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Polling matters – politicalbetting.com

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  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,617
    Under random thoughts, King Charles and Rishi Sunak being around at the same may be an interesting opportunity to continue reimagining the Commonwealth.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Labour need to be careful with their calls for an election. Starmer's message is basically: "Congratulations on becoming the first British Asian PM. I want you to be chucked out immediately before you've had chance to do anything."

    https://twitter.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1584861552234369024

    Congratulations, Rishi Sunak, on becoming Prime Minister and making history as the first British Asian PM.

    The Tories have crashed the economy, with low wages, high prices and a cost of living crisis.

    The public needs a fresh start and a say on Britain’s future.

    Why? They are offering Sunny Rick a chance to win his own mandate. If the country disagrees, then so be it.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    geoffw said:

     

    NF Simpson, 'A resounding tinkle' 1958
    Act 1, Scene 1

        A knock
    Mrs Paradock    There's somebody at the door wanting you to form a government
    Bro Paracock looks at her in astonishment. Several seconds elapse.
    Mr Paradock      What does he look like?
    Mrs Paradock     He says he's working through the street directory.


    I'd forgotten that.
    I directed a school production many years ago, to the bemusement of all concerned.
  • DJ41DJ41 Posts: 792

    Labour need to be careful with their calls for an election. Starmer's message is basically: "Congratulations on becoming the first British Asian PM. I want you to be chucked out immediately before you've had chance to do anything."

    https://twitter.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1584861552234369024

    Congratulations, Rishi Sunak, on becoming Prime Minister and making history as the first British Asian PM.

    The Tories have crashed the economy, with low wages, high prices and a cost of living crisis.

    The public needs a fresh start and a say on Britain’s future.

    "...your government to be chucked out immediately because it's Tory - and look at the Tories' record, not just generally but in this parliament" is more like it.

    Sunak depends on the parliamentary Conservative party - this is obvious.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,253

    All sounds very relatable.
    I was Deputy Head Boy at my local comp. Makes me about the same as Sunak, then?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,539
    Andy_JS said:
    Remarkable - there were 110 MPs prepared to have us go through the process of appointing a PM all over again in a few weeks, once the Committee of Privileges reported.

    Thankfully, Boris was not.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,072
    edited October 2022
    I think Sunak’s brief dawn of New Hope is going to unravel quite quickly to be honest.

    The facts are It will still be turbulent economics and politics for the next two years whatever Sunak does. If he puts country ahead of party or party ahead of country it’s still a rocky road and one stonking Tory election defeat.

    look at Today’s Telegraph front page - Sunak must put the country before the markets. What is the right thing for the country? Are you and the Telegraph columnist on the same front page as it were? You know It is not as straightforward as just give the dammed markets whatever they ask for to keep them pacified, and carry on business as usual? I tell you in all candour that that option no longer exists.

    BECAUSE. What do the markets want? The bond markets, seeing no plan for growth now, will perfectly fairly demand a greater return on their investment. Markets want an era of 2-4% interest rates and higher gilt markets than they have been for much of this century.

    BUT From a political and avoiding election wipe out aspect, does the Tory government want the same as the markets, us paying them more because we can’t do growth?

    The market opinion is government shouldn’t now continue to make everything worse by trying to keep gilts and interest rates down - it’s doom loop economics of low interest rates creates debt, coupled with a reluctance to tackle inflation because raising interest rates will make people poorer. You see? what you are calling good this afternoon after a Sunak’s pep talk, hunt and Sunak calming the markets after Truss instability, is itself the madness? We are in the belly of a beast that is dying, and government and BoE joint policy you are applauding as good, is what is killing us.
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Selebian said:

    Smarkets have paind out on Liz Truss no confidence vote before the next election :smile: I thought they'd make me wait until the next GE.

    Nice one. unfortunately Paddy's look like they are going to make me wait for the same.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686

    NEW: Rishi Sunak becomes Prime Minister.

    pictures just released show him meeting the King. Sunak becomes Charles’ second prime minister, of a reign itself not even two months old.




    https://twitter.com/lewis_goodall/status/1584856028255920128

    Nice carpet.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    It will become an issue but I see no prospect of Labour touching this in its first term. I also don't think 60:40 is good enough for the EU to risk having us back or for Labour to risk going near this. I think 70:30 is the kind of level where it would happen. Maybe in 10 years. It will happen though because Brexit was simply, objectively, the wrong decision and eventually enough people will see that for it to be overturned. And what a sad waste of everyone's time and energy it will have been.
    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
  • Leon said:


    If Starmer gets a large majority (still quite likely despite Sunak being not-entirely-mad) he will come under huge pressure to speed this up, for fear he only has one term. And he might only get one term as the economic situation will be perilous for years

    He might go for EEA/SM membership and say “times are so desperate we need to do everything we can to help British business, this is it”. And it might work

    Rejoin seems unlikely for a generation. It would require yet another energy-sapping, divisive referendum. Unappealing for any government
    There'd only be political pressure if his opponents were hovering up votes because they were committed to joining the EEA or whatever and he wasn't. Do you think the Tories might go down that route?
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,302

    Why? They are offering Sunny Rick a chance to win his own mandate. If the country disagrees, then so be it.
    Then they should have said that, rather than some weird staccato statements that don’t fit together.

    I mean it’s a minor point in the general scheme of things but Labour have played an excellent messaging game in recent weeks and they must keep it up to stay ahead of the curve.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,469
    edited October 2022
    Hu Jintao: Fresh China congress footage deepens mystery over exit
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-63384608

    Like a scene from tits and dragons.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    ydoethur said:

    He really is a piece of work. I hope Sunak offers him a cabinet post as ambassador to North Korea.

    “My view is the change of leader requires a General Election” JRM

    “A General Election iimpossible to avoid" - Nadine

    “A General Election is the only answer" - Christopher Chope
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,302
    Leon said:

    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
    There is absolutely no chance of Labour going anywhere near this before they re-enter government. Afterwards, they can start laying some groundwork perhaps.

  • kle4 said:

    If there is action on rejoin it will be over multiple election cycles I think, if only to reassure the EU we won't immediately turn around again. So first term close alignment, second term single market, third term rejoin etc.
    I expect a fix on alignment by the Sunak government. We can remove a multi-billion economic dampener by normalising our relations with our biggest trading partner. And as the alternative was a free trade and movement deal with India, its less toxic than it once was.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,512
    Noa Hoffman
    @hoffman_noa
    ·
    15m
    Source who worked on the Liz Truss leadership campaign: "Thank god the adults are back in the room. He absolutely smashed that."
  • glwglw Posts: 10,361

    It will become an issue but I see no prospect of Labour touching this in its first term. I also don't think 60:40 is good enough for the EU to risk having us back or for Labour to risk going near this. I think 70:30 is the kind of level where it would happen. Maybe in 10 years. It will happen though because Brexit was simply, objectively, the wrong decision and eventually enough people will see that for it to be overturned. And what a sad waste of everyone's time and energy it will have been.

    Only one third of the electorate even want to be in the single market. Whatever these polls tell us, it's not an endorsement of the EU in reality, the public are expressing dissatisfaction far more than they are wanting to rejoin the EU as it is.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    Leon said:

    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
    Some sort of associate membership without FoM (Of labour) might be the sweet spot for both parties. FoM cuts both ways.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I expect a fix on alignment by the Sunak government. We can remove a multi-billion economic dampener by normalising our relations with our biggest trading partner. And as the alternative was a free trade and movement deal with India, its less toxic than it once was.
    Regulatory alignment with the EU is an absolute no-brainer – Labour must be hoping that the siren voices of the swivel-eyed eurosceptics in the PCP prove enough to stop Rishi going for it: because it would be an easy policy win for a prospective Labour administration that, as you say, brings a huge economic benefit.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745

    There'd only be political pressure if his opponents were hovering up votes because they were committed to joining the EEA or whatever and he wasn't. Do you think the Tories might go down that route?
    No, the pressure will come from within Labour circles. They are nearly all Remoaners. But they know Rejoin is too hard, for now, maybe for many decades. So they will say

    “We might only have one term. We could be out again in 2029. The opportunity will be gone forever. Do it. Single Market!”

    It will chime with Starmer’s own instincts





  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,253
    glw said:

    Only one third of the electorate even want to be in the single market. Whatever these polls tell us, it's not an endorsement of the EU in reality, the public are expressing dissatisfaction far more than they are wanting to rejoin the EU as it is.
    To be fair, the original referendum result was also more about expressing dissatisfaction than a nuanced view on the pros and cons of EU membership :wink:
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Then they should have said that, rather than some weird staccato statements that don’t fit together.

    I mean it’s a minor point in the general scheme of things but Labour have played an excellent messaging game in recent weeks and they must keep it up to stay ahead of the curve.
    Fair enough, I take your point, but I guess it'll do for now. Royale can nuance at PMQs.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    Rishi certainly has experience of short-living
    This isn't a pop at you personally because a lot of people do this but is there any chance we could stop making comments about his height? It doesn't matter how short or tall he is.

    It matters whether he's a competent Prime Minister.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,593

    Sturgeon
    I thought they were the same thing?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    Leon said:


    If Starmer gets a large majority (still quite likely despite Sunak being not-entirely-mad) he will come under huge pressure to speed this up, for fear he only has one term. And he might only get one term as the economic situation will be perilous for years

    He might go for EEA/SM membership and say “times are so desperate we need to do everything we can to help British business, this is it”. And it might work

    Rejoin seems unlikely for a generation. It would require yet another energy-sapping, divisive referendum. Unappealing for any government
    Labour would be mad to attempt it unless supported by the leader of the opposition, otherwise the opposition's promise to leave again would destroy any prospect of negotiating entry to the EU.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    edited October 2022
    Macron sends congratulations to Rishi Sunak and looks forward to working with him, he now has a fellow former banker amongst his G7 counterparts

    https://twitter.com/EmmanuelMacron/status/1584862604945551361?s=20&t=lEoLpavkv-kYZaqppxOInA
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,512
    The next Tory leader market is up on BF.

    The caravan never stays still for long.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,098
    Mogg binned
  • glwglw Posts: 10,361
    Selebian said:

    To be fair, the original referendum result was also more about expressing dissatisfaction than a nuanced view on the pros and cons of EU membership :wink:
    I agree, it's a shame the EU didn't budge a bit more, or we didn't have a fallback of something like leave the EU directly to EFTA/EEA.
  • RandallFlaggRandallFlagg Posts: 1,381
    Praise the Lord. Mogg gone.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Leon said:

    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
    FoM will be desperately popular down here: the hospitality catering/sector is on its knees thanks to the exodus of jobbing French, Italian and eastern European waitresses who once provided a professional service at reasonable rates.

    Some sort of benign visa system could provide a decent compromise and help plug the gap: because the demand to work in London, and learn English, is still there. It's just the current regulations militate against it.
  • SlackbladderSlackbladder Posts: 9,795
    Scott_xP said:

    Mogg binned

    huzzah!!
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,098
    Off to a good start...
  • Oh dear. Jacob Rees-Mogg has resigned.

    The country mourns....
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    It will become an issue but I see no prospect of Labour touching this in its first term. I also don't think 60:40 is good enough for the EU to risk having us back or for Labour to risk going near this. I think 70:30 is the kind of level where it would happen. Maybe in 10 years. It will happen though because Brexit was simply, objectively, the wrong decision and eventually enough people will see that for it to be overturned. And what a sad waste of everyone's time and energy it will have been.
    The problem is that joining the EU as it will be in 5/10 years will not resemble what people wish they could go back to. It will never happen. However we will obviously end up a key player in whatever the outer ring looks like and de facto leader of the non-EU states.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668
    glw said:

    I agree, it's a shame the EU didn't budge a bit more, or we didn't have a fallback of something like leave the EU directly to EFTA/EEA.
    We did have that fallback available, but May and the Brexiteers ruled it out.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    Leon said:

    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
    Hello.

    But ... hang on.

    Is this a change of mind? You come across today as in favour of this but only a matter of weeks ago you were pouring invective on "remoaners" and wokerati for their evil plotting that would see us rejoin the EU.

    I don't have a problem if you've changed your standpoint but have you?
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,302
    Bye Jacob.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,512
    Rejoice! Rejoice! Rejoice! Mogg gone.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192

    Rejoice! Rejoice! Rejoice! Mogg gone.

    HOORAY!!!

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    kle4 said:

    If there is action on rejoin it will be over multiple election cycles I think, if only to reassure the EU we won't immediately turn around again. So first term close alignment, second term single market, third term rejoin etc.
    It would need a number of years of it being the settled consensus before any government risked making the effort.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    Leon said:

    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
    The EU wouldn’t agree any time soon*, whilst there is a strong lobby against. It won’t want to disruption of us entering and then leaving again.

    *Or rather, someone would veto.
  • If Boris had the 100 votes I can't believe that the reason he didn't stand was for any of that unity-of-the-party crap. More likely a delegation of Tory grandees approached him and it went like this: 'Boris, you know all those lucrative executive positions you'll be offered when you leave parliament? Well, if you try to become PM again we'll make sure they never happen.'
  • Leon said:

    No, the pressure will come from within Labour circles. They are nearly all Remoaners. But they know Rejoin is too hard, for now, maybe for many decades. So they will say

    “We might only have one term. We could be out again in 2029. The opportunity will be gone forever. Do it. Single Market!”

    It will chime with Starmer’s own instincts

    Forget Starmer - Sunak is PM. Facing both an economy mired in almost / actual recession and a desperate need for tax revenues. Removing our trade barriers with Europe generates a whopping economic gain which means less cuts for services.
  • ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503
    Heathener said:

    This isn't a pop at you personally because a lot of people do this but is there any chance we could stop making comments about his height? It doesn't matter how short or tall he is.

    It matters whether he's a competent Prime Minister.
    That's a bit of a tall order.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    Nigelb said:


    “My view is the change of leader requires a General Election” JRM

    “A General Election iimpossible to avoid" - Nadine

    “A General Election is the only answer" - Christopher Chope
    If I was choosing Tory MPs to be executed by firing squad in order of iniquity, my first three names would be ....
  • Forget Starmer - Sunak is PM. Facing both an economy mired in almost / actual recession and a desperate need for tax revenues. Removing our trade barriers with Europe generates a whopping economic gain which means less cuts for services.
    There's no economic gain, since there's been no economic gain from EU membership, and no economic loss from Brexit.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    We did have that fallback available, but May and the Brexiteers ruled it out.
    Many of us who voted leave (especially those of us not driven by immigration) wanted and expected just that. Not because we felt the EEA/EFTA is the right long term home, but because it makes sense as a first step (and is enough to be getting on with) while you plan what comes next.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,945
    Jonathan said:

    Rees-Mogg is pathetic. Goodbye. Good-riddance. Hope you lose your seat next time.
    In 2017, after May screwed up her majority and Rees-Mogg was developing some 'Moggmentum', I said to a colleague I would pay £50 to see a General Election campaign between Mogg and Corbyn.
    It would've been a laugh a minute.

    Not sure it would've been good for the country, but a laugh a minute indeed.....
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005

    Oh dear. Jacob Rees-Mogg has resigned.

    There's the bust!
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    Pulpstar said:

    Some sort of associate membership without FoM (Of labour) might be the sweet spot for both parties. FoM cuts both ways.
    And I'm not sure that it will be "without" FoM - I think both parties need the ability to live and work across the EU, and can sell whatever the fudge is as a passporting deal.

    But I agree that it *will* be what happens; to get through the next 10 years, we all need the boost to the western economy that a deal between the EU and the UK would bring.
  • There's no economic gain, since there's been no economic gain from EU membership, and no economic loss from Brexit.
    Happy for you to continue repeating that mantra if it makes you feel better.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222

    There's no economic gain, since there's been no economic gain from EU membership, and no economic loss from Brexit.
    There's arguments for not rejoining the EU but that's simply wrong.
  • Who was most hated at the end? Mogg or Portillo?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    Heathener said:

    Hello.

    But ... hang on.

    Is this a change of mind? You come across today as in favour of this but only a matter of weeks ago you were pouring invective on "remoaners" and wokerati for their evil plotting that would see us rejoin the EU.

    I don't have a problem if you've changed your standpoint but have you?
    I’m merely observing a big shift in sentiment: in that poll. And noting that it gives Starmer a window of opportunity to get closer to the EU (and solve the NI issue)

    I detest the idea of Rejoining. I also think it is unlikely

    I am maybe persuadable on the SM. I was always a soft Leaver. I wanted us to go to EEA/EFTA as a holding position with minimal damage, then plot our course further out, over time
  • glwglw Posts: 10,361

    We did have that fallback available, but May and the Brexiteers ruled it out.

    True, but I meant Cameron's government should have had some plan if the referendum was lost. Not throw in the towel. You could say Leave should have had a plan, but they weren't in government. Essentially no planning followed by a partisan and dysfunctional parliamentary battle lead us to a pretty ropey deal.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    If Boris had the 100 votes I can't believe that the reason he didn't stand was for any of that unity-of-the-party crap. More likely a delegation of Tory grandees approached him and it went like this: 'Boris, you know all those lucrative executive positions you'll be offered when you leave parliament? Well, if you try to become PM again we'll make sure they never happen.'

    He’s not a pantomime villain. He’s not pure evil. All people are complex. He probably realised he’d only get to lead a leasable party AND honestly felt that would be bad for the country as well as him AND calculated his best chance of a second go is from opposition by acclamation.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    glw said:

    Only one third of the electorate even want to be in the single market. Whatever these polls tell us, it's not an endorsement of the EU in reality, the public are expressing dissatisfaction far more than they are wanting to rejoin the EU as it is.
    And less than 1/3 know what being in the single market means (on both the up- and the down- side). The players all argue from "belief" and "principle" and an ignorant electorate [again, I emphasise, on both sides of the argument] suits that kind polemic.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,945
    Leon said:


    If Starmer gets a large majority (still quite likely despite Sunak being not-entirely-mad) he will come under huge pressure to speed this up, for fear he only has one term. And he might only get one term as the economic situation will be perilous for years

    He might go for EEA/SM membership and say “times are so desperate we need to do everything we can to help British business, this is it”. And it might work

    Rejoin seems unlikely for a generation. It would require yet another energy-sapping, divisive referendum. Unappealing for any government
    To me, EFTA+ or EEA always felt right. Honours the referendum, wouldn't crash the economy (even more than its been crashed).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686

    Who was most hated at the end? Mogg or Portillo?

    You're suggesting Mogg might rehabilitate himself as a TV personality...
    Antiques Roadshow ?
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243
    Andy_JS said:

    Boris had 110 names according to this article.

    Just like Grant Shapps…
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,512

    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    2m
    Lot of people will be cheering Jacob Rees-Mogg’s departure. But he’s a decent man who always conducted his politics in a civil way.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    What happens if a minister gets asked to resign and they just say no ?
    Does the king remove said minister at the PM's request ?

    I know all sackings are officially resignations (I think !) but are they ever actual sackings by the king ?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,512
    Nigelb said:

    You're suggesting Mogg might rehabilitate himself as a TV personality...
    Antiques Roadshow ?
    Send him to the jungle.

    Two weeks without his valet.

  • Leon said:

    I’m merely observing a big shift in sentiment: in that poll. And noting that it gives Starmer a window of opportunity to get closer to the EU (and solve the NI issue)

    I detest the idea of Rejoining. I also think it is unlikely

    I am maybe persuadable on the SM. I was always a soft Leaver. I wanted us to go to EEA/EFTA as a holding position with minimal damage, then plot our course further out, over time
    Park remain as an option, drop "remoaner". What we have done has cost us billions. If Sunak wants to cut services less he can get those billions back into the economy by removing our self-imposed trading barriers. Not rejoin. Not even EEA yet. Just ending the petulant war and accepting we need them.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,476
    Mr. glw, the alternative prospectus (ie what would happen if we leave) should have been spelled out by the official Leave campaign, and that should have been a condition of the referendum. The blank space was a weird way to go because it was less fair to the electorate, and in Leave's interest, yet Cameron permitted it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,013
    Leon said:

    Decent speech by Sunak. But he is highly unlikely to win in ‘24. Starmer will take over… and do what?

    I’ve always thought - and said on here - that the EU would become an issue if the polls reached 60/40 in favour of Rejoin. No government can ignore that

    👇

    Dubious, a more in depth Blair institute poll last week had just 23% of voters overall and only 37% of Labour voters wanting to rejoin the full EU. Only most LD voters even wanted to join the EEA, a closer relationship outside both was preferred.

    Once it is explained to voters rejoining the EU means the Eurozone, Brussels and Frankfurt imposed austerity and free movement again the rejoin numbers collapse

    https://institute.global/policy/moving-how-british-public-views-brexit-and-what-it-wants-future-relationship-european-union

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548
    Heathener said:

    This isn't a pop at you personally because a lot of people do this but is there any chance we could stop making comments about his height? It doesn't matter how short or tall he is.

    It matters whether he's a competent Prime Minister.
    I'm the same height and do it. It's only funny if he's self conscious about it, which he shouldn't be given he's uber successful.

    If he's good the joke will die away.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,302


    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    2m
    Lot of people will be cheering Jacob Rees-Mogg’s departure. But he’s a decent man who always conducted his politics in a civil way.

    PMSL. Really?!
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    mwadams said:

    Labour line today seems to be:

    "Not a new start"
    "Rishi Sunak has been at the heart of 12 years of Tory failure"
    "Labour have made specific proposals"
    "Green Energy Tax/Green Propserity Plan"
    "Tories going in the wrong direction"
    and repetition of
    "High Tax, Low Growth Tory Economy"

    Actually telling us what they are rather than just telling us you have them would help!
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,617
    Leon said:

    60/40 is enough for Starmer to push for SM membership, especially at a time when business will be screaming for assistance

    That’s do-able for Labour. And Starmer is a staunch Remainer who wanted a 2nd vote

    It solves the NI problem. The EU will likely agree. FoM is the thorny bit. But in dark times I can see Starmer selling it successfully
    I agree. I think it almost inevitable if labour win next time
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    HYUFD said:

    Dubious, a more in depth Blair institute poll last week had just 23% of voters overall and only 37% of Labour voters wanting to rejoin the full EU. Only most LD voters even wanted to join the EEA, a closer relationship outside both was preferred.

    Once it is explained to voters rejoining the EU means the Eurozone, Brussels and Frankfurt imposed austerity and free movement again the rejoin numbers collapse

    https://institute.global/policy/moving-how-british-public-views-brexit-and-what-it-wants-future-relationship-european-union

    You mean we won't be getting austerity from Mr Sunak?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    edited October 2022
    mwadams said:

    And I'm not sure that it will be "without" FoM - I think both parties need the ability to live and work across the EU, and can sell whatever the fudge is as a passporting deal.

    But I agree that it *will* be what happens; to get through the next 10 years, we all need the boost to the western economy that a deal between the EU and the UK would bring.
    Facts matter. Being in the EU is worth a marginal gain in GDP in the same way as leaving it was worth a marginal loss (though lost Covid supply chain are localising a bit anyway). Neither is the cause of/answer to all of our problems.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,098
    Pulpstar said:

    What happens if a minister gets asked to resign and they just say no ?
    Does the king remove said minister at the PM's request ?

    I know all sackings are officially resignations (I think !) but are they ever actual sackings by the king ?

    I think they are automatically resigned when the PM goes. Unless they get asked back they are out
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,415
    edited October 2022
    Pulpstar said:

    There's arguments for not rejoining the EU but that's simply wrong.
    The UK grew more than the Eurozone in the 2010s "despite Brexit".

    If its cost us billions, its a rounding error. Seems like hubris to assume we would have outgrown them by even more without any evidence for that.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,098
    Wendy Morton summoned. In a world of mistakes by Liz Truss, many MPs think appointing Morton as chief whip was a worse blunder than the 45p tax rate
    https://twitter.com/ShippersUnbound/status/1584877335182180353
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,668

    There's no economic gain, since there's been no economic gain from EU membership, and no economic loss from Brexit.
    You don’t believe free trade brings economic gains? As a libertarian, you support barriers to trade???

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    mwadams said:

    Hang on a moment. Is Dan mistaking poor attempts at Latin translation delivered in RP tones, for being civil? He is one of the rudest, most dismissive, divisive politicians of his generation.
    I've never noticed him being rude, unless you count lying down in the commons as rude.
  • AlistairMAlistairM Posts: 2,005
    I hope Rishi keeps Steve Baker in post as NI Secretary. Seems to be building good relations in progress towards finding solutions there.

    It was fantastic to be in Cavan at BIPA yesterday to build relations and understanding on the various issues facing Ireland and Northern Ireland.
    https://twitter.com/SteveBakerHW/status/1584848013872316416
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754


    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    2m
    Lot of people will be cheering Jacob Rees-Mogg’s departure. But he’s a decent man who always conducted his politics in a civil way.

    LOL.

    Ask the civil service about his “civility”…
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,415
    edited October 2022

    You don’t believe free trade brings economic gains? As a libertarian, you support barriers to trade???

    I do think free trade brings economic gains, and we have a free trade agreement with the EU, just as I wanted us to have. And we don't need to spend a billion pounds a month in taxes for that agreement either.

    If we didn't have a free trade agreement and had tariffs etc then that would have caused much more disruption, but it didn't happen.

    And now we're out of the EU we have the opportunity to strike more free trade agreements like CPTPP. Truly having our cake and eating it too.
  • Brandon Lewis has been called to Rishi’s Commons office
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,476
    Betting Post

    F1: backed Perez each way to top qualifying in Mexico.

    He was a tenth off Verstappen last time.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,686
    HYUFD said:

    Dubious, a more in depth Blair institute poll last week had just 23% of voters overall and only 37% of Labour voters wanting to rejoin the full EU. Only most LD voters even wanted to join the EEA, a closer relationship outside both was preferred.

    Once it is explained to voters rejoining the EU means the Eurozone, Brussels and Frankfurt imposed austerity and free movement again...
    ... then you've skewed your poll numbers.

    The reality is that no politician is going to touch this for years.
    But the consensus that Brexit was a mistake will solidify over time, at which point the discussion begins.

    Trying to predict now how that might go in 5 or 10 years time is an exercise in futility.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,098
    Meet Rishi Sunak, Britain's new PM who is only 42, meaning he'll probably serve well into his 42-and-a-halves https://twitter.com/TheDailyShow/status/1584878439944921088/video/1
  • alex_alex_ Posts: 7,518
    mwadams said:

    Labour line today seems to be:

    "Not a new start"
    "Rishi Sunak has been at the heart of 12 years of Tory failure"
    "Labour have made specific proposals"
    "Green Energy Tax/Green Propserity Plan"
    "Tories going in the wrong direction"
    and repetition of
    "High Tax, Low Growth Tory Economy"

    12 year is a bit of a stretch - only been an MP since 2015 and Govt since 2018. Of course if you think they were on the right track until Brexit happened… (or was he an Osborne SPAD or something?)
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    edited October 2022
    Scott_xP said:

    I think they are automatically resigned when the PM goes. Unless they get asked back they are out
    Nope - they are individual appointments from the Crown. The PM changing doesn’t change their job. They have to be sacked or resign. If you resign you get to write the letter - hence JRM doing this.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,222
    Scott_xP said:

    Wendy Morton summoned. In a world of mistakes by Liz Truss, many MPs think appointing Morton as chief whip was a worse blunder than the 45p tax rate
    https://twitter.com/ShippersUnbound/status/1584877335182180353

    Given she was unable to follow her own 3 line whip on the fracking vote she really can't stay as chief whip.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,745
    biggles said:

    He’s not a pantomime villain. He’s not pure evil. All people are complex. He probably realised he’d only get to lead a leasable party AND honestly felt that would be bad for the country as well as him AND calculated his best chance of a second go is from opposition by acclamation.

    Boris’ political time has surely come and gone, now

    His job was

    1 win the Brexit referendum
    2 defeat Corbyn soundly
    3 do Brexit

    He did all that - and did pretty well on Ukraine and very well on vaccines

    Now he will soak up the money. He will not get a Churchillian Restoration
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,548
    edited October 2022

    PMSL. Really?!
    JRM is often incredibly rude and insulting. A civil tone does not mean someone is automatically polite, respectful, or decent.
  • biggles said:

    LOL.

    Ask the civil service about his “civility”…
    There isn't a single redeeming feature about Jacob Rees-Mogg.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Nigelb said:

    You're suggesting Mogg might rehabilitate himself as a TV personality...
    Antiques Roadshow ?
    A remake of the Barchester Chronicles, if he can be brought to be so modernist.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022

    Park remain as an option, drop "remoaner". What we have done has cost us billions. If Sunak wants to cut services less he can get those billions back into the economy by removing our self-imposed trading barriers. Not rejoin. Not even EEA yet. Just ending the petulant war and accepting we need them.
    What do you think can be done without rejoining the customs union or single market? If it's align on everything we might as well just rejoin the whole thing.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    Driver said:

    Actually telling us what they are rather than just telling us you have them would help!
    The only one they cite in the soundbite is the Green Energy Tax - contrasting their proposal with Sunak's resistance to voices including but not exclusively Labour's, and watered-down measures.

    I wonder if their plan is to develop individual policies "serially" so that they can "overwhelm" locally while not having to defend a "whole programme" until they reach the general election and the manifesto - testing them for popularity as they go.
This discussion has been closed.