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Sunak remains favourite to succeed Truss as PM – politicalbetting.com

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  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,392
    The biggest take away from today was Penny letting slip how much she enjoys looking at herself in the mirror.
  • Seattle Times ($) - WA Legislature races roil Whatcom swing district where Trump rallied

    . . . . With three competitive races and a unique electorate spread across urban, suburban and rural areas, the 42nd Legislative District will put each party’s broader arguments to the test. Few other districts feature true toss-ups.

    “The 42nd is probably the purplest district in the whole state,” said Andrew Reding, who chairs the Whatcom County Democrats.

    The contests themselves were made to order for 2022. They pit a social worker against a police officer. A staffer for the governor against a businessman who shared a meme likening COVID policies to Nazi persecution. And an economics professor against a recent graduate who worked for President Donald Trump.

    Trump rallied in the district, in Lynden, during his 2016 presidential campaign, when Republicans occupied the 42nd’s state Senate seat and both of its state House seats. But Democrats subsequently won the House seats and now have their sights set on the Senate seat, which is held by a 22-year-old appointed after the longtime incumbent suddenly died. . . .

    The last time the seat was contested, the Republican won by 46 votes. This year, Democratic Rep. Sharon Shewmake has vacated her House seat to challenge Sen. Simon Sefzik in a showdown that’s attracted more than $1 million in campaign donations, plus massive outside spending.

    In districts throughout the state, Republicans are raging about high prices and blaming Democrats for crime. Many GOP candidates sputtered in August’s primary, however, with Democrats ringing alarms over the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down abortion rights. Such rights are still shielded by Washington law, Republicans note. But there are no guarantees, depending on this and other elections, Democrats counter.

    Those topics are particularly hot in the 42nd, judging by the roads that bristle with campaign signs between quite-red Lynden’s dairy farms and deep-blue Bellingham’s vegan restaurants. Floods are a local concern with no easy answers, because the swollen Nooksack River inundated towns like Everson last winter. So is a housing crunch that’s starting to resemble pricey Seattle’s. . . .

    The 42nd appears to be trending blue, due to Puget Sound transplants and suburban growth in places like Ferndale. It includes about half of populous Bellingham. Nothing is certain, however. Democratic candidates captured 47% to 49% in each primary race, so they must turn out more voters this fall. . . .

    SSI - This legislative district is one of the most socio-economically diverse in the great State of WA. AND among the most politically polarized in the nation, let alone the Evergreen State. For example, in 2020, support for Biden/Harris ranged from 12% in rural Lynden (dairy country hard on the Canadian border) to 86% in downtown Bellingham.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 24,583
    glw said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    The Tories have completely screwed up and you are talking about a hypothetical Labour government. Wake up old chap. The Tories broke the country on their watch. Not Labour. The Conservatives. You can blame Corbyn for many things, but this one, today, is on the blues and no-one will forget it.

    Of course it's hypothetical, because thank God we didn't have Corbyn in charge. And yes Truss and the Tories own the current debacle. I'm not excusing that at all. But there are good reason to vote Tory even if it is a negative don't let Labour back in reason.

    The trouble with Labour is it doesn't matter how good Starmer is, who I personally like quite a lot, the party is full of people who fundamentally had no problem putting Corbyn in charge. That is as unpalatable to me as it would be voting for a hypothetical good GOP candidate knowing that everyone around him was wearing a stupid red cap a year or so earlier.
    :D:D

    Whereas in reality, the Conservatives are full of people who fundamentally had no problem putting Truss in charge.


    Truss is a terrible PM. Corbyn would be worse. It's really not complicated.
    It is true Corbyn would have been a disastrous Prime Minister, although I suspect even he might have soldiered on into his third month of chaos without too much trouble.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,004
    This chap has a whole Tweet history of trying to explain what has caused various explosions by magnetic anomalies. He thinks that the Russian bomber that crashed into a building today was taken out by a Russian air defence system.

    "Combat plane lost control and fell on a residential building in Russian #Yeysk city. The plane carried ammunition." Upon examining the magnetic anomaly in the graph below, I happened to noticed a suspicious missile signature (circled). Now I know why the pilot "lost control".
    https://twitter.com/rrichcord/status/1582100799240687616
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,050
    ihunt said:

    been another big rally in us bond yields this evening which will likely feed through to the uk gilts market tomorrow

    Yes, notably foreign markets were up as much or more as the FTSE.
  • glw said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    The Tories have completely screwed up and you are talking about a hypothetical Labour government. Wake up old chap. The Tories broke the country on their watch. Not Labour. The Conservatives. You can blame Corbyn for many things, but this one, today, is on the blues and no-one will forget it.

    Of course it's hypothetical, because thank God we didn't have Corbyn in charge. And yes Truss and the Tories own the current debacle. I'm not excusing that at all. But there are good reason to vote Tory even if it is a negative don't let Labour back in reason.

    The trouble with Labour is it doesn't matter how good Starmer is, who I personally like quite a lot, the party is full of people who fundamentally had no problem putting Corbyn in charge. That is as unpalatable to me as it would be voting for a hypothetical good GOP candidate knowing that everyone around him was wearing a stupid red cap a year or so earlier.
    :D:D

    Whereas in reality, the Conservatives are full of people who fundamentally had no problem putting Truss in charge.


    Truss is a terrible PM. Corbyn would be worse. It's really not complicated.
    He would have been worse than Johnson - he was that bad. But Truss has forced everyone to recalibrate the measurements of incompetence
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Foxy said:

    Jonathan said:

    On topic. No. Penny Mourdant would be yet another big mistake?

    Firstly, What does Penny believe in?

    Penny had so much wind in her sails going into the leadership contest, but she sank very early on once the whistle started the hustings, not just because she lacks charisma and presentation skills, but because she was a policy vacuum whilst those around her came for a proper fight over the soul of the party. Can you recall her launch event, in the debates what were her positions on issues defining and dividing the Conservative Party today, the main points of her sales pitch?

    Truss won, because she at least had a platform, and the (party) electorate like it. Planning laws and other structural rigidities keep Britain poorer than it should be, our merchant banks made us great once and the City can again, our advantage lies in professional services, ease of doing business and a capital city on which all the world converges.

    For example, does Penny Mourdant believe in levelling up, or does she see it is just pretend the ancient mismatch in scale and wealth between London and the secondary cities their regions, can ever be levelled?

    Secondly, todays smug and irritating performance from Penny Mourdant, made up from just party political bullshit and spin, will wear thin very quickly if that’s her usual modus operandi from the very top of a governing party. From her Willy Speech, her bizarre Speech in the US, through the leadership contest to today, Penny has never shown Primeministerial vision or gravitas.

    The prospect of Penny as PM won’t frighten the opposition one bit. But more importantly, can she steer the Tory party out of its factional infighting and unite them around an ethos?

    Imo the answer is a clear and rather obvious no.

    The prospect of Penny as PM will frighten the opposition far more than Truss staying in place.....
    Truss is pretty scary. Imagine having to clean up two years of her mess rather than just a month. Penny is not remotely scary. Two years of public relations veneer can not cover up the abyss at the heart of the Conservatives.
    There is to an abyss at the heart of Starmer's Labour.

    Labour definitely has work to do. No doubt about it, but I would take Starmers position over Truss’ successor any day of the week now. And that includes the Tory ‘majority’.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 7,146
    fox327 said:

    It is easy to blame Tory members for the collapse. However, Tory MPs presented them with two weak candidates in the final two. Clearly Truss was a very weak candidate. The other candidate, Sunak, could not beat her which suggests that he too was a weak candidate.

    Tory MPs also elimated Hunt in the first round of the contest, a strong candidate for the job. Hence, I think that the MPs should take a substantial part of the blame. It is said that plane crashes rarely happen due to a single cause, but due to a combination of several factors. The same thing has happened here. The candidates, the MPs, the party membership, the outgoing PM, and the current political situation (Brexit, COVID, Ukraine, 12 years in power) all contributed to this disaster.

    The solution to the candidates, the MPs, the party membership, the outgoing PM and some of the current political situation is, however, the same. Don’t vote Conservative!
  • glwglw Posts: 9,535

    I see we are back to the PB Tories luxuriating in their nostalgic fantasies about a bloke that is no longer a Labour MP.

    Funny old world.

    It's not nostalgia, it's genuinely interesting that Labour supporters won't even entertain the hypothetical quesion of what a Corbyn victory would have been like. After all they were cheering him on three years ago.

    The last 8 months of the Ukraine war have made me think a Corybn premiership would have been calamitous. It's the one thing I'll give Johnson some real credit for. Johnson is a lazy, dishonest idiot, but his instincts on the biggest issues were generally right.

    It would be a lot easier to believe Labour has changed if they could do some soul searching about such things, that they don't or won't makes me think the change is only skin deep. On here you might not see many "out" Corbyn supporters, but they still seem to be there in large numbers.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,004
    I take this as Wallace being out the running. Very notable that he doesn't say he wants Truss to remain! Personally think he'll become NATO SG at some point in the future.

    NEW: Ben Wallace says he wants to remain as Defence Secretary

    He told @thetimes: “I want to be the secretary of state for defence until I finish. I love the job I do and we have more to do. I want the prime minister to be the prime minister and I want to do this job.”

    https://twitter.com/darrenmccaffrey/status/1582104016481562624
  • glwglw Posts: 9,535

    It is true Corbyn would have been a disastrous Prime Minister, although I suspect even he might have soldiered on into his third month of chaos without too much trouble.

    He would have been worse than Johnson - he was that bad. But Truss has forced everyone to recalibrate the measurements of incompetence

    I'm really not defending Truss, she was my last choice of the lot. All I'm saying is that not very long ago the Labour Party also wanted some totally unsuitable to lead the country, and I'm not convinced they have really changed as much as they need to.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,392
    ihunt said:

    there is now complete poison in the Tory bloodstream....the attacks on each other will be vicious from now on

    At least none of them will be falling out of windows
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 2,973
    Even my grandparents of 84 years old saw what a disaster Truss would be. WHY THE HELL DIDNT TORY MPS OR MEMBERS NOTICE THIS OBVIOUS FACT
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 12,415

    stodge said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    I have laid him. He is conspicuously awol today (but then people said last time round, Truss had ruled herself out by being in the far East when it all kicked off). And truly stellar performances drom PM and JH this afternoon can't have helped him.

    "truly stellar" ? - you're easily pleased.
    No. Some posters, Z, MexiPete for example, are just mischief makers, disrupters, probably in the pay of the management like what happened on Big Brother - some other posters (like us) try to offer some thoughtful analysis, explain the why behind the what and how policy battles fit into the larger political context, that mostly boils down to money and control.
    Your analysis flip flops from Johnson to Corbyn and back again. Mind you for a Centre Left Remainer I was taken by the sultry Mordaunt earlier. Ding dong!
    You realise growth for the UK has been downgraded since Hunt shredded the mini budget? public spending should also be honestly financed too. But payroll taxes that milks worker to spare asset owners, and further borrowing is not that honest finance.
    Of course Capital needs to be available to power the ideas and ambition available to create growth, but the Growth Budget was only so very glibly, growth comes from investment, to kickstart growth, zoning reform, better ways to upskill workers (recognising it’s a long haul) and revisit the deals with the EU would all be part of my own growth budget.

    I understand people taken by fresh faces and penny mordant, but I’m trying to explain the inherent vice of Penny mordant - the need to fill policy vacuum with strong policy. But me sharing and explaining what I actually believe on this blog is just a waste a time isn’t it? looking at your reply above, even ruder and wrongheaded than Bens this morning, like when have I ever supported Johnson or Corbyn? 🤷‍♀️

  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,005
    Foxy said:

    ihunt said:

    been another big rally in us bond yields this evening which will likely feed through to the uk gilts market tomorrow

    Yes, notably foreign markets were up as much or more as the FTSE.
    European gas prices down again.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,226
    Hunt’s political delivery was v impressive I thought. Polite, clear, calm, confident. If he really is about to unleash austerity in the face of a big recession (ala Sunak’s promises) then the Tories are proper fecked. If he’s smart then he’ll just pretend that’s what he’s going to do to calm the horses, while running a a counter cyclical deficit.

    He’d be an able PM but a dangerous one in that it would likely mean the return of Sunak as Chancellor, who was pretty useless at it before. I’d still rather Hunt stays where he is, someone else takes “the chairperson” job and Sunak is shunted off to be Consul to Bermuda or something.
  • Jonathan said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    Nobody cares. Why not have a go at dealing with reality rather than made up questions?

    No. Go on tell me what you think Corbyn would have been like from 2019 to 2022. I think you know damn well he'd have been a disaster.
    Nobody cares. I would rather think about how we can undo the current mess. Truss and Boris were actual disasters.
    Yes. Even in politics, actual undeniable disasters are WAY more than significant credible theoretical disasters.

    From the day that Truss & Kwarteng (remember him) tanked the Pound, Tory incantations of Corbyn! Corbyn! Corbyn! became worthless in appealing to anyone beyond paid-up Tory members.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 24,583
    glw said:

    It is true Corbyn would have been a disastrous Prime Minister, although I suspect even he might have soldiered on into his third month of chaos without too much trouble.

    He would have been worse than Johnson - he was that bad. But Truss has forced everyone to recalibrate the measurements of incompetence

    I'm really not defending Truss, she was my last choice of the lot. All I'm saying is that not very long ago the Labour Party also wanted some totally unsuitable to lead the country, and I'm not convinced they have really changed as much as they need to.
    It's all whataboutery. Corbyn didn't become PM so we shall never know how adequate or dire his premiership would have panned out. Truss did and it is teetering on the brink after 90 days which speaks for itself.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,005
    AlistairM said:

    I take this as Wallace being out the running. Very notable that he doesn't say he wants Truss to remain! Personally think he'll become NATO SG at some point in the future.

    NEW: Ben Wallace says he wants to remain as Defence Secretary

    He told @thetimes: “I want to be the secretary of state for defence until I finish. I love the job I do and we have more to do. I want the prime minister to be the prime minister and I want to do this job.”

    https://twitter.com/darrenmccaffrey/status/1582104016481562624

    Perhaps a deal to replace him with Tugendhat if the Nato position comes up. Worth remembering that Hunt isn't some kind of superman. We need a government of all the talents, not Hunt plus a bunch of Trussafarians.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038
    DougSeal said:

    AlistairM said:

    Good read about the threat to Ukraine from Belarus. TL;DR - There will be no attack from Belarus.

    https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1582044513274822656.html

    No. @Leon told us there would be. This latter day prophet is never ever wrong. Which is why I know Truss is playing the long game.
    I replied to @Leon that it was most likely a ruse to try and distract from Kherson disaster.

  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,727
    NEW: Tory plotters descend into infighting

    — Rishi Sunak was contacted in recent days by a senior MP on behalf of Penny Mordaunt, making a “formal offer” of a joint ticket

    — Sunak said no, per person in the know

    — Mordaunt denies authorising approach

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-17/truss-watches-uk-vision-dismantled-as-rivals-fight-for-her-job
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 4,746
    glw said:

    I see we are back to the PB Tories luxuriating in their nostalgic fantasies about a bloke that is no longer a Labour MP.

    Funny old world.

    It's not nostalgia, it's genuinely interesting that Labour supporters won't even entertain the hypothetical quesion of what a Corbyn victory would have been like. After all they were cheering him on three years ago.

    The last 8 months of the Ukraine war have made me think a Corybn premiership would have been calamitous. It's the one thing I'll give Johnson some real credit for. Johnson is a lazy, dishonest idiot, but his instincts on the biggest issues were generally right.

    It would be a lot easier to believe Labour has changed if they could do some soul searching about such things, that they don't or won't makes me think the change is only skin deep. On here you might not see many "out" Corbyn supporters, but they still seem to be there in large numbers.
    Yes this is what I always tell myself about Johnson, the alternative was Corbyn.
    I don't know what Corbyn would have done about Ukraine if he was PM though. A lot of people on the left say that Ukraine should be armed to defend itself. But this is basically what we have actually done.
    I guess Corbyns position would be more like that of France.

    I would imagine that Corbyn would be more disruptive over strategic issues relating to defence, like NATO expansion, trident etc.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    edited October 2022
    glw said:

    I see we are back to the PB Tories luxuriating in their nostalgic fantasies about a bloke that is no longer a Labour MP.

    Funny old world.

    It's not nostalgia, it's genuinely interesting that Labour supporters won't even entertain the hypothetical quesion of what a Corbyn victory would have been like. After all they were cheering him on three years ago.

    The last 8 months of the Ukraine war have made me think a Corybn premiership would have been calamitous. It's the one thing I'll give Johnson some real credit for. Johnson is a lazy, dishonest idiot, but his instincts on the biggest issues were generally right.

    It would be a lot easier to believe Labour has changed if they could do some soul searching about such things, that they don't or won't makes me think the change is only skin deep. On here you might not see many "out" Corbyn supporters, but they still seem to be there in large numbers.
    Jeremy Corbyn was elected Labour leader. I voted against that (twice). But as Labour leader he was entitled to put his manifesto to the country. He did that twice and lost twice despite 10M people voting for it. The world has moved on.

    The fact that so many people wanted something different deserves analysis and more respect than it gets, but right now I think we all have bigger problems to solve caused by the Tory debacle. I am more worried about the mess the country is in today. I genuinely don’t care about what ifs.

    In our reality, the country was damaged by Truss not Corbyn.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,226
    glw said:

    I see we are back to the PB Tories luxuriating in their nostalgic fantasies about a bloke that is no longer a Labour MP.

    Funny old world.

    It's not nostalgia, it's genuinely interesting that Labour supporters won't even entertain the hypothetical quesion of what a Corbyn victory would have been like. After all they were cheering him on three years ago.

    The last 8 months of the Ukraine war have made me think a Corybn premiership would have been calamitous. It's the one thing I'll give Johnson some real credit for. Johnson is a lazy, dishonest idiot, but his instincts on the biggest issues were generally right.

    It would be a lot easier to believe Labour has changed if they could do some soul searching about such things, that they don't or won't makes me think the change is only skin deep. On here you might not see many "out" Corbyn supporters, but they still seem to be there in large numbers.
    I don’t think we have to try too hard. Something about a Jewish plot to destabilise Europe, NATO provoking a war to sell weapons, and him needing better proof that Russia were the ones who bombed Mariupol.

  • Even my grandparents of 84 years old saw what a disaster Truss would be. WHY THE HELL DIDNT TORY MPS OR MEMBERS NOTICE THIS OBVIOUS FACT

    Because Gramps and Grannie may be old, but they ain't stupid.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,004
    I hope he asked her what was so important that she had on at 3.30pm today.

    Coming up on #bbcnewsten @BBCOne: I’ve interviewed the Prime Minister tonight
    https://twitter.com/ChrisMasonBBC/status/1582107636438564864
  • glwglw Posts: 9,535

    Even my grandparents of 84 years old saw what a disaster Truss would be. WHY THE HELL DIDNT TORY MPS OR MEMBERS NOTICE THIS OBVIOUS FACT

    People who join political parties are not normal. They vote for the idealogues.
  • AlistairM said:

    I take this as Wallace being out the running. Very notable that he doesn't say he wants Truss to remain! Personally think he'll become NATO SG at some point in the future.

    NEW: Ben Wallace says he wants to remain as Defence Secretary

    He told @thetimes: “I want to be the secretary of state for defence until I finish. I love the job I do and we have more to do. I want the prime minister to be the prime minister and I want to do this job.”

    https://twitter.com/darrenmccaffrey/status/1582104016481562624

    Perhaps a deal to replace him with Tugendhat if the Nato position comes up. Worth remembering that Hunt isn't some kind of superman. We need a government of all the talents, not Hunt plus a bunch of Trussafarians.
    Purge of Trussafarians is a good place to start. Starting but not stopping at the top.

    Whatever Britain needs, it's NOT a Ministry of All the Dunces.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835
    AlistairM said:

    I hope he asked her what was so important that she had on at 3.30pm today.

    Coming up on #bbcnewsten @BBCOne: I’ve interviewed the Prime Minister tonight
    https://twitter.com/ChrisMasonBBC/status/1582107636438564864

    Is there still no answer to that one?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 12,415
    AlistairM said:

    On topic. No. Penny Mourdant would be yet another big mistake?

    Firstly, What does Penny believe in?

    Penny had so much wind in her sails going into the leadership contest, but she sank very early on once the whistle started the hustings, not just because she lacks charisma and presentation skills, but because she was a policy vacuum whilst those around her came for a proper fight over the soul of the party. Can you recall her launch event, in the debates what were her positions on issues defining and dividing the Conservative Party today, the main points of her sales pitch?

    Truss won, because she at least had a platform, and the (party) electorate like it. Planning laws and other structural rigidities keep Britain poorer than it should be, our merchant banks made us great once and the City can again, our advantage lies in professional services, ease of doing business and a capital city on which all the world converges.

    For example, does Penny Mourdant believe in levelling up, or does she see it is just pretend the ancient mismatch in scale and wealth between London and the secondary cities their regions, can ever be levelled?

    Secondly, todays smug and irritating performance from Penny Mourdant, made up from just party political bullshit and spin, will wear thin very quickly if that’s her usual modus operandi from the very top of a governing party. From her Willy Speech, her bizarre Speech in the US, through the leadership contest to today, Penny has never shown Primeministerial vision or gravitas.

    The prospect of Penny as PM won’t frighten the opposition one bit. But more importantly, can she steer the Tory party out of its factional infighting and unite them around an ethos?

    Imo the answer is a clear and rather obvious no.

    The prospect of Penny as PM will frighten the opposition far more than Truss staying in place.....
    True. But does that actually mean or prove anything?

    for all the reasons I listed, Penny won’t really frighten opposition all that much.

    But you are missing the point Mark - as I posted in the last thread and in the post above, the definition here isn’t what frightens Labour going into the next election, but what ethos unites the Conservative Party and steers it in the right direction. That’s the more important measurement for the replacement of Truss. It wasn’t just craziness that drove the Truss government to attack and trash the Tory governments since 2010, including that of Boris, it was a search for answers to the UKs underlying problems, search for realistic and achievable policies, not just vacuous slogans like “levelling up”.
    The Tory party should forget about ethos for now. They have one job to do for the country - be boring but competent. For their party their job is to limit their losses at the next General Election. Best if they can get someone who can achieve both. In my view, Mordaunt as PM with Hunt as CotE gives the best balance.
    I disagree. In my view of discussing politics on a politicalbetting blog is an acknowledgement of issues, and there must be policies to solve issues, and there will be issues with the policies.

    How can there be two years now of issues, quite flipping difficult ones, policies to solve those issues, yet no contention, controversy or argument over the policies to solve the issues? The immediate future of UK politics can only be the complete opposite of your post 🤷‍♀️
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    Even my grandparents of 84 years old saw what a disaster Truss would be. WHY THE HELL DIDNT TORY MPS OR MEMBERS NOTICE THIS OBVIOUS FACT

    Why do you say "even" unless they are demented?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038
    Pollster standing to be MP:



    Chris Curtis
    @chriscurtis94
    ·
    4h
    This Tory chaos is damaging Britain and damaging my city.

    We deserve a better future and I’m willing to fight for it.

    That’s why I’m standing to be Labour’s next MP for Milton Keynes North.

    Sign up to my campaign here - https://chriscurtis.org.uk

    https://twitter.com/chriscurtis94/status/1582044974841233408
  • LeonLeon Posts: 46,206
    Just finished my horseride in the Great Sand Dunes and now having lunch under the aspens. Doesn’t look like I missed much. Any interesting by-elections?








  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,005
    rcs1000 said:

    ihunt said:

    i think this is what Farage means when he talks about a globalist coup

    Lots of chatter around in Tory circles speculating about the degree to which Sunakites with City links may have deliberately stoked the market run against Truss/Kwarteng.

    https://twitter.com/oflynnsocial/status/1582095411107414016?s=20&t=pAaHO2IC7bBRXlBMb8-fcQ

    Oh please,

    Sunak was a relatively junior guy at TCI, which deals solely in equities. The idea that he could affect the bond market for political purposes is utterly ridiculous.

    Why would the spivs prefer Sunak to Kwarteng? If anything you'd expect them to prefer Kwarteng's tax cutting for personal reasons. Ultimately they're capitalists who want to make money. Not lending at favourable rates of interest to a government that has no plan to bring down the debt burden and presumably would inflate/devalue it away.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    ihunt said:

    been another big rally in us bond yields this evening which will likely feed through to the uk gilts market tomorrow

    A rally in yields??

    You really haven't a fucking clue, do you?
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,226
    Scott_xP said:

    NEW: Tory plotters descend into infighting

    — Rishi Sunak was contacted in recent days by a senior MP on behalf of Penny Mordaunt, making a “formal offer” of a joint ticket

    — Sunak said no, per person in the know

    — Mordaunt denies authorising approach

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-17/truss-watches-uk-vision-dismantled-as-rivals-fight-for-her-job

    SPLITTERS!
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,005
    edited October 2022
    Scott_xP said:

    NEW: Tory plotters descend into infighting

    — Rishi Sunak was contacted in recent days by a senior MP on behalf of Penny Mordaunt, making a “formal offer” of a joint ticket

    — Sunak said no, per person in the know

    — Mordaunt denies authorising approach

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-17/truss-watches-uk-vision-dismantled-as-rivals-fight-for-her-job

    Infighting sounds like a bit of an exaggeration. They need to work out relatively quickly who has most MP support and then all get behind them. I hope Gove is busy sorting it out.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 12,415

    On topic. No. Penny Mourdant would be yet another big mistake?

    Firstly, What does Penny believe in?

    Penny had so much wind in her sails going into the leadership contest, but she sank very early on once the whistle started the hustings, not just because she lacks charisma and presentation skills, but because she was a policy vacuum whilst those around her came for a proper fight over the soul of the party. Can you recall her launch event, in the debates what were her positions on issues defining and dividing the Conservative Party today, the main points of her sales pitch?

    Truss won, because she at least had a platform, and the (party) electorate like it. Planning laws and other structural rigidities keep Britain poorer than it should be, our merchant banks made us great once and the City can again, our advantage lies in professional services, ease of doing business and a capital city on which all the world converges.

    For example, does Penny Mourdant believe in levelling up, or does she see it is just pretend the ancient mismatch in scale and wealth between London and the secondary cities their regions, can ever be levelled?

    Secondly, todays smug and irritating performance from Penny Mourdant, made up from just party political bullshit and spin, will wear thin very quickly if that’s her usual modus operandi from the very top of a governing party. From her Willy Speech, her bizarre Speech in the US, through the leadership contest to today, Penny has never shown Primeministerial vision or gravitas.

    The prospect of Penny as PM won’t frighten the opposition one bit. But more importantly, can she steer the Tory party out of its factional infighting and unite them around an ethos?

    Imo the answer is a clear and rather obvious no.

    The task facing the next PM is not a regular one though and Penny, without significant baggage, is the best fit for those circumstances IMHO.

    As I mentioned above, no new PM is going to be able to make any significant impact on policy before the next GE. They shouldn't (see Truss, Liz) and also won't be able to, because Number 11 under Hunt is now the most powerful it has been in years, and any firm commitments will have to be vetted and re-vetted by the Treasury first.

    Penny is policy-light? Great, she can't upset the apple cart. Let her focus on key Tory messaging and try to rebuild some level of trust and understanding with the public. She can do empathy much more than many of the other Tories at the top. She is self-deprecating which will be important when it comes to facing the public (as everyone hates the government now).

    The next government is going to have a strong Chancellor (Hunt) setting the direction and will need a chairman to sell policy and reach out to people. It doesn't need an ethos/ideology-heavy big beast as chairman, it needs someone who can communicate and connect. Penny can do that.

    In terms of policy for the next election the Tory Party would do far worse than setting up a committee to work on a manifesto. Yes that means that the leadership won't be all-powerful (though would be expected to tweak/sign off on it) but the next election is not about being radical for the Tories. It is about giving the appearance of a credible and sensible government with credible, sensible policy ideas. That's all. In 95% likelihood they'll never have to implement it, it is more mood music and window dressing to show they can run a country sensibly and win some votes back from Labour. Again, Penny can sell this. She doesn't need to come up with a full thesis, because she doesn't have time and the situation doesn't call for it. If the Tories do end up winning through some amazing fluke or Labour implosion, then they could do far worse than running a middle-of-the-road competent government for a few more years rather than pandering to their fantasies and ruining things (again, see Truss, Liz).
    I’m beginning to think, maybe I shouldn’t be wasting my time posting analysis on politicalbetting.com my posts, like above better placed on conhome then?
  • glwglw Posts: 9,535
    Jonathan said:

    The fact that so many people wanted something different deserves analysis and more respect than it gets, but right now I think we all have bigger problems to solve caused by the Tory debacle. I am more worried about the mess the country is in today. I genuinely don’t care about what ifs.

    In our reality, the country was damaged by Truss not Corbyn.

    Fair play to you for voting against Corbyn twice. You are not the problem. It's the people who did vote for him and still support him that bother me. Maybe one day I will feel Labour has sufficiently repudiated such nonsense, but I don't think they are they yet. I wish I could feel like that because I'd happily take Starmer over Truss.

    As to the issue of "what ifs" I do believe that if Corbyn was PM today Ukraine would have received no help from the UK. So I do care about "what ifs", I care about them a lot.


  • rcs1000 said:

    ihunt said:

    i think this is what Farage means when he talks about a globalist coup

    Lots of chatter around in Tory circles speculating about the degree to which Sunakites with City links may have deliberately stoked the market run against Truss/Kwarteng.

    https://twitter.com/oflynnsocial/status/1582095411107414016?s=20&t=pAaHO2IC7bBRXlBMb8-fcQ

    Oh please,

    Sunak was a relatively junior guy at TCI, which deals solely in equities. The idea that he could affect the bond market for political purposes is utterly ridiculous.

    But does fit nicely into the international right-wing populist ideological antipathy to high finance.

    As per the Ezra Pound Correspondence School in Applied Economics.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835
    167 job losses may be a clue as to why Wasps were unsustainable as a going concern.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/63244504
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    The fact that so many people wanted something different deserves analysis and more respect than it gets, but right now I think we all have bigger problems to solve caused by the Tory debacle. I am more worried about the mess the country is in today. I genuinely don’t care about what ifs.

    In our reality, the country was damaged by Truss not Corbyn.

    Fair play to you for voting against Corbyn twice. You are not the problem. It's the people who did vote for him and still support him that bother me. Maybe one day I will feel Labour has sufficiently repudiated such nonsense, but I don't think they are they yet. I wish I could feel like that because I'd happily take Starmer over Truss.

    As to the issue of "what ifs" I do believe that if Corbyn was PM today Ukraine would have received no help from the UK. So I do care about "what ifs", I care about them a lot.


    If Starmer had become PM on 1Sep rather than Truss, we would all be better off now. How’s that for a hypothetical?
  • TresTres Posts: 2,160
    edited October 2022
    ihunt said:

    i think this is what Farage means when he talks about a globalist coup

    Lots of chatter around in Tory circles speculating about the degree to which Sunakites with City links may have deliberately stoked the market run against Truss/Kwarteng.

    https://twitter.com/oflynnsocial/status/1582095411107414016?s=20&t=pAaHO2IC7bBRXlBMb8-fcQ

    yep, makes sense, the tories today are mostly randite cranks, anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    glw said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    The Tories have completely screwed up and you are talking about a hypothetical Labour government. Wake up old chap. The Tories broke the country on their watch. Not Labour. The Conservatives. You can blame Corbyn for many things, but this one, today, is on the blues and no-one will forget it.

    Of course it's hypothetical, because thank God we didn't have Corbyn in charge. And yes Truss and the Tories own the current debacle. I'm not excusing that at all. But there are good reason to vote Tory even if it is a negative don't let Labour back in reason.

    The trouble with Labour is it doesn't matter how good Starmer is, who I personally like quite a lot, the party is full of people who fundamentally had no problem putting Corbyn in charge. That is as unpalatable to me as it would be voting for a hypothetical good GOP candidate knowing that everyone around him was wearing a stupid red cap a year or so earlier.
    :D:D

    Whereas in reality, the Conservatives are full of people who fundamentally had no problem putting Truss in charge.


    Truss is a terrible PM. Corbyn would be worse. It's really not complicated.
    That is an assertion that can never be proved because Corbyn was never PM. He put himself forward twice and the electorate rejected him both times. He will never be allowed another go. So there is no point in discussing it any further.

    It's really not that complicated.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    On topic. No. Penny Mourdant would be yet another big mistake?

    Firstly, What does Penny believe in?

    Penny had so much wind in her sails going into the leadership contest, but she sank very early on once the whistle started the hustings, not just because she lacks charisma and presentation skills, but because she was a policy vacuum whilst those around her came for a proper fight over the soul of the party. Can you recall her launch event, in the debates what were her positions on issues defining and dividing the Conservative Party today, the main points of her sales pitch?

    Truss won, because she at least had a platform, and the (party) electorate like it. Planning laws and other structural rigidities keep Britain poorer than it should be, our merchant banks made us great once and the City can again, our advantage lies in professional services, ease of doing business and a capital city on which all the world converges.

    For example, does Penny Mourdant believe in levelling up, or does she see it is just pretend the ancient mismatch in scale and wealth between London and the secondary cities their regions, can ever be levelled?

    Secondly, todays smug and irritating performance from Penny Mourdant, made up from just party political bullshit and spin, will wear thin very quickly if that’s her usual modus operandi from the very top of a governing party. From her Willy Speech, her bizarre Speech in the US, through the leadership contest to today, Penny has never shown Primeministerial vision or gravitas.

    The prospect of Penny as PM won’t frighten the opposition one bit. But more importantly, can she steer the Tory party out of its factional infighting and unite them around an ethos?

    Imo the answer is a clear and rather obvious no.

    The task facing the next PM is not a regular one though and Penny, without significant baggage, is the best fit for those circumstances IMHO.

    As I mentioned above, no new PM is going to be able to make any significant impact on policy before the next GE. They shouldn't (see Truss, Liz) and also won't be able to, because Number 11 under Hunt is now the most powerful it has been in years, and any firm commitments will have to be vetted and re-vetted by the Treasury first.

    Penny is policy-light? Great, she can't upset the apple cart. Let her focus on key Tory messaging and try to rebuild some level of trust and understanding with the public. She can do empathy much more than many of the other Tories at the top. She is self-deprecating which will be important when it comes to facing the public (as everyone hates the government now).

    The next government is going to have a strong Chancellor (Hunt) setting the direction and will need a chairman to sell policy and reach out to people. It doesn't need an ethos/ideology-heavy big beast as chairman, it needs someone who can communicate and connect. Penny can do that.

    In terms of policy for the next election the Tory Party would do far worse than setting up a committee to work on a manifesto. Yes that means that the leadership won't be all-powerful (though would be expected to tweak/sign off on it) but the next election is not about being radical for the Tories. It is about giving the appearance of a credible and sensible government with credible, sensible policy ideas. That's all. In 95% likelihood they'll never have to implement it, it is more mood music and window dressing to show they can run a country sensibly and win some votes back from Labour. Again, Penny can sell this. She doesn't need to come up with a full thesis, because she doesn't have time and the situation doesn't call for it. If the Tories do end up winning through some amazing fluke or Labour implosion, then they could do far worse than running a middle-of-the-road competent government for a few more years rather than pandering to their fantasies and ruining things (again, see Truss, Liz).
    I’m beginning to think, maybe I shouldn’t be wasting my time posting analysis on politicalbetting.com my posts, like above better placed on conhome then?
    Don't go!

    But that's not analysis it's just I don't like Penny dressed up in a lot of other stuff. She doesn’t have the vision thing, is your beef. My response and @numbertwelve s is Good, Truss has tainted the vision thing for years.
  • Leon said:

    Just finished my horseride in the Great Sand Dunes and now having lunch under the aspens. Doesn’t look like I missed much. Any interesting by-elections?








    Naw, just some horse racing news, I think. But sad to see that nobody wants to sit by you in that pic.

    Even though empathy ain't Liz T's strong suite, reckon she came relate.
  • glwglw Posts: 9,535
    edited October 2022
    Jonathan said:

    If Starmer had become PM on 1Sep rather than Truss, we would all be better off now. How’s that for a hypothetical?

    I agree.

    I should add I'm quite content with de facto PM Hunt. It's not an ideal way of doing things, but at least for now someone reasonably competent and sensible appears to be in charge.
  • Scott_xP said:

    NEW: Tory plotters descend into infighting

    — Rishi Sunak was contacted in recent days by a senior MP on behalf of Penny Mordaunt, making a “formal offer” of a joint ticket

    — Sunak said no, per person in the know

    — Mordaunt denies authorising approach

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-17/truss-watches-uk-vision-dismantled-as-rivals-fight-for-her-job

    Infighting sounds like a bit of an exaggeration. They need to work out relatively quickly who has most MP support and then all get behind them. I hope Gove is busy sorting it out.
    What is the aim?

    Win- or more realistically, minimise the defeat?

    Do the right things, even if they're unpopular?

    Have a bit of fun, because it could be a decade or two before any Conservative has another sniff of power?

    Until the party settles on one of those, they can't choose the right leader to achieve that aim.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 47,786

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    It was Truss’s spending profligacy that was her undoing. If this episode has killed anything off, it is the idea that the state doesn’t need to balance the books.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,392
    If Labour had won the last GE we wouldn't have had 359 Jezzas sitting on our benches. Any daft ideas would have been voted down, and if Corbyn didn't play ball he'd have been VONCed and someone like Benn installed.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 20,812
    I feel like there is a Rishi faction and a Mordaunt/Hunt faction. I could be wrong.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835

    Scott_xP said:

    NEW: Tory plotters descend into infighting

    — Rishi Sunak was contacted in recent days by a senior MP on behalf of Penny Mordaunt, making a “formal offer” of a joint ticket

    — Sunak said no, per person in the know

    — Mordaunt denies authorising approach

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-17/truss-watches-uk-vision-dismantled-as-rivals-fight-for-her-job

    Infighting sounds like a bit of an exaggeration. They need to work out relatively quickly who has most MP support and then all get behind them. I hope Gove is busy sorting it out.
    What is the aim?

    Win- or more realistically, minimise the defeat?

    Do the right things, even if they're unpopular?

    Have a bit of fun, because it could be a decade or two before any Conservative has another sniff of power?

    Until the party settles on one of those, they can't choose the right leader to achieve that aim.
    Middle one is the only solution if they want to have a sniff of being back before 2033.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,414

    On topic. No. Penny Mourdant would be yet another big mistake?

    Firstly, What does Penny believe in?

    Penny had so much wind in her sails going into the leadership contest, but she sank very early on once the whistle started the hustings, not just because she lacks charisma and presentation skills, but because she was a policy vacuum whilst those around her came for a proper fight over the soul of the party. Can you recall her launch event, in the debates what were her positions on issues defining and dividing the Conservative Party today, the main points of her sales pitch?

    Truss won, because she at least had a platform, and the (party) electorate like it. Planning laws and other structural rigidities keep Britain poorer than it should be, our merchant banks made us great once and the City can again, our advantage lies in professional services, ease of doing business and a capital city on which all the world converges.

    For example, does Penny Mourdant believe in levelling up, or does she see it is just pretend the ancient mismatch in scale and wealth between London and the secondary cities their regions, can ever be levelled?

    Secondly, todays smug and irritating performance from Penny Mourdant, made up from just party political bullshit and spin, will wear thin very quickly if that’s her usual modus operandi from the very top of a governing party. From her Willy Speech, her bizarre Speech in the US, through the leadership contest to today, Penny has never shown Primeministerial vision or gravitas.

    The prospect of Penny as PM won’t frighten the opposition one bit. But more importantly, can she steer the Tory party out of its factional infighting and unite them around an ethos?

    Imo the answer is a clear and rather obvious no.

    The task facing the next PM is not a regular one though and Penny, without significant baggage, is the best fit for those circumstances IMHO.

    As I mentioned above, no new PM is going to be able to make any significant impact on policy before the next GE. They shouldn't (see Truss, Liz) and also won't be able to, because Number 11 under Hunt is now the most powerful it has been in years, and any firm commitments will have to be vetted and re-vetted by the Treasury first.

    Penny is policy-light? Great, she can't upset the apple cart. Let her focus on key Tory messaging and try to rebuild some level of trust and understanding with the public. She can do empathy much more than many of the other Tories at the top. She is self-deprecating which will be important when it comes to facing the public (as everyone hates the government now).

    The next government is going to have a strong Chancellor (Hunt) setting the direction and will need a chairman to sell policy and reach out to people. It doesn't need an ethos/ideology-heavy big beast as chairman, it needs someone who can communicate and connect. Penny can do that.

    In terms of policy for the next election the Tory Party would do far worse than setting up a committee to work on a manifesto. Yes that means that the leadership won't be all-powerful (though would be expected to tweak/sign off on it) but the next election is not about being radical for the Tories. It is about giving the appearance of a credible and sensible government with credible, sensible policy ideas. That's all. In 95% likelihood they'll never have to implement it, it is more mood music and window dressing to show they can run a country sensibly and win some votes back from Labour. Again, Penny can sell this. She doesn't need to come up with a full thesis, because she doesn't have time and the situation doesn't call for it. If the Tories do end up winning through some amazing fluke or Labour implosion, then they could do far worse than running a middle-of-the-road competent government for a few more years rather than pandering to their fantasies and ruining things (again, see Truss, Liz).
    I’m beginning to think, maybe I shouldn’t be wasting my time posting analysis on politicalbetting.com my posts, like above better placed on conhome then?
    Not at all, I think you make good points - the whole point of the battle for the next leader is that there's no obvious successor to Truss - it is good to analyse and debate the pros/cons and outcomes.

    And I really don't want to spend my days posting on conhome!
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,704
    Jonathan said:

    glw said:

    I see we are back to the PB Tories luxuriating in their nostalgic fantasies about a bloke that is no longer a Labour MP.

    Funny old world.

    It's not nostalgia, it's genuinely interesting that Labour supporters won't even entertain the hypothetical quesion of what a Corbyn victory would have been like. After all they were cheering him on three years ago.

    The last 8 months of the Ukraine war have made me think a Corybn premiership would have been calamitous. It's the one thing I'll give Johnson some real credit for. Johnson is a lazy, dishonest idiot, but his instincts on the biggest issues were generally right.

    It would be a lot easier to believe Labour has changed if they could do some soul searching about such things, that they don't or won't makes me think the change is only skin deep. On here you might not see many "out" Corbyn supporters, but they still seem to be there in large numbers.
    Jeremy Corbyn was elected Labour leader. I voted against that (twice). But as Labour leader he was entitled to put his manifesto to the country. He did that twice and lost twice despite 10M people voting for it. The world has moved on.

    12.9m in 2017 but yes the world has moved on
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766
    ihunt said:

    The UK’s National Grid has warned British households to prepare for blackouts between 4pm and 7pm on ‘really, really cold’ weekdays in January and February | FT

    https://twitter.com/WarMonitors/status/1582098068354519040?s=20&t=pAaHO2IC7bBRXlBMb8-fcQ

    This is what the CEO of National Grid actually said at an energy conference. (Not, one would note, to consumers)

    He said the period of particular concern would be in January and February if the weather turned extremely cold and there were insufficient gas supplies to feed Britain’s fleet of gas-fired power stations — which remain the backbone of the system. He said the situation would become particularly acute if the wind speeds during the cold snap were too low to power turbines and electricity imports via subsea cables from countries including France, Belgium and the Netherlands were restricted.

    In those “worst case” circumstances, power would be cut off to parts of the country for up to three hours “probably between 4pm and 7pm in the evenings on those weekdays when it’s really, really cold in January and February”, Pettigrew said.


    Basically, he's said that if:

    (a) The UK can't secure LNG imports
    (b) It's really cold
    (c) The wind isn't blowing
    and
    (d) There were restrictions on energy exports from Europe

    Then we *could* see blackouts.

  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 24,583

    stodge said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    I have laid him. He is conspicuously awol today (but then people said last time round, Truss had ruled herself out by being in the far East when it all kicked off). And truly stellar performances drom PM and JH this afternoon can't have helped him.

    "truly stellar" ? - you're easily pleased.
    No. Some posters, Z, MexiPete for example, are just mischief makers, disrupters, probably in the pay of the management like what happened on Big Brother - some other posters (like us) try to offer some thoughtful analysis, explain the why behind the what and how policy battles fit into the larger political context, that mostly boils down to money and control.
    Your analysis flip flops from Johnson to Corbyn and back again. Mind you for a Centre Left Remainer I was taken by the sultry Mordaunt earlier. Ding dong!
    You realise growth for the UK has been downgraded since Hunt shredded the mini budget? public spending should also be honestly financed too. But payroll taxes that milks worker to spare asset owners, and further borrowing is not that honest finance.
    Of course Capital needs to be available to power the ideas and ambition available to create growth, but the Growth Budget was only so very glibly, growth comes from investment, to kickstart growth, zoning reform, better ways to upskill workers (recognising it’s a long haul) and revisit the deals with the EU would all be part of my own growth budget.

    I understand people taken by fresh faces and penny mordant, but I’m trying to explain the inherent vice of Penny mordant - the need to fill policy vacuum with strong policy. But me sharing and explaining what I actually believe on this blog is just a waste a time isn’t it? looking at your reply above, even ruder and wrongheaded than Bens this morning, like when have I ever supported Johnson or Corbyn? 🤷‍♀️

    You have had several pops at me over the months. If you don't like what I write move on to the next post.

    Kwarteng's budget was not a growth generator in any way, shape or form. Trickle down economics has always been nonsense. For a growth promoting budget a government needs to push infrastructure spending which creates jobs and wealth, OK we have more jobs than workers, which is a problem, so government can invest in retraining, and so it goes on.

    I have a thesis on missteps over the decades which I won't bore you with, but none of them were addressed in Kwarteng's budget.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,004

    I feel like there is a Rishi faction and a Mordaunt/Hunt faction. I could be wrong.

    Can't they just do the MP voting in a few days like they did in the Summer? When they get to the final 2 whoever is second agrees to withdraw. Just crack on with it. Get enough letters in and SGB has to act.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835
    edited October 2022

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    It was Truss’s spending profligacy that was her undoing. If this episode has killed anything off, it is the idea that the state doesn’t need to balance the books.
    Yes but. It's a two parter isn't it?
    Unfunded tax cuts.
    Tax cuts as the magical answer to any and all ills without question has been discredited. It will be difficult to make the case for a fair while.
    Though I don't suppose that will stop them. Folk, even in the Tory Party will look more askance at the very idea.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766

    rcs1000 said:

    ihunt said:

    i think this is what Farage means when he talks about a globalist coup

    Lots of chatter around in Tory circles speculating about the degree to which Sunakites with City links may have deliberately stoked the market run against Truss/Kwarteng.

    https://twitter.com/oflynnsocial/status/1582095411107414016?s=20&t=pAaHO2IC7bBRXlBMb8-fcQ

    Oh please,

    Sunak was a relatively junior guy at TCI, which deals solely in equities. The idea that he could affect the bond market for political purposes is utterly ridiculous.

    Why would the spivs prefer Sunak to Kwarteng? If anything you'd expect them to prefer Kwarteng's tax cutting for personal reasons. Ultimately they're capitalists who want to make money. Not lending at favourable rates of interest to a government that has no plan to bring down the debt burden and presumably would inflate/devalue it away.
    You make a good point: Kwarteng (Odey Asset Management) is at least as plugged into that world as Sunak.
  • dixiedean said:

    AlistairM said:

    I hope he asked her what was so important that she had on at 3.30pm today.

    Coming up on #bbcnewsten @BBCOne: I’ve interviewed the Prime Minister tonight
    https://twitter.com/ChrisMasonBBC/status/1582107636438564864

    Is there still no answer to that one?
    SO what is she saying to BBC dude? (I cannot access.)
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,414
    AlistairM said:

    I hope he asked her what was so important that she had on at 3.30pm today.

    Coming up on #bbcnewsten @BBCOne: I’ve interviewed the Prime Minister tonight
    https://twitter.com/ChrisMasonBBC/status/1582107636438564864


    BRACE.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 24,583

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    Can I introduce you to Suella Braverman?
  • glwglw Posts: 9,535
    edited October 2022

    If Labour had won the last GE we wouldn't have had 359 Jezzas sitting on our benches. Any daft ideas would have been voted down, and if Corbyn didn't play ball he'd have been VONCed and someone like Benn installed.

    I don't think that's entirely true. Obviously MPs can do a lot to stop legislation, but they can do little about executive power, and the Labour MPs track record of thwarting Corbyn was quite poor in practice.

    Besides which, it's a bloody stupid idea to elect a government on the basis that you hope the MPs stop the PM doing anything dangerously nuts.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,080

    I feel like there is a Rishi faction and a Mordaunt/Hunt faction. I could be wrong.

    I feel that Truss is starting to struggle a bit, but I too could be wrong
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038

    AlistairM said:

    I hope he asked her what was so important that she had on at 3.30pm today.

    Coming up on #bbcnewsten @BBCOne: I’ve interviewed the Prime Minister tonight
    https://twitter.com/ChrisMasonBBC/status/1582107636438564864


    BRACE.
    "I am determined to carry out my mission"

    "Growth, growth, growth"

  • CookieCookie Posts: 11,182
    I suppose the one thing Liz Truss can take from today is that if you add up all of Gordon Brown's terrible days - the Bigoted Woman incident, the orange blob, the address to the nation in which he was told to smile, the car crash ppb, farmy farm, phonegate, the day on which he started listing, alphabetically, every single person in the UK in order to explain that he hated everyone without discrimination*, Liz's day today wasn't quite as bad as all of that put together. But I don't think any PM has had such a bad, embarassing, weird single day as this that I can remember.

    *one or two things on this list may by mythical.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 5,996
    Salute to Ben Wallace's commitment to logic. He has promised to be secretary of state for defence until he finishes.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,414

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    Can I introduce you to Suella Braverman?
    Suella Braverman is libertarian?

    I thought she hated everyone too much to be libertarian.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 47,786
    I'll lead Tories into next election, says embattled Liz Truss

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-63293891
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835
    "I'll lead the Party into the next election."
    Yes, Liz.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038
    BBC News interview with Truss.

    She looks utterly broken and probably on medication.

    Someone stop this now please.

  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,727
    POLL EXCLUSIVE

    Tory members would vote for Rishi Sunak not Liz Truss as leader today

    60% Sunak
    40% Truss
    (From members who shared a view)

    Suggests the grassroots are turning.
    (Polling by @JLPartnersPolls)
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2022/10/17/tory-members-would-vote-rishi-sunak-liz-truss-leadership-election/
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    Can I introduce you to Suella Braverman?
    Suella Braverman is libertarian?

    I thought she hated everyone too much to be libertarian.
    She's not a libertarian in the slightest.
    She wants to ban almost everything.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835
    glw said:

    If Labour had won the last GE we wouldn't have had 359 Jezzas sitting on our benches. Any daft ideas would have been voted down, and if Corbyn didn't play ball he'd have been VONCed and someone like Benn installed.

    I don't think that's entirely true. Obviously MPs can do a lot to stop legislation, but they can do little about executive power, and the Labour MPs track record of thwarting Corbyn was quite poor in practice.

    Besides which, it's a bloody stupid idea to elect a government on the basis that you hope the MPs stop the PM doing anything dangerously nuts.
    As we have seen.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,727
    ...
  • I'll lead Tories into next election, says embattled Liz Truss

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-63293891

    Did they have her do one of those capcha (sp?) thingies before the broadcast? Might have been wise!
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Scott_xP said:

    POLL EXCLUSIVE

    Tory members would vote for Rishi Sunak not Liz Truss as leader today

    60% Sunak
    40% Truss
    (From members who shared a view)

    Suggests the grassroots are turning.
    (Polling by @JLPartnersPolls)
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2022/10/17/tory-members-would-vote-rishi-sunak-liz-truss-leadership-election/

    Fuck the grassroots. Other than the Waffen SS I cannot think of a more loathsome contemptible and damaging group of individuals in the last 100 years.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 27,835
    edited October 2022
    Cookie said:

    I suppose the one thing Liz Truss can take from today is that if you add up all of Gordon Brown's terrible days - the Bigoted Woman incident, the orange blob, the address to the nation in which he was told to smile, the car crash ppb, farmy farm, phonegate, the day on which he started listing, alphabetically, every single person in the UK in order to explain that he hated everyone without discrimination*, Liz's day today wasn't quite as bad as all of that put together. But I don't think any PM has had such a bad, embarassing, weird single day as this that I can remember.

    *one or two things on this list may by mythical.

    Worse than Friday's then?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392

    Jonathan said:

    Any PM candidate is going to have to be a team player because Hunt isn’t going to be moveable from the Treasury now and has a clear grip on fiscal policy. So their role as PM is going to be presentational and tone-setting.

    For that reason I think Penny is the best fit for them. Has the best chance of giving them a 200-240 seat result IMHO.

    What does the 2024 manifesto say? Where's the vision for Britain? If it's all managerial with a token figurehead PR PM balancing an uneasy truce, that is unlikely to work.

    In my view the hack doesn't work, the Tories have to choose which way they want to go and deal with the consequences.
    Given that Hunt's original leadership platform was not a million miles away from Truss's, we might end up with Trussism by the back door, but with collegiate decision making and competent execution.
    He came 8th out of 8
    Hence being a compromise candidate - he doesn't have a faction lined up behind him already, but could win support of others.
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 2,973
    dixiedean said:

    "I'll lead the Party into the next election."
    Yes, Liz.

    The Tories risk taking all of us for fools. No one believes this. Why are we pretending we need to keep her in post? To do what? Communicate nothing? Grind her jaw in robotic fashion?
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,414
    dixiedean said:

    "I'll lead the Party into the next election."
    Yes, Liz.

    I thought she'd been told to stop engaging in wild fantasies?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 49,955

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    It was Truss’s spending profligacy that was her undoing. If this episode has killed anything off, it is the idea that the state doesn’t need to balance the books.
    Which buggers Labour's ability to fund its public sector clients.

    It's going to be fun watching that.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,038
    Oh God this is just painful to watch.

    Pls we need an intervention.

  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    BBC News interview with Truss.

    She looks utterly broken and probably on medication.

    Someone stop this now please.

    Just awful.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    edited October 2022
    nova said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    Nobody cares. Why not have a go at dealing with reality rather than made up questions?

    No. Go on tell me what you think Corbyn would have been like from 2019 to 2022. I think you know damn well he'd have been a disaster.
    Nobody cares. I would rather think about how we can undo the current mess. Truss and Boris were actual disasters.
    You genuinely can't admit it can you? It's actually pathetic that on the one hand we are told we should believe "Labour has changed, Labour is better", but the very same people won't even admit how close they came to do something every bit as nuts as the GOP letting Trump get elected. Fundamentally you haven't changed at all, most of you would vote for Corbyn today if that was the option.
    I'm not a fan of Corbyn, but he's nothing like Trump.

    Corbyn was clearly a reluctant leader, and in many ways the Labour offer was much more conservative than his personal views. John McDonnell was clearly the brains of the operation, and was much more pragmatic - if anything desperate to be seen as unlikely to rock the boat too much.

    Trump was an absolute megalomaniac - and nearly everyone who worked closely with him, has at some point suggested he was a dangerous, unpredictable lunatic.
    You can make comparisons between anyone if you focus on specific elements. Corbyn similarly relied upon members (or equivalent) rather than legislators, and some of his supporters have a conspiracist mindset that is similar, but there's far more differences, both in content and style.

    It's the same with the far more common comparison between Boris and Trump. There are some, but Boris for example is entirely of the regular political establishment in a way that just doesn't apply with Trump, to name but one difference.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,392
    glw said:

    If Labour had won the last GE we wouldn't have had 359 Jezzas sitting on our benches. Any daft ideas would have been voted down, and if Corbyn didn't play ball he'd have been VONCed and someone like Benn installed.

    I don't think that's entirely true. Obviously MPs can do a lot to stop legislation, but they can do little about executive power, and the Labour MPs track record of thwarting Corbyn was quite poor in practice.

    Besides which, it's a bloody stupid idea to elect a government on the basis that you hope the MPs stop the PM doing anything dangerously nuts.
    Alas, we never got to find out.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    Foxy said:

    Jonathan said:

    On topic. No. Penny Mourdant would be yet another big mistake?

    Firstly, What does Penny believe in?

    Penny had so much wind in her sails going into the leadership contest, but she sank very early on once the whistle started the hustings, not just because she lacks charisma and presentation skills, but because she was a policy vacuum whilst those around her came for a proper fight over the soul of the party. Can you recall her launch event, in the debates what were her positions on issues defining and dividing the Conservative Party today, the main points of her sales pitch?

    Truss won, because she at least had a platform, and the (party) electorate like it. Planning laws and other structural rigidities keep Britain poorer than it should be, our merchant banks made us great once and the City can again, our advantage lies in professional services, ease of doing business and a capital city on which all the world converges.

    For example, does Penny Mourdant believe in levelling up, or does she see it is just pretend the ancient mismatch in scale and wealth between London and the secondary cities their regions, can ever be levelled?

    Secondly, todays smug and irritating performance from Penny Mourdant, made up from just party political bullshit and spin, will wear thin very quickly if that’s her usual modus operandi from the very top of a governing party. From her Willy Speech, her bizarre Speech in the US, through the leadership contest to today, Penny has never shown Primeministerial vision or gravitas.

    The prospect of Penny as PM won’t frighten the opposition one bit. But more importantly, can she steer the Tory party out of its factional infighting and unite them around an ethos?

    Imo the answer is a clear and rather obvious no.

    The prospect of Penny as PM will frighten the opposition far more than Truss staying in place.....
    Truss is pretty scary. Imagine having to clean up two years of her mess rather than just a month. Penny is not remotely scary. Two years of public relations veneer can not cover up the abyss at the heart of the Conservatives.
    There is to an abyss at the heart of Starmer's Labour.
    There is?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 46,206
    Interesting thread by that Belarus journalist that the entire Russian/Belarus build up is a feint. To attract Ukr troops from the south/east and weaken those fronts

    Could be

    However, I’m not sure I buy it (even as I respect his inside knowledge). Because Putin is losing the war and an all out direct-route attack on kyiv from the north is the last conventional throw of the die - or
    rather the last one that might win for Russia (tho I doubt Putin would win, but at least he’d have a chance)

    If it is however a feint, and Putin does not attack, I can’t see how Putin has ANY chance of winning. What other move is there? In that case he is condemning himself and Russia to a long grinding attritional winter that ends in defeat for him


    That’s not his style. He escalates

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    Nigelb said:

    rcs1000 said:

    ihunt said:

    Farage called what has happened the last few weeks a globalist coup tonite

    The Chancellor and the PM announced policies that led to the deficit skyrocketing. Investors took fright, because bad shit often happens to countries where debt levels rise in perpetuity (see Greece, Japan, and even Italy).

    Investors are neither legally nor morally obligated to bankroll the government.

    What does Farage suggest? Laws that require people to buy British government bonds?
    Who cares what Farage thinks ?

    Lots of people, based on past evidence.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 49,955
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Scott_xP said:

    POLL EXCLUSIVE

    Tory members would vote for Rishi Sunak not Liz Truss as leader today

    60% Sunak
    40% Truss
    (From members who shared a view)

    Suggests the grassroots are turning.
    (Polling by @JLPartnersPolls)
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2022/10/17/tory-members-would-vote-rishi-sunak-liz-truss-leadership-election/

    Fuck the grassroots. Other than the Waffen SS I cannot think of a more loathsome contemptible and damaging group of individuals in the last 100 years.
    Oh come on, the Khmer Rouge would run them close.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    Jonathan said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    glw said:

    Jonathan said:

    Nobody cares. Why not have a go at dealing with reality rather than made up questions?

    No. Go on tell me what you think Corbyn would have been like from 2019 to 2022. I think you know damn well he'd have been a disaster.
    Nobody cares. I would rather think about how we can undo the current mess. Truss and Boris were actual disasters.
    You genuinely can't admit it can you? It's actually pathetic that on the one hand we are told we should believe "Labour has changed, Labour is better", but the very same people won't even admit how close they came to do something every bit as nuts as the GOP letting Trump get elected. Fundamentally you haven't changed at all, most of you would vote for Corbyn today if that was the option.
    I invited you to have a go at dealing with reality. You said 'No'.
    That's my preferred approach to reality as well. It always disappoints me.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,004
    Any Tory MPs watching that interview should be thinking what she would be like in a general election campaign.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 49,955
    dixiedean said:

    Cookie said:

    I suppose the one thing Liz Truss can take from today is that if you add up all of Gordon Brown's terrible days - the Bigoted Woman incident, the orange blob, the address to the nation in which he was told to smile, the car crash ppb, farmy farm, phonegate, the day on which he started listing, alphabetically, every single person in the UK in order to explain that he hated everyone without discrimination*, Liz's day today wasn't quite as bad as all of that put together. But I don't think any PM has had such a bad, embarassing, weird single day as this that I can remember.

    *one or two things on this list may by mythical.

    Worse than Friday's then?
    Getting worse. The trend is not her friend.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 7,981
    IanB2 said:

    I feel like there is a Rishi faction and a Mordaunt/Hunt faction. I could be wrong.

    I feel that Truss is starting to struggle a bit, but I too could be wrong
    Her blink rate in that interview was alarmingly high. I went back and looked at her party conference speech and her blink rate was more normal.

    .
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 14,911

    Polly Mackenzie
    @pollymackenzie
    ·
    1h
    The good news is that no one will try libertarian bullshit again for at least 20 years.

    It was Truss’s spending profligacy that was her undoing. If this episode has killed anything off, it is the idea that the state doesn’t need to balance the books.
    Which buggers Labour's ability to fund its public sector clients.

    It's going to be fun watching that.
    Glad to hear you are looking forward to the next Labour government.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    glw said:

    If Labour had won the last GE we wouldn't have had 359 Jezzas sitting on our benches. Any daft ideas would have been voted down, and if Corbyn didn't play ball he'd have been VONCed and someone like Benn installed.

    I don't think that's entirely true. Obviously MPs can do a lot to stop legislation, but they can do little about executive power, and the Labour MPs track record of thwarting Corbyn was quite poor in practice.

    Besides which, it's a bloody stupid idea to elect a government on the basis that you hope the MPs stop the PM doing anything dangerously nuts.
    Which is why when people were asked to not focus on the leader in 2019 it did not work.
This discussion has been closed.