
    https://www.yorkshirewater.com/your-water/is-there-a-hosepipe-ban/

    Many Pennine reservoirs are very low.

    Most of the Flatlands supply comes from an aquifer but there's only so much you can pump out, and in any case they have to dilute the groundwater to keep the nitrate content below the required level.

    Our water goes off pretty quickly if there is a power cut so winter might be fun...
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,291
    edited October 2022

    Yorkshire has been very dry. Reservoirs about 50pc full I think with localised hosepipe bans.
    32% according to Yorkshire Water:

    https://www.yorkshirewater.com/about-us/open-data/watsit-report/

    56% refers to the amount of precipitation compared to the long term average.

    Edit - I love the punning title there. A 'watsit' report is just brilliant.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,297
    edited October 2022

    From the snippets I've seen two poor articles from Jonathan Freedland and Charles Moore this weekend. Freedland seems to think sovereignty is all about being able to borrow lots of money at favourable rates of interest and Moore bemoans the generic 'blob' controlling everything, not realising that if you want to usurp the establishment there isn't much point unless you can display a basic amount of competence yourself.

    I have no doubt that there'll be much lazy journalism written about this disaster and blaming establishment forces or some vast conspiracy as to why Lizzy crashed and burned.

    The truth of the matter is that you can have a legitimate argument about building a low tax economy. The problem is that instituting new fiscal policy takes time and requires an understanding of the realities of the books and what you can hope to achieve. It's incremental. Thatcher believed in low taxes, but she also understood sound money. She raised taxes in her first term, because she realised the economic situation called for it.

    The more I think about Liz and Kwasi's weird Special Fiscal Operation the more I despair at how they were actually able to get it out of the door without someone pulling some kind of intervention.

    If Truss had been sensible she would have used the political capital she had to level with the public and the Tory Party and explain - look, I want to cut everyone's taxes, I've said it plenty of times on the campaign trail, but one of the other things I'm hearing is that people desperately need support with their energy bills, and that has to be my focus right now. That support needs to be paid for. So I'm not going to be able to cut taxes right now, but once we're out of this difficult winter we'll revisit things at the budget and we'll see if there's any way we can achieve this. That she didn't do that shows why she is a poor (nay, atrocious) Prime Minister.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,291
    Taz said:
    Oh that's really smart. Destroy a load of dairy products to make a point about waste. What a bunch of useless hypocrites.

    Although I can understand why they feel plants should be prized above other life forms.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,031
    ...
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    I mentioned last week that my boiler was bust. Had a new one installed this week at a cost of 2.5k. More than I was expecting. Of course there was an additional 20% VAT on top. Now I'm told that new boilers are 90%+ efficient whereas old ones are 50-60%. That's a big difference in terms of gas usage.

    Now of course I am biased but wouldn't it have been worth the government considering a temporary removal on VAT for the installation of new boilers? Might that actually save money if they are then spending less subsidising peoples' bills? Funny how a right of centre government ends up resorting to the most statist policies.
  • rcs1000 said:

    That's the silver bullet fallacy. We don't need to do it all in one go, we need to do it little bit by little bit, month by month, and year by year.
    Also, a lot of the heat question is really an insulation question.
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518

    For the first time in a long time I believe we have a grown up in what is now the most powerful political position in the country

    I wish Hunt all the best not just for the conservative party but for the country

    Truss is over, it is just the question of when but it won't be long

    But he is in favour of fox hunting don't forget.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    We've had a fair bit of rain the last few weeks but I notice the Taff is still fairly low. Checking the forecast we appear to have 2 weeks non-stop rain on the way! Great time for my annual leave.
  • Scott_xP said:

    ...

    I thought a Doom Loop was that necklace she wears.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,691

    You telling us It’s unknowable wasn’t the impression I got when you reduced it from £200bn to £20bn to spark my reply. 🙂

    We know enough overall price can’t come down that much. Because the bit you seem to be avoiding is commodity price drop is to some extent offset by borrowing cost increase - goes back to the unknowable being very guessable in that the borrowing cost won’t be based on “maybe the commodity price drops and stays at x price”, who lends money on that basis?

    You accept the part of the equation, political and economic, it is not necessary to provide help in this way, there other options such as sliding scale to target help where needed, not wasted where not needed, and virtually pays for itself?
    I believe most UK government borrowing is fixed rate. So the increase only kicks in as new debt is issued.

    Interesting the current (March) forecast it from debt interest this year to be c £83bn but to *fall* to £47bn next year… a cut in public spending baked in
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,031
    The Liz Truss premiership is over. She needs to realise it, and so does her party > Mail Plus > https://www.mailplus.co.uk/edition/comment/229634/liz-truss-doesnt-get-it.-if-she-did-she-would-no-longer-be-sitting-in-downing-street
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,291

    I believe most UK government borrowing is fixed rate. So the increase only kicks in as new debt is issued.

    Interesting the current (March) forecast it from debt interest this year to be c £83bn but to *fall* to £47bn next year… a cut in public spending baked in
    How? Are they assuming a default?
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,561


    The more I think about Liz and Kwasi's weird Special Fiscal Operation the more I despair at how they were actually able to get it out of the door without someone pulling some kind of intervention.

    From the outside it looks like everyone who tried to intervene was sacked for their troubles.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,691
    IanB2 said:

    He was at Cambridge with Richard Burgon, I believe, who was in the next door college?
    Do people now understand why so many Cambridge politicians have been passed over before now?
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,691

    Quite..

    NHS: “Overuse of antibiotics means they're becoming less effective and has led to emergence of superbugs"

    Mayo Clinic: “MRSA [which killed 100k in 2019] is the result of decades of often unnecessary antibiotic use”

    British government: let’s make it easier to overuse antibiotics


    https://twitter.com/jburnmurdoch/status/1581296766787325952

    Pharmacists are trained medical professionals. They are not going to just hand these out like candy
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    alex_ said:

    But he is in favour of fox hunting don't forget.
    Good. So am I.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    I see it is going well in here tonight...
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,905
    ydoethur said:

    32% according to Yorkshire Water:

    https://www.yorkshirewater.com/about-us/open-data/watsit-report/

    56% refers to the amount of precipitation compared to the long term average.
    Oddly enough precipitation hasn't vastly lower than normal here - I'm about 12% (45mm) low - but the problem is that evaporation has been very high.

    The two combined mean we've actually had a net loss this year.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,291

    Do people now understand why so many Cambridge politicians have been passed over before now?
    Which would be a valid argument if the Oxford ones who get in weren't just as useless.
  • ihuntihunt Posts: 146

    The Tory Party won't allow that because Truss would have to run the next election on obtaining a mandate for... something.

    We have seen what happens when Liz Truss tries to implement what she wants and it's not good. They have zero chance of persuading the electorate to listen to Liz. And they can hardly say "well she won't be the leader really, nice Mr. Hunt will sort it all out when she goes off the deep end, don't worry."

    So one way or the other the Tories will be going into the next GE with a new leader. The question then comes are they doing it nearer the GE or are they doing it now. For what it's worth, I see no reason to delay matters given the damage Truss can do to their poll ratings every time she opens her mouth.
    Also assumption of a mild recession is questionable given how heavily geared uk economy is to house prices. High interest rates and falling house prices will feed right through to the local plasterer in rotherham. Demand for tradesmen will fall off a cliff
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,396
    Oh God, Hancock is on LK show tomorrow.

    I guess he is plugging a book or something?

  • rcs1000 said:

    He may be a contributory factor, but to make him solely responsible for BJs lies and Truss's failings is absurd.
    Indeed, it's not clear whether Johnson would have survived even if Rishi had not resigned. And he could not have known that Truss would win the leadership contest. Anyone who thinks they knew for sure that Truss would win is probably lying, because for a while it looked like the MPs wouldn't even let her into the final round.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,561
    edited October 2022

    I mentioned last week that my boiler was bust. Had a new one installed this week at a cost of 2.5k. More than I was expecting. Of course there was an additional 20% VAT on top. Now I'm told that new boilers are 90%+ efficient whereas old ones are 50-60%. That's a big difference in terms of gas usage.

    Now of course I am biased but wouldn't it have been worth the government considering a temporary removal on VAT for the installation of new boilers? Might that actually save money if they are then spending less subsidising peoples' bills? Funny how a right of centre government ends up resorting to the most statist policies.

    NB. They’re only 90+% efficient if you run the radiators at a low enough temperature so that the return flow to the boiler is cold enough to trigger the condensation process in the boiler outflow (hence, condensing boilers...).

    The return flow needs to be < 54℃ for this process to work, with progressively greater gains with lower temps.

    Many boiler installers just whack the flow temp up to 80℃ and leave it there so that they don’t get call-backs from their customers because “the radiators don’t feel very hot”. It’s understandable to an extent: educating customers is not always easy & people want the familiar, which in this case is to be able to walk into a cold house, whack the heating on & have the radiators start blasting out heat ASAP. (I’ve even heard of one bunch of heat pump installers doing this to the flow from their heat pump installations: Madness!)

    But the consequence is that all these expensive new boiler installations are running at 70% efficiency instead of 90+%.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067

    Oh God, Hancock is on LK show tomorrow.

    I guess he is plugging a book or something?

    Enter Free World Cup ticket draw if you subscribe to the Hancock App.

    To enter you just need to answer one simple question “If Matt Hancock was PM what economic policy would win your vote?”
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Good. So am I.
    But BigG definitely isn't. During the Johnson/Hunt leadership contest it was a deal breaker for his vote.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898
    pancakes said:

    Indeed, it's not clear whether Johnson would have survived even if Rishi had not resigned. And he could not have known that Truss would win the leadership contest. Anyone who thinks they knew for sure that Truss would win is probably lying, because for a while it looked like the MPs wouldn't even let her into the final round.
    There was a belief her being stranded in Indonesia would be a fatal impediment.
  • I want to know what happened to David Cameron's 24/7 NHS.

    I think it got misinterpreted as 7 hours a day, 24 days a month......
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    ydoethur said:

    How? Are they assuming a default?
    I assume it's at least in part due to the likely drop in RPI inflation and so lower payments on Linkers.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,831
    edited October 2022

    I can seen the Tory bigwigs scrapping the membership vote sooner or later. If it means a dwindling membership gifting the Left by selecting increasingly mad and unelectable leaders then what really is the point?
    Then the Tory membership will start deselecting Tory MPs until they get ones who will give them a voice.

    At the end of the day the voluntary party is as much a part of the party as the parliamentary party.

    If Labour MPs had tried to take the membership vote away during the Corbyn era then you can guarantee Labour members would have started to deselect Labour MPs too.

    Trying to ignore what the Tory core vote wants will also only boost Farage.

    Plus 'unelectable' leaders can sometimes win. People thought Thatcher unelectable in 1975. Even Corbyn got a hung parliament in 2017
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,297
    dixiedean said:

    There was a belief her being stranded in Indonesia would be a fatal impediment.
    If only.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,724
    ydoethur said:

    Which would be a valid argument if the Oxford ones who get in weren't just as useless.
    "as useless"?
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Good. So am I.
    With or without dogs?
  • DJ41DJ41 Posts: 792
    rcs1000 said:

    He may be a contributory factor, but to make him solely responsible for BJs lies and Truss's failings is absurd.
    Yes, agreed on both points - the before and after - and in addition even after Sunak resigned that didn't mean that a third of the rest of the government had to resign or indeed do anything at all other than gossip about who Johnson might replace him with.

    Besides, who else might Hunt appoint as ChEx? If it's Esther McVey he'd just be taking the piss.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,133
    HYUFD said:

    There is zero chance Tory members will elect Hunt as Leader of the Opposition. At present if Truss and Hunt lead the Tories to heavy defeat, the membership will likely conclude she was not rightwing enough and elect Braverman as Leader of the Opposition to PM Starmer's government.

    At best Hunt can be Mandelson to Truss' Brown and steady the ship
    I fear you are right in your analysis of Conservative members, but Braverman would be an absolute disaster for your party, much as Corbyn was and remains a disaster for Labour.

    After Corbyn there are still left leaning voters who don't trust the Party not to jettison Starmer and replace with Burgon or Pidcock, or some other moon howler.

    Should Braverman ever become Leader her spectral legacy would be, one of we Centists can't vote for a one nation feudal Tory Party because they might replace a sensible leader with Mark Francois, or Phillip Davies.

    The die would be cast, as it is for Labour. To be on the safe side, perhaps we should all vote LibDem.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507

    Enter Free World Cup ticket draw if you subscribe to the Hancock App.

    To enter you just need to answer one simple question “If Matt Hancock was PM what economic policy would win your vote?”
    I'm watching This England atm. Whoever is playing Matt Hancock is so convincing.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898

    Enter Free World Cup ticket draw if you subscribe to the Hancock App.

    To enter you just need to answer one simple question “If Matt Hancock was PM what economic policy would win your vote?”
    A new PM?
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    With or without dogs?
    Is this a trick question?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,133

    I see it is going well in here tonight...

    Mr Hunt seems to have turned Conservative Party fortunes around, and these winning ways will be reflected in the polls over the next week or two.

    Long live President Truss!
  • HYUFD said:

    Then the Tory membership will start deselecting Tory MPs until they get ones who will give them a voice.

    At the end of the day the voluntary party is as much a part of the party as the parliamentary party.

    If Labour MPs had tried to take the membership vote away during the Corbyn era then you can guarantee Labour members would have started to deselect Labour MPs too.

    Trying to ignore what the Tory core vote wants will also only boost Farage
    You are seeking the destruction of the conservative party, while many of us are fighting against the likes of yourself, the ERG, and the appalling Farage to re- establish an electable centre ground conservative party

    It is only a matter of time until you and your like are marginalised, just as the Corbyn faction have been

    Hunt is the first positive for the party in months as is evident in the majority of posts on here
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695
    rcs1000 said:

    He may be a contributory factor, but to make him solely responsible for BJs lies and Truss's failings is absurd.
    I didn't say he was solely responsible, but he was a destabilising influence and put his personal ambition before the interests of the country and the party.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695
    DJ41 said:

    Yes, agreed on both points - the before and after - and in addition even after Sunak resigned that didn't mean that a third of the rest of the government had to resign or indeed do anything at all other than gossip about who Johnson might replace him with.

    Besides, who else might Hunt appoint as ChEx? If it's Esther McVey he'd just be taking the piss.
    Sajid Javid or even Theresa May.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,195
    alex_ said:

    But BigG definitely isn't. During the Johnson/Hunt leadership contest it was a deal breaker for his vote.
    Fox hunting is a long way outside the Chncellors remit though
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,133

    I didn't say he was solely responsible, but he was a destabilising influence and put his personal ambition before the interests of the country and the party.
    Are you confusing Mr Sunak with Mr Johnson?
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    ydoethur said:

    Which would be a valid argument if the Oxford ones who get in weren't just as useless.
    The real apex of entitled and ignorant cretinism in the education system is neither Oxford nor Cambridge, but Eton College. The first action of an incoming Labour Government should be to whistle up a squadron of RAF Typhoons armed with precision guided bombs and reduce the whole place to a pile of smouldering rubble.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192

    Mr Hunt seems to have turned Conservative Party fortunes around, and these winning ways will be reflected in the polls over the next week or two.

    Long live President Truss!
    :D

    It is almost as if the Leave / ERG brigade do not like anyone with talent or ability.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,092
    HYUFD said:

    If Labour MPs had tried to take the membership vote away during the Corbyn era then you can guarantee Labour members would have started to deselect Labour MPs too.

    I'm not sure this is the zinger you think it is...
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    I see, despite being an international laughing stock, we continue to live rent free in the Kremlin’s head:

    Update: TASS: Lukashenko: A solution to the conflict in Ukraine is possible within a week and depends on the position of the United States and Britain.

    https://twitter.com/EndGameWW3/status/1581324308215103488
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    edited October 2022

    Oh God, Hancock is on LK show tomorrow.

    I guess he is plugging a book or something?

    Another absolutely worthless cretin imposed on us by the Tories.

    Apparently Kate Bingham is utterly damning about him in her book.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Pulpstar said:

    Fox hunting is a long way outside the Chncellors remit though
    Get with the program, Hunt is PMIABN.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Is this a trick question?
    No. Fox hunting is still legal isn't it? As long as you don't use dogs. I was against the ban. But there are deer living near us and the local oiks try hunting them with their pitbull-type dogs. And I hate that.

    So I decided I shouldn't support toffs hunting foxes with dogs either.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    Pulpstar said:

    Fox hunting is a long way outside the Chncellors remit though
    I somehow doubt that Jeremy Hunt is much interested in mucking about with foxhunting right now. Though FWIW I think that the new Chancellor's remit extends to anything he says it does.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898
    Mail in Sunday reporting KK was opposed to reducing the 45p rate. Overruled by Truss.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    pigeon said:

    The real apex of entitled and ignorant cretinism in the education system is neither Oxford nor Cambridge, but Eton College. The first action of an incoming Labour Government should be to whistle up a squadron of RAF Typhoons armed with precision guided bombs and reduce the whole place to a pile of smouldering rubble.
    Revoke its charitable status and start taxing it. That will hurt more than the Typhoons...
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    dixiedean said:

    Mail in Sunday reporting KK was opposed to reducing the 45p rate. Overruled by Truss.

    And KK wanted to reverse the Corporation tax change - opposed by Truss….
  • ihuntihunt Posts: 146
    pigeon said:

    The real apex of entitled and ignorant cretinism in the education system is neither Oxford nor Cambridge, but Eton College. The first action of an incoming Labour Government should be to whistle up a squadron of RAF Typhoons armed with precision guided bombs and reduce the whole place to a pile of smouldering rubble.
    Questions should be asked though as to why every pm since 1945 with a degree went to oxford with the exception of gordon brown. Clearly i imagine its something to do with contacts as oxford graduates arent that much better
  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    Quite possible we’ll see an interesting divergence in the polls in the coming week(s)

    Truss rating remains abysmal, but Tory VI recovers somewhat….

    I expect it’ll fall again fairly soon after the tax rises/spending cuts are officially revealed, though.

    Interesting times.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    I don't like reading things in the Mail even if the MoS is the acceptable face, but if this story is true then it's very bad for Truss:

    https://www.mailplus.co.uk/edition/news/politics/229979/truss-bounced-kwasi-into-tax-cut

  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    edited October 2022

    I believe most UK government borrowing is fixed rate. So the increase only kicks in as new debt is issued.

    Interesting the current (March) forecast it from debt interest this year to be c £83bn but to *fall* to £47bn next year… a cut in public spending baked in
    If you listened to what the mini budget said - the Energy Price Freeze (a quarter of a trillion pounds) will be paid for by new borrowing, no new taxes no new cuts.

    If you listed to what Liz Truss said Wednesday, public spending overall total will not show any cuts under her, simply because the quarter of a trillion Energy Price Freeze is being added to the public spending total.

    What I am arguing in this thread, we don’t have to fund a quarter of a trillion pound scheme when other realistic options are available better targeted and virtually paying for themselves, I’m also arguing against those saying commodity price coming down proves the end bill will definitely be cheaper, because even with cuts even with more tax, this scheme will always need a huge amount of new borrowing at the new higher borrowing rates.

    Correct me where wrong.

    But I am now adding a third facet to my argument - anyone who claims Kwarteng and Truss mini budget crashed the markets I am calling an idiot peddling a myth. And I can prove it. That spiking gilt market graph they use over and over in media, expand it to see the previous 12 months and see the trajectory is up up up long before Truss got anywhere near number 10 - my argument is the budget exacerbated an already underlying problem.

    Anyone want to own the claim if the mini budget is reversed, annulled, reset, the trajectory on the borrowings chart graph would be down when it hasn’t been all year?
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    dixiedean said:

    Mail in Sunday reporting KK was opposed to reducing the 45p rate. Overruled by Truss.

    Sorry didn't see you had already mentioned this story.

    Very bad for Truss.

    https://www.mailplus.co.uk/edition/news/politics/229979/truss-bounced-kwasi-into-tax-cut
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    No. Fox hunting is still legal isn't it? As long as you don't use dogs. I was against the ban. But there are deer living near us and the local oiks try hunting them with their pitbull-type dogs. And I hate that.

    So I decided I shouldn't support toffs hunting foxes with dogs either.
    Well, in non American English hunting means, with dogs. Using rifles is called shooting. It kills 10x the foxes hunting ever did, with the availability of military grade night sight equipment, and because foxes have never learned to lick their wounds those which are shot but not killed die very slowly and horribly of gangrene. And foxhunting unlike say pheasant shooting was never the preserve of rich toffs.

    Agree about the pitbull types though.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    ihunt said:

    Questions should be asked though as to why every pm since 1945 with a degree went to oxford with the exception of gordon brown. Clearly i imagine its something to do with contacts as oxford graduates arent that much better
    Memo: add the Oxford Union to the list of bombing targets.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    Revoke its charitable status and start taxing it. That will hurt more than the Typhoons...
    That's reasonable. There's no reason why the private schooling sector should benefit from charitable tax breaks. It contributes nothing of value to wider society.
  • Mr Hunt seems to have turned Conservative Party fortunes around, and these winning ways will be reflected in the polls over the next week or two.

    Long live President Truss!
    I do not think a poll lead is remotely likely but it is good to have a grown up as the most important politician in the conservative party
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,386
    OT. Just listened to Lisa Nandy being interviewed in depth by Nick Robinson. I have to say she's a very impressive person and politician and not at all belonging in the box I'd put her in with Rayner and Long Bailey. An object lesson in not judging someone by the number of letters they drop. On the basis of that interview I reckon she'd make a formidable leader.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,067
    ping said:

    Quite possible we’ll see an interesting divergence in the polls in the coming week(s)

    Truss rating remains abysmal, but Tory VI recovers somewhat….

    I expect it’ll fall again fairly soon after the tax rises/spending cuts are officially revealed, though.

    Interesting times.

    We might get an Opinium tonight, to see if the Tory recovery in most recent polls is reflected in that one, I predict an especially big leap for the Tories if the previous lowness was caused by a huge don’t know pool now coming back home to the Tories the Opinium methodology has been splashing about in over recent days.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,999
    edited October 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    Fox hunting is a long way outside the Chncellors remit though
    I am implacably opposed to fox hunting but I really do not see this as an issue at this time
This discussion has been closed.