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Some of the mathematics of the next general election – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 12,152
edited August 2023 in General
imageSome of the mathematics of the next general election – politicalbetting.com

At the next election there will be 650 parliamentary constituencies so in order to secure a majority, certainly as defined the bookmakers, LAB needs to come out with 326 MPs which is 124 more than their GE2019 haul.

Read the full story here

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Comments

  • Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    OHIO ISSUE 1 - amending state constitution to require 60% supermajority for future amendments

    with estimated 53% of votes counted statewide

    No 934,590 58.25%
    Yes 669,760 41.75%
  • MikeSmithsonMikeSmithson Posts: 7,382

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    OHIO ISSUE 1 - amending state constitution to require 60% supermajority for future amendments

    with estimated 53% of votes counted statewide

    No 934,590 58.25%
    Yes 669,760 41.75%

    So that is bad for GOP and Trump?
  • Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    OHIO ISSUE 1 - amending state constitution to require 60% supermajority for future amendments

    with estimated 53% of votes counted statewide

    No 934,590 58.25%
    Yes 669,760 41.75%

    So that is bad for GOP and Trump?
    Mobilizing opposition voters ain't what you'd call GOOD news . . . unless you're the opposition.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,502
    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."
  • OHIO Issue 1 with estimated 81% counted

    No 1,351,605 56.59%
    Yes 1,036,760 43.41%

    Constitutional amendment pushed by Buckeye GOPers to require 60% for passage of future state constitutional amendments, most especially pro-choice one on November 2023 ballot.

    Currently failing in all large counties, for example
    Cuyahoga (Cleveland) No 80%
    Franklin (Columbus) No 75%
    Lucas (Toledo) No 74%
    Summit (Akron) No 70%
    Hamilton (Cincinnati) No 69%
    Montgomery (Dayton) No 61%
    Stark (Canton) No 57%

    In contrast, Yes is leading in most of the rest of the state, including almost all rural & small town counties, with notable (and predictable) exception of Athens County in southeastern OH, home of Ohio University (not to be confused with The Ohio STATE University!)

    Note that the entire northeast corner of the great Buckeye State is voting No as a block = the Western Reserve. So called because it was part of western lands claimed by Connecticut, whose residents were granted right to make private land claims when area was ceded to federal government as part of the old Northwest Territory. Settled primarily by New Englanders, who made the area a stronghold of the young (and middle-aged) Republican Party.
  • Of course, landslide defeat of GOP-pushed Issue 1 does NOT mean that Biden and Democrats are gonna win Ohio next year.

    However, it does make that happening a bit less unlikely.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,502
    edited August 2023
    "Russians feared to be behind cyberattack on Electoral Commission
    Hackers accessed names and addresses in ‘complex’ security breach" (£)

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/electoral-commission-hack-exposes-millions-of-voter-details-jn588mjqc
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,502

    Ohio Very Special Election 2023 - Issue 1

    with 99% counted statewide

    No 1,674,428 56.65%
    Yes 1,281,485 43.35%

    Increase in Yes % as night wore on due, I think, to absentee and early in-person ballots being counted first, followed by ballots cast today (that is, Tuesday) at the polls.

    Perhaps worth noting, that above results are being reported four hours after polls closed in Ohio at 7.30pm local time (EDT). From all 88 of the state's counties, big and small, who do the counting.

    Showing that American election officials, administrators and workers are capable of a fast count - when there is just ONE thing on every ballot being counted.

    Which is NOT the norm for 99.46% of US elections.

    We often have only one thing on a ballot in the UK, with separate ballot papers being used if two different types of elections are happening at the same time. The exception is 2 or 3 member wards/divisions at local elections, which are more complicated to count.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 5,187

    Of course, landslide defeat of GOP-pushed Issue 1 does NOT mean that Biden and Democrats are gonna win Ohio next year.

    However, it does make that happening a bit less unlikely.

    Or does it help Republicans to get an issue that mobilises Democrat voters out of the way before next year?
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,018
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310
    On topic: vast numbers of voters are in play these days (who are all soft) as party loyalty is largely a thing of the past and we now have an era of mass fickleness.

    So (1) I don't think huge seat hurdles are a problem if the vote lead is huge and (2) what looks like a comfortable buffer could all disappear quickly once Labour are in office.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 35,958
    ...
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,084
    edited August 2023

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    "The breach involved the surname, initials, the rank or grade, the work location and departments of all PSNI staff, but did not involve the officers' and civilians' private addresses."

    Not the most exciting stuff. If you search biggest data breaches evah you'll find the private sector easily outperforms the state anyway. I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure to combat illegal immigration - the system already knows me as a taxpayer, car owner, NHS patient, passport holder...
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,012
    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,012
    @SeaShantyIrish2 , thank you for your ongoing efforts to keep us informed about US politics. It is useful, thank you.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    A GE is a GE, they all have their quirks and they are never enough to disqualify them. GE 17 was in many ways much weirder than 19.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,012
    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,509
    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Every new Home Secretary gets the ID cards talk from their permanent secretary in the first week. It’s been top of the HO civil service to-do list for three or four decades now.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    So, soft coercion. NHS appointments cost £25 if you don't produce one, or something.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,084
    edited August 2023
    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    So, soft coercion. NHS appointments cost £25 if you don't produce one, or something.
    Your airy dismissal of my point about GE2019, which has received a lot of support on here, does not endear me to you. I like cogent counter arguments, but airy arrogance? Not so much.

    As for ID cards, no thank you. And your £25 for a NHS appt without an ID card is straight out of the reactionary tory right. Do you work for the Party?

    I am very anti-state and whilst I recognise that these days this is a losing battle, it's one I intend to keep fighting.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 6,709
    edited August 2023
    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    So, soft coercion. NHS appointments cost £25 if you don't produce one, or something.
    ...and will never happen
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    Heathener said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    So, soft coercion. NHS appointments cost £25 if you don't produce one, or something.
    Your airy dismissal of my point about GE2019, which has received a lot of support on here, does not endear me to you. I like cogent counter arguments, but airy arrogance? Not so much.

    As for ID cards, no thank you. And your £25 for a NHS appt without an ID card is straight out of the reactionary tory right. Do you work for the Party?

    I am very anti-state and whilst I recognise that these days this is a losing battle, it's one I intend to keep fighting.
    You seem to be saying that M Smithson is repeatedly getting it wrong. I know who to believe.

    Full disclosure of my betting position: none open, I backed lab maj at 6 a couple of years back and cashed out at about evens.

    What's yours?
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    edited August 2023
    Sandpit said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Every new Home Secretary gets the ID cards talk from their permanent secretary in the first week. It’s been top of the HO civil service to-do list for three or four decades now.
    There was an interesting interview about this with David Davis a while ago. Popular support in the late 2000's turned from 80% in favour to 80% against after a data breach.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    As ever, in the Labour Party, there will be the “one last heave” activists - and Welsh & Scottish Labour are still following the old line. However, the more the debate is discussed and the better the public understands the less firm the grip of post modern queer theory becomes. There’s a reason Stonewall wanted “no debate”….Truth is the daughter of time.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,509

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855
    darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    The Dodds piece was 24 july, time enough for any shad cab min who wished to do so to distance themselves from it
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,084

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    Heathener said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
    Strange, I’d have thought you’d welcome Starmer stopping it being “a political football”

    A desire to stick to the progressive line has meant that Labour politicians have ended up saying baffling things like “A child is born without sex.” Some have attacked interviewers for even bringing up the subject, which just drew more attention to their tortured answers. Stuck arguing about the exact percentage of women who have a penis, Labour couldn’t talk about Britain’s housing crisis, high energy costs, crumbling infrastructure, poor economic growth, and high inflation.

    That era is now over, if rank-and-file Labour politicians want it to be. Two days after the Dodds column appeared, Starmer was asked to define woman. He responded simply, “An adult female.” If that answer is permissible in left-wing circles, interviewers have been deprived of an easy gotcha question, and Labour can go back to talking about economics and trying to win over the median voter.


    I do, why don’t you?
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,807

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    I doubt the issue will be settled just like that. There will be a lot of pressure from activists in the Labour Party, particularly in government, to revisit issues like this.

    The goal for a first term Starmer government is not to get distracted by culture war issues.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,208
    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    "The breach involved the surname, initials, the rank or grade, the work location and departments of all PSNI staff, but did not involve the officers' and civilians' private addresses."

    Not the most exciting stuff. If you search biggest data breaches evah you'll find the private sector easily outperforms the state anyway. I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure to combat illegal immigration - the system already knows me as a taxpayer, car owner, NHS patient, passport holder...
    The cover is blown for every undercover agent in the Northern Ireland Police, who have very strong reasons for their identity not to be known.

    I would say, exciting stuff.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578
    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,341
    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    It's the other way around. 2019 is about what you would have expected from the polls in early 2017 at the following election. It's close to what 1992 would have been without tactical voting (Tory majority 77 on UNS).

    2017 was a genuine fluke and a perfect storm. Just 56% of Labour voters voted for the party because they liked its policies or its leadership. The remaining 44% voted for a variety of reasons, many tactical, some to do with the EU. May was a significant issue, as was her manifesto (and not just the so-called 'dementia tax') but also there was concern about too large a Tory majority. None of those were really in play in 2019 and there was a reset.

    It is worth remembering it's not just in seats that Starmer faces a huge challenge. A 1997 style swing delivers a Labour majority of 1. And that assumes UNS, including in Scotland.

    The last time a party with a large majority suffered a complete wipeout in a peacetime election was in 1906. A better parallel here would be 1929, when changes in the electoral system (a wider franchise) and a lacklustre government coupled with a large third party delivered a hung Parliament.

    That's the likeliest outcome here still.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310
    Real gamblers don't say: this is absolutely going to happen and "bet accordingly"; they lay out their thinking, the risks and the pitfalls, and then say "Do Your Own Research."
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    Miklosvar said:

    darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    The Dodds piece was 24 july, time enough for any shad cab min who wished to do so to distance themselves from it
    I suspect the change and careful low key execution of it was fully discussed beforehand. This was not a series of “off the cuff” events, but a well planned and thoughtfully executed u-turn. Labour are serious about gaining power and Starmer will not let the gender religion get in its way.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310
    Heathener said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
    So Sir Keir Starmer is a right wing reactionary?
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    As ever, in the Labour Party, there will be the “one last heave” activists - and Welsh & Scottish Labour are still following the old line. However, the more the debate is discussed and the better the public understands the less firm the grip of post modern queer theory becomes. There’s a reason Stonewall wanted “no debate”….Truth is the daughter of time.
    My sense on this is that the new Labour party position is what most people who support trans rights think that they are actually supporting. There is a low level of understanding as to how extreme and illiberal the position of trans rights activists actually is.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310
    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    This one is an absolute corker.

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,341

    Heathener said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
    So Sir Keir Starmer is a right wing reactionary?
    Has BJO hacked your account?
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,084
    edited August 2023
    Miklosvar said:

    Heathener said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    So, soft coercion. NHS appointments cost £25 if you don't produce one, or something.
    Your airy dismissal of my point about GE2019, which has received a lot of support on here, does not endear me to you. I like cogent counter arguments, but airy arrogance? Not so much.

    As for ID cards, no thank you. And your £25 for a NHS appt without an ID card is straight out of the reactionary tory right. Do you work for the Party?

    I am very anti-state and whilst I recognise that these days this is a losing battle, it's one I intend to keep fighting.
    You seem to be saying that M Smithson is repeatedly getting it wrong.
    Yes I am.

    Mike is great but not infallible. He makes punting errors, as do we all. Notably he is less strong when it comes to Labour, better on Conservatives, and generally outstanding on LibDems. For reasons which should be all too clear. I have often followed his LibDem tips, notably on Chesham & Amersham which yielded for me a good win.

    Historically he has sailed with the wind. But the wind has changed in this country. At least for now. This is the first time for 30 years that the country has changed and appeared to embrace Labour in the polls. I don't think he, or a few others, have sufficiently realised the manner in which the tories have trashed their brand - worse than Black Wednesday. Historically it takes a decade to come back from that. 1979 - following the winter of discontent was similar. The covid-partygate-Liz Truss fiascos have left the tories reeling in the 20's and it's a sea-change from which they will not recover this parliament. It happens.

    I do also have something of an objection to a thread which purports to be about the mathematics of the next general election but within a few words contains the comment that 'Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.' He may not be, but that isn't a mathematical, let alone empirical, remark. It does contain an important point about the lack of love-in for Starmer's Labour but that may also be a reflection of people's weariness. Remember that despite Black Wednesday, the economy was in great shape in 1997. Tony Blair had it easy.

    My arguments that the true benchmark for the next GE is the GE of June 2017 (which wasn't 'weird') remain intact.

    GE2019 was a one-off. A unique midwinter 'Get Brexit Done' election. It is not a sound benchmark for the next election.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578
    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,341
    Heathener said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Heathener said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    So, soft coercion. NHS appointments cost £25 if you don't produce one, or something.
    Your airy dismissal of my point about GE2019, which has received a lot of support on here, does not endear me to you. I like cogent counter arguments, but airy arrogance? Not so much.

    As for ID cards, no thank you. And your £25 for a NHS appt without an ID card is straight out of the reactionary tory right. Do you work for the Party?

    I am very anti-state and whilst I recognise that these days this is a losing battle, it's one I intend to keep fighting.
    You seem to be saying that M Smithson is repeatedly getting it wrong.
    Yes I am.

    Mike is great but not infallible. He makes punting errors, as do we all. Notably he is less strong when it comes to Labour, better on Conservatives, and generally outstanding on LibDems. For reasons which should be all too clear. I have often followed his LibDem tips, notably on Chesham & Amersham.

    Historically he has sailed with the wind. But the wind has changed in this country. At least for now. This is the first time for 30 years that the country has changed and appeared to embrace Labour in the polls.

    And I do have an objection to a thread which purports to be about the mathematics of the next general election but within a few words contains the comment that 'Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.' He may not be, but that isn't a mathematical, let alone empirical, remark.

    My arguments that the true benchmark for the next GE are the GE of June 2017 (which wasn't 'weird') remain intact.

    GE2019 was a one-off. A unique midwinter 'Get Brexit Done' election.
    Unless you're saying Starmer *is* Tony Blair, it is empirical, if not mathematical.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,652
    ydoethur said:

    Heathener said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
    So Sir Keir Starmer is a right wing reactionary?
    Has BJO hacked your account?
    No
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331
    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,341

    ydoethur said:

    Heathener said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
    So Sir Keir Starmer is a right wing reactionary?
    Has BJO hacked your account?
    No
    You're right, silly me.

    If you had, the comment would have been simply 'Sir Kid Starver is a right wing reactionary!'
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    The key question of voters in 2024 will be "are you better off than you were 5 years ago?"

    For most of us the answer will be "No!".
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,509

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310
    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    I think he'll be delighted to have the activist Left opposing him on this.

    They really are his useful idiots.
  • The mention of Sinn Fein MPs is interesting - whilst they do not sit in the Commons they are in Westminster. I think the GB media largely ignore them but from what I can read they are active both as constituency MPs and in lobbying ministers.

    Should the elected Sinn Fein block be even bigger after the election, and should they start to project a presence in Westminster (from outside the Commons - would be entertaining if they swore allegiance for the purpose of destroying it but its unlikely), they could magnify the moaning from the remaining SNP/Alba/PC MPs.

    Won't affect the maths. Might affect the politics.

    Final point. Your average Sinn Fein MP does more work than Nadine Dorries.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 50,082
    ydoethur said:

    ydoethur said:

    Heathener said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    And off you go again.

    This topic is an obsession of right wing reactionaries and, on here, by yourself and two other people.

    I don't need a man to lecture me about what constitutes the biology of a woman thanks, not to pretend to be protecting me and my rights.

    This is a highly complex subject which should not be a political football, even less so part of a trolling war on a political betting forum.

    Have a nice day.
    So Sir Keir Starmer is a right wing reactionary?
    Has BJO hacked your account?
    No
    You're right, silly me.

    If you had, the comment would have been simply 'Sir Kid Starver is a right wing reactionary!'
    Shirley “Sir Kid Slaughterer is literally Hitler^3” ?
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    darkage said:

    darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    As ever, in the Labour Party, there will be the “one last heave” activists - and Welsh & Scottish Labour are still following the old line. However, the more the debate is discussed and the better the public understands the less firm the grip of post modern queer theory becomes. There’s a reason Stonewall wanted “no debate”….Truth is the daughter of time.
    There is a low level of understanding as to how extreme and illiberal the position of trans rights activists actually is.
    I saw Goody Rowling, in the barn, consorting with the devil!’ is the tone of every such outburst.

    https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/08/08/the-smear-campaign-against-jk-rowling/
  • boulayboulay Posts: 5,454
    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    When I lived in Switzerland i was legally obliged to carry my ID card/foreigner permit (carte des etrangers) at all times and if it was requested by the police or an official and I didn’t have it then I was liable to a fine. There was not one second where I felt that it was oppression by the state or an intrusion into my civil liberties.

    In fact it was actually great to have one as with it so many activities were quicker - opening a bank account, collecting a parcel, registering with a gov department re tax or similar - because it was an official compulsory ID card that no functionary would refuse to accept as ID.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 8,572
    edited August 2023
    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    I haven't read the paper behind the article, but this is another astonishing line:

    the poorest tenth of the population had been especially hard hit by Britain’s cost of living crisis and would need an income boost of £4,000 a year to have the same living standards they enjoyed in the year before Covid-19 arrived.
  • Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    And yet...

    In its quarterly update on the state of the economy, the NIESR said the poorest tenth of the population had been especially hard hit by Britain’s cost of living crisis and would need an income boost of £4,000 a year to have the same living standards they enjoyed in the year before Covid-19 arrived.

    The poorest households – hit by weak wage growth, higher debt, the need to devote more of their budgets to expensive energy, food and housing costs; and with few if any savings – would be 17% worse off by the end of 2024 than they were five years earlier. The richest households would be 5% worse off.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    None of this appears to be true, although you seldom miss an opportunity to repeat it.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,807
    edited August 2023
    boulay said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    When I lived in Switzerland i was legally obliged to carry my ID card/foreigner permit (carte des etrangers) at all times and if it was requested by the police or an official and I didn’t have it then I was liable to a fine. There was not one second where I felt that it was oppression by the state or an intrusion into my civil liberties.

    In fact it was actually great to have one as with it so many activities were quicker - opening a bank account, collecting a parcel, registering with a gov department re tax or similar - because it was an official compulsory ID card that no functionary would refuse to accept as ID.
    For me it comes down to this.

    Yes to an ID card to prove you are who you say you are, to access public services etc.

    No to a database of all my personal data that can be readily accessed by anyone performing any kind of public sector function.

    That was what the pre-2010 ID card proposal got wrong.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578
    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Real pay has gone down in the West Midlands, a key GE 24 battleground.

    It is a great Irony that Remania has thrived despite Brexit, while Leaverstan continues to slide.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,652
    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,648

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    Cheerio then!
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Real pay has gone down in the West Midlands, a key GE 24 battleground.

    It is a great Irony that Remania has thrived despite Brexit, while Leaverstan continues to slide.
    It was expected to be so given that the West Mids etc are relatively more reliant on exporting (and probably indeed small business exporting) to the EU than London.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    I won't be voting Labour, indeed 50/50 between LD and Green myself depending on how things develop in my constituency.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,742

    The mention of Sinn Fein MPs is interesting - whilst they do not sit in the Commons they are in Westminster. I think the GB media largely ignore them but from what I can read they are active both as constituency MPs and in lobbying ministers.

    Should the elected Sinn Fein block be even bigger after the election, and should they start to project a presence in Westminster (from outside the Commons - would be entertaining if they swore allegiance for the purpose of destroying it but its unlikely), they could magnify the moaning from the remaining SNP/Alba/PC MPs.

    Won't affect the maths. Might affect the politics.

    Final point. Your average Sinn Fein MP does more work than Nadine Dorries.

    Your average quadriplegic sloth does more work than Nadine Dorries.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 35,958
    Foxy said:

    It is a great Irony that Remania has thrived despite Brexit, while Leaverstan continues to slide.

    The xenophobic idiots who voted for Britain's decline largely got what they voted for...
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 50,082
    boulay said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    When I lived in Switzerland i was legally obliged to carry my ID card/foreigner permit (carte des etrangers) at all times and if it was requested by the police or an official and I didn’t have it then I was liable to a fine. There was not one second where I felt that it was oppression by the state or an intrusion into my civil liberties.

    In fact it was actually great to have one as with it so many activities were quicker - opening a bank account, collecting a parcel, registering with a gov department re tax or similar - because it was an official compulsory ID card that no functionary would refuse to accept as ID.
    Sigh.

    For the nth time. The problem isn’t the ID card. The problem isn’t the unique identifying code on it. The problem isn’t even the potential use of that unique code as a key on databases.

    The problem is that every single time ID cards have been proposed (and he time that they were, briefly, actually implemented), they come with an attempt to link all our personal information together. And link it to biometric data - finger prints, face recognition. etc. and the make it accessible to everyone.

    In the last such scheme, they were going to make everything the NHS had on you (for instance) available to council officials investigating fly tipping. When asked why, the response was that segregating data would be difficult and slow things down.

    So if your finger print day was stolen, you’d just have to get new finger prints, eh?

    It should be noted that personal for Important People (Politicians, senior civil servants, famous people who the government liked) *was* to be segregated. #NU10K

    The only saving grace was that such an insane breach of every concept of data security would have gone the way of all such government projects. Collapsed after spending billions. Though in this case it would have got to the data leaking stage
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578



    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Real pay has gone down in the West Midlands, a key GE 24 battleground.

    It is a great Irony that Remania has thrived despite Brexit, while Leaverstan continues to slide.
    It was expected to be so given that the West Mids etc are relatively more reliant on exporting (and probably indeed small business exporting) to the EU than London.
    Yes, expected by those of us who understood it.

    Still, black passports hey?
  • Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Do you think? The activist base is moderate and has been for decades. During their Kali Ma years all kinds of entryists suffering from the black sleep entered the party and were sent to conference by CLPs taken over by cultists. But they have largely all gone now, and the ones who are left sit at the back of meetings moaning but not actually doing.
  • Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Also thanks to Brexit, they are worse off despite their higher wages...
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,648
    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Total fiction again from our correspondent on the spot in the desert.

    Minimum wage was never the maximum wage in any industry, because... managers, of course.

    However, my guess, supported by anecdotal evidence here in the south west, is that a larger proportion of the workforce than ever are on the minimum wage.

    This report from February supports that but the change this year (minimum wage up by inflation, most wages up by less than inflation) will have increased the numbers on MW even further.

    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-7735/CBP-7735.pdf
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    Yes, I think the Tories have snookered themselves. It is hard to see any of those 3 fronts being contained next GE. While Scotland is unique, the other 2 fronts play out across most E and W constituencies. They are sociological rather than geographical waves.
  • Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    You do. Like TUSC. Who scored just FIVE votes in that council by-election you were crowing about a week or so back.

    The more the crank left foam on about "Kid Starver" the more you box yourselves back off into the political wilderness.

    Keep it up!
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,648

    boulay said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    When I lived in Switzerland i was legally obliged to carry my ID card/foreigner permit (carte des etrangers) at all times and if it was requested by the police or an official and I didn’t have it then I was liable to a fine. There was not one second where I felt that it was oppression by the state or an intrusion into my civil liberties.

    In fact it was actually great to have one as with it so many activities were quicker - opening a bank account, collecting a parcel, registering with a gov department re tax or similar - because it was an official compulsory ID card that no functionary would refuse to accept as ID.
    Sigh.

    For the nth time. The problem isn’t the ID card. The problem isn’t the unique identifying code on it. The problem isn’t even the potential use of that unique code as a key on databases.

    The problem is that every single time ID cards have been proposed (and he time that they were, briefly, actually implemented), they come with an attempt to link all our personal information together. And link it to biometric data - finger prints, face recognition. etc. and the make it accessible to everyone.

    In the last such scheme, they were going to make everything the NHS had on you (for instance) available to council officials investigating fly tipping. When asked why, the response was that segregating data would be difficult and slow things down.

    So if your finger print day was stolen, you’d just have to get new finger prints, eh?

    It should be noted that personal for Important People (Politicians, senior civil servants, famous people who the government liked) *was* to be segregated. #NU10K

    The only saving grace was that such an insane breach of every concept of data security would have gone the way of all such government projects. Collapsed after spending billions. Though in this case it would have got to the data leaking stage
    "...make it accessible to everyone..." sounds like utter bollocks, just saying. On what planet?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,341

    boulay said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    When I lived in Switzerland i was legally obliged to carry my ID card/foreigner permit (carte des etrangers) at all times and if it was requested by the police or an official and I didn’t have it then I was liable to a fine. There was not one second where I felt that it was oppression by the state or an intrusion into my civil liberties.

    In fact it was actually great to have one as with it so many activities were quicker - opening a bank account, collecting a parcel, registering with a gov department re tax or similar - because it was an official compulsory ID card that no functionary would refuse to accept as ID.
    Sigh.

    For the nth time. The problem isn’t the ID card. The problem isn’t the unique identifying code on it. The problem isn’t even the potential use of that unique code as a key on databases.

    The problem is that every single time ID cards have been proposed (and he time that they were, briefly, actually implemented), they come with an attempt to link all our personal information together. And link it to biometric data - finger prints, face recognition. etc. and the make it accessible to everyone.

    In the last such scheme, they were going to make everything the NHS had on you (for instance) available to council officials investigating fly tipping. When asked why, the response was that segregating data would be difficult and slow things down.

    So if your finger print day was stolen, you’d just have to get new finger prints, eh?

    It should be noted that personal for Important People (Politicians, senior civil servants, famous people who the government liked) *was* to be segregated. #NU10K

    The only saving grace was that such an insane breach of every concept of data security would have gone the way of all such government projects. Collapsed after spending billions. Though in this case it would have got to the data leaking stage
    Time to repost this admittedly brilliant analysis from a couple of years ago:

    I’ve always said I’m in favour of ID cards, if the following conditions are met:

    1) They’re issued for free

    2) You don’t have to carry them at all times

    3) You can use them chip and pin to access all government services - so they would replace passports and driving licences, not augment them

    4) That you had the power to access all information the government holds on you, and amend it where it is wrong

    5) That civil servants who access your data are logged, and you can see who they are and why they accessed it

    6) That if somebody has accessed your data inappropriately you have the right to take legal action against them, funded by the government.

    And numbers 4-6 will not happen while any civil servant breathes air.

    So - I oppose them.


    https://vf.politicalbetting.com/discussion/comment/3389196#Comment_3389196
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,943

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    OHIO ISSUE 1 - amending state constitution to require 60% supermajority for future amendments

    with estimated 53% of votes counted statewide

    No 934,590 58.25%
    Yes 669,760 41.75%

    So that is bad for GOP and Trump?
    It's not entirely connected to the presidential contest, though.
    Trump panders shamelessly to the religious extremists, but he's not one himself.
  • darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    I suspect a lot of the people that really care about this are now with the Greens. Those that aren’t can make some noise, but the vast majority of the party will be fine with the position reached. Largely because it’s the correct one - politically, morally and ethically.

  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,652

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Do you think? The activist base is moderate and has been for decades. During their Kali Ma years all kinds of entryists suffering from the black sleep entered the party and were sent to conference by CLPs taken over by cultists. But they have largely all gone now, and the ones who are left sit at the back of meetings moaning but not actually doing.
    How do you know.

    You sulked off long ago

    Are you back now?

    Was it Kid Starving that attracted you back?
  • Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Total fiction again from our correspondent on the spot in the desert.

    Minimum wage was never the maximum wage in any industry, because... managers, of course.

    However, my guess, supported by anecdotal evidence here in the south west, is that a larger proportion of the workforce than ever are on the minimum wage.

    This report from February supports that but the change this year (minimum wage up by inflation, most wages up by less than inflation) will have increased the numbers on MW even further.

    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-7735/CBP-7735.pdf
    Strong trade unions are the best guarantor of decent wages and working conditions there are.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 54,509
    Eabhal said:

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    I haven't read the paper behind the article, but this is another astonishing line:

    the poorest tenth of the population had been especially hard hit by Britain’s cost of living crisis and would need an income boost of £4,000 a year to have the same living standards they enjoyed in the year before Covid-19 arrived.
    Sadly, a massive increase in fuel prices has a larger impact on the poorest people.

    We can blame Vladimir Putin for that one.

    Fortunately, many people have managed to get better jobs than they had in 2019, which makes them better off than they would have been if they were still earning minimum wage, even if their living standard has declined in practice.

    Yes, I understand that this is difficult to sell electorally, most people are not better off now than they were four years ago.

    We should all be lobbying OPEC to start pumping oil, which will have the dual effects of reducing inflation and starving Putin of dollars.
  • Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Also thanks to Brexit, they are worse off despite their higher wages...
    Are you suggesting that Stuart Rose (wages would be expected to go up but that's not necessarily a good thing) was right about the economics even if he was foolish about soundbites?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,652

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    You do. Like TUSC. Who scored just FIVE votes in that council by-election you were crowing about a week or so back.

    The more the crank left foam on about "Kid Starver" the more you box yourselves back off into the political wilderness.

    Keep it up!
    LDs and Greens are anti Kid Starving alternatives
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295
    edited August 2023
    Foxy said:

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    Yes, I think the Tories have snookered themselves. It is hard to see any of those 3 fronts being contained next GE. While Scotland is unique, the other 2 fronts play out across most E and W constituencies. They are sociological rather than geographical waves.
    Tory unpopularity with the working age population is astonishing. I doubt there’s been anything like it in the history of two-party politics in this country.
  • Foxy said:

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    Yes, I think the Tories have snookered themselves. It is hard to see any of those 3 fronts being contained next GE. While Scotland is unique, the other 2 fronts play out across most E and W constituencies. They are sociological rather than geographical waves.
    I get the objection. "Labour can't win that many seats". And from a standing start that would be true. But as I pointed out:
    1. Red Wall Reversion to lifetime voting habits. Scores of seats flip blue to red - 2 points for each
    2. Scottish independence tide reverts now they realise Bully's Star Prize was a speedboat, and they live in Kilmarnock, and besides which the party have nicked the speedboat. 20-30 seats flip orange to red - 2 points for each
    3. Blue wall revulsion to "sink the boats" tendencies. Another 20-30 seats to flip blue to yellow - 1 point each as on paper the LDs would be in opposition to Labour, but we know in reality every party bar the DUP are ABC

    And that is just the reversion phase of the election. Then we go after the seats not involved in these three tidal movements, where we're not just resetting the 2017 and 2015 tides but pushing Red and Blue into places not won in a while. With a government this unpopular and unhinged, projections show all kinds of results are doable. Whilst I dismiss some of the more excitable predictions, you can see how it is achievable.

    Achievable. Not guaranteed.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 71,341

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    You do. Like TUSC. Who scored just FIVE votes in that council by-election you were crowing about a week or so back.

    The more the crank left foam on about "Kid Starver" the more you box yourselves back off into the political wilderness.

    Keep it up!
    LDs and Greens are anti Kid Starving alternatives
    I thought the Greens were in favour of organic farming, which is much more expensive and less productive?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,404

    boulay said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    viewcode said:

    Miklosvar said:

    Fishing said:

    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    https://news.sky.com/story/police-service-of-northern-ireland-in-major-data-breach-affecting-officers-and-civilian-staff-report-12936303

    "Every police officer in Northern Ireland has data compromised in 'monumental' breach due to human error

    The PSNI Assistant Chief Constable admitted the breach was made in "human error" and apologised to colleagues whose data was made public for two and a half to three hours."

    Amazingly, some dangerous idiots still want the government to have yet more of our intimate personal data, even though it's obvious they can't keep it safe. Last year Labour were advocating ID cards to control illegal immigration.
    ... I would regard id cards as a sensible and proportionate measure...
    UK 2020s politics is a long stream of illiberal measures designed to burden law-abiding citizens with whatever the fashionable nostrums of the day are. ID cards is a thing that keeps popping up, and it gets knocked down every time.
    Not very effectively knocked down then. It's about 1% as scary to me as the surveillance by facial/numberplate recognition/cell phone which goes on 24/7 so if it has any practical value let's do it.
    Again, coercing the individual. The question is not whether it is a good idea, but whether it is moral to fine/jail somebody for refusing to carry one. That would be state overkill.
    When I lived in Switzerland i was legally obliged to carry my ID card/foreigner permit (carte des etrangers) at all times and if it was requested by the police or an official and I didn’t have it then I was liable to a fine. There was not one second where I felt that it was oppression by the state or an intrusion into my civil liberties.

    In fact it was actually great to have one as with it so many activities were quicker - opening a bank account, collecting a parcel, registering with a gov department re tax or similar - because it was an official compulsory ID card that no functionary would refuse to accept as ID.
    Sigh.

    For the nth time. The problem isn’t the ID card. The problem isn’t the unique identifying code on it. The problem isn’t even the potential use of that unique code as a key on databases.

    The problem is that every single time ID cards have been proposed (and he time that they were, briefly, actually implemented), they come with an attempt to link all our personal information together. And link it to biometric data - finger prints, face recognition. etc. and the make it accessible to everyone.

    In the last such scheme, they were going to make everything the NHS had on you (for instance) available to council officials investigating fly tipping. When asked why, the response was that segregating data would be difficult and slow things down.

    So if your finger print day was stolen, you’d just have to get new finger prints, eh?

    It should be noted that personal for Important People (Politicians, senior civil servants, famous people who the government liked) *was* to be segregated. #NU10K

    The only saving grace was that such an insane breach of every concept of data security would have gone the way of all such government projects. Collapsed after spending billions. Though in this case it would have got to the data leaking stage
    Morning all!

    I didn’t like the last proposal for the reasons given, but given that I carry an OAP bus pass to say one should ‘never’ carry an ID card seems a bit silly.
  • Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    And yet...

    In its quarterly update on the state of the economy, the NIESR said the poorest tenth of the population had been especially hard hit by Britain’s cost of living crisis and would need an income boost of £4,000 a year to have the same living standards they enjoyed in the year before Covid-19 arrived.

    The poorest households – hit by weak wage growth, higher debt, the need to devote more of their budgets to expensive energy, food and housing costs; and with few if any savings – would be 17% worse off by the end of 2024 than they were five years earlier. The richest households would be 5% worse off.
    And yet ...

    Its almost as if two distinct things have happened. The pandemic, expensive food, energy etc is because of what has happened across the globe and would have happened with or without Brexit. That the cost of gas has shot up globally, and the UK relies upon gas, is not a Brexit issue.

    The fact that the cost of housing is so high is a British issue, but not a Brexit issue. Build more houses to solve that one.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,578
    edited August 2023

    darkage said:

    The Gender War Is Over in Britain
    While upholding trans rights, the Labour Party disassociates itself from radical postmodern theories.


    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2023/08/uk-trans-rights-labour-party/674944/

    A wise move politically, but i'm not sure how settled this issue really is in the labour party.
    I suspect a lot of the people that really care about this are now with the Greens. Those that aren’t can make some noise, but the vast majority of the party will be fine with the position reached. Largely because it’s the correct one - politically, morally and ethically.

    The correct one at the present time anyway. Some easing of the rules for gender recognition, but protection for some sex based rights. Politics cannot move faster than the populous on this. Both extremes will hate it, the vast majority will be content.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 21,295

    Sandpit said:

    Foxy said:

    "Despite the government’s focus on levelling up, the NIESR found wage growth had been fastest in London. It predicted real wage growth of 7% in the capital between the end of 2019 and 2024, compared with a fall of 5% in the West Midlands."

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/aug/09/risk-of-uk-recession-at-next-general-election-is-60-says-thinktank

    Brexit in action.
    Indeed. Minimum wage is no longer the maximum wage in many industries, especially so in London. Thanks to Brexit, unskilled employees have seen large rises in their pay, especially those who changed jobs during the pandemic.
    Also thanks to Brexit, they are worse off despite their higher wages...
    Are you suggesting that Stuart Rose (wages would be expected to go up but that's not necessarily a good thing) was right about the economics even if he was foolish about soundbites?
    No, no, don’t say that.
    It is the sole remaining shibboleth for Brexiters that “Stuart Rose let the cat out of the bag”.
  • Foxy said:

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    Yes, I think the Tories have snookered themselves. It is hard to see any of those 3 fronts being contained next GE. While Scotland is unique, the other 2 fronts play out across most E and W constituencies. They are sociological rather than geographical waves.
    And to an extent, the Conservatives were in trouble from the 20 March 2020. The moment the furlough scheme was announced, the government generosity cycle was yanked utterly out of synch with the electoral cycle.

    A brilliant government might have navigated that, but they had Johnson, Truss and co.
  • Foxy said:

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    Yes, I think the Tories have snookered themselves. It is hard to see any of those 3 fronts being contained next GE. While Scotland is unique, the other 2 fronts play out across most E and W constituencies. They are sociological rather than geographical waves.
    Tory unpopularity with the working age population is astonishing. I doubt there’s been anything like it in the history of two-party politics in this country.
    What possible reason is there at the minute for someone who works for a living to support the Tories?

    Sunak has made his bed and shown that working people only exist in his eyes to be taxed ever higher to provide welfare for those who don't work. That's something you can understand from Labour, but from the Tories?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,648
    O/T Surprised there's still a market for stolen mobiles. Don't the manufacturers have an option to permanently block a phone based on its hardware ID?

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/aug/09/nearly-two-fifths-of-robberies-in-london-last-year-were-for-mobile-phones
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    The point is that we are two nations.

    A handful of floating voters have joined Labour's tribe, out of exasperation with the Conservatives, and much of the other tribe will simply sit on their hands.

    That's what is different to GE2017, which was largely stalemated, and is what is going to deliver Starmer's majority. And, by the same token, means we could get another GE2017 result, or something like it, at the end of his 1st term.
  • Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    You do. Like TUSC. Who scored just FIVE votes in that council by-election you were crowing about a week or so back.

    The more the crank left foam on about "Kid Starver" the more you box yourselves back off into the political wilderness.

    Keep it up!
    LDs and Greens are anti Kid Starving alternatives
    The crank left like the Tories being in government. It means that stuff gets broken, people get beaten down and that makes them susceptible to crankist politics. Zero interest in power - actually making things better for people - because reality is compromise and the political dialectic bans compromise.

    For all of the ranting and the name calling and the attempts to belittle progressives, the simple realty is that the crankist left is Tory and always has been. Actual Tories want to profit economically off human misery, crankies want to profit ideologically off human misery. Same arse, different buttock.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 60,310

    Foxy said:

    Heathener said:

    Hard to find anything to argue with in OGH's summary. At least for yours truly!

    Morning all.

    @MikeSmithson keeps taking GE2019 as the benchmark. Whilst this looks right on paper, it's an illusion and for punters it's an error. GE2019 was a one-off 'Get Brexit Done' election to unblock the jam created during the Remainer Parliament. Boris Johnson galvanised the voters against the unelectable trotskyite anti-semitic Jeremy Corbyn with the sole aim of Getting Brexit Done. Hence the December election. In many ways GE2019 was NOT a General Election.

    The last proper General Election in the UK was June 2017, which resulted in a hung parliament. That's your benchmark.

    Bet accordingly.

    p.s. I'm personally very glad that Keir Starmer is no Tony Blair.
    I think I understand the point you are making - whilst the 2019 election is the status quo, its artificial. Ordinarily the Labour task would be considered politically unlikely - as we all said in the aftermath.

    But if we consider the 2019 result to be the aberration, then a revision to the norm can be expected to happen as the start of any new electoral move. There are swathes of red wall seats which endless polls have shows will not just revert to Labour but will deliver them 5 figure majorities.

    If we bake that 2017 reversion in, the task facing Starmer is much smaller, and much more attainable. Then we look at the two other political low tides from 2015 likely to come back in:

    The absence of unionist MPs in Scotland feels like a situation that can't be sustained - so expect 20-30 seats to switch from the motorhome party.
    The absence of yellow MPs in rural England is already a tide rushing back in. The focus is always on Labour, but as is clear it is the LibDems who will mop up disaffected sane voters in places where "Sink the Boats" makes people feel sick.

    So, we reset the Red Wall. We drain out the SNP flood. We remove the dam from the LibDems. And suddenly a thumping Tory defeat is not just possible, it feels likely. To stay in power they need to preserve all three of these artificial positions. Which politically means they need to be Janus, a task they are spectacularly failing to pull off.
    Yes, I think the Tories have snookered themselves. It is hard to see any of those 3 fronts being contained next GE. While Scotland is unique, the other 2 fronts play out across most E and W constituencies. They are sociological rather than geographical waves.
    Tory unpopularity with the working age population is astonishing. I doubt there’s been anything like it in the history of two-party politics in this country.
    Yes, it is deeply concerning.

    The only people they seem to look after (and protect from policy) is the retired and they've dug a hole so deep there I struggle to see how they get out now.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216

    Foxy said:

    Sandpit said:

    As a leader of a left-wing party, Starmer has sent an important sign by disassociating himself from the radical postmodern idea that the distinction between males and females is a social construct, and that biology has nothing to do with women’s historical oppression……

    Labour’s new position represents a big ideological shift, but it wasn’t presented as one. That is typical of Starmer’s personality, which is unshowy but ruthless. Unlike many American politicians on either side of the spectrum, he has tried to find a position that will make the debate less inflammatory, and to appeal to the wider country rather than his activist base.


    https://archive.ph/AlfFu

    There will be fireworks at the Labour Party conference this year! The activist base definitely won’t be approving of the change in stance, even if it’s the sensible thing to do.
    Yes, but once again it will be Starmer facing down the extremists.

    He is a very lucky general, but also adept at making his own luck.
    People who don't want Kids to starve are extremists now in his Party.

    Fortunately us compassionate "extremists" have other non kid Starving parties available.
    You do. Like TUSC. Who scored just FIVE votes in that council by-election you were crowing about a week or so back.

    The more the crank left foam on about "Kid Starver" the more you box yourselves back off into the political wilderness.

    Keep it up!
    LDs and Greens are anti Kid Starving alternatives
    I see the purity of powerless opposition has lost none of its charm.
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