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By wins for LAB in the byelections – politicalbetting.com

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  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238
    Dura_Ace said:

    ...sunak.xlsx...

    I'm stealing that... :D

  • nico679 said:

    It’s notable that Starmers word de jour is “ humble “.

    He mentioned this several times today.

    Let's get ready to humble!
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    Lock him up !

    New York judge threatens to jail Trump for ‘blatantly’ violating gag order
    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/oct/20/new-york-judge-threatens-jail-trump-gag-order
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,202
    darkage said:

    https://www.rightmove.co.uk/properties/137759765#/floorplan?activePlan=1&channel=RES_BUY

    Here is a 50 sqm house - with about 20% of the floor area being lost to stairs.
    A one bedroom “house”.
    I’d call this a granny-flat.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,339

    Corbyn enjoyed a "takeaway dinner" with the person being interviewed.

    https://www.pressreader.com/uk/the-jewish-chronicle/20180823/281651075962191
    "What did you talk about?"

    "Well, frankly it was a normal dinner. We talked about the weather, and how our kids are doing. And how millions of deaths are justified in order to free their lands of the Jews. I was most taken aback by his choice of the chow mein as a starter..."
  • In DC, Jim Jordan being nominated for Speaker by . . . wait for it . . . Kevin McCarthy.

    This oughta be good . . . in some manner of speak(er)ing.

    Remind me of how, in the May 1940 "Norway Debate" in HoC, the closing speech in support of Neville Chamberlain was give by . . . Winston Churchill.

    Except that back then, WSC was on the way up . . . whereas KMcC is on the path to . . .

    Already lost with plenty of votes to go, and Brian Fitzpatrick confirmed as a further loss by Jordan (as he'd indicated yesterday).
  • Chris said:

    And looking at the clothes the members of the band are wearing, the Nazi references are extremely clear.

    And by extension, that clearly makes Greta Thunberg a Nazi too.

    I apologise for ever doubting it. I must confess I didn't understand how the new social media logic worked!
    Worse than a Nazi, Greta's a hypocrite. She wants us to stand with Gaza but she is sitting down.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,775

    .

    It is.

    Deal with the planning issue that adds 1000% to the cost of unplanned land on average, and the problem is solved.

    Its been done in countries around the planet.

    Getting the state involved in housebuilding is no solution and just further politicises that which needs to be depoliticised. Getting the state to fix the problem blocking housebuilding is a solution.
    Agree about loosening up planning. As for the argument in general - your central thrust is strong and not wrong but you simplify and overegg like Malmesbury, so I refer you to my conversation with him, otherwise I'll be typing out almost duplicate posts, which nobody wants to see.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    kinabalu said:

    Ok. Terrific. But your 1st point stands nicely on its own so why that 2nd 'immigration' comment again? It's like you're saying the 1st thing mainly in order to say the 2nd.

    That's the sense I get.
    It's about choices

    1) Immigration and infrastructure increase to match
    2) Zero Immigration and no infrastructure increase
    3) Immigration and no infrastructure increase

    We are doing 3). This won't work. Physically. Reality says no.

    1) will work.
    2) will work.

    The moral and social arguments between 1 and 2 are separate. I prefer 1. Turning the country into Japan is also *possible* - but I don't *want* that.

    It is also a fact that as a result of doing 3) we *have* to do the infrastructure to match, or stagger on in a continual edge-of-failure mode.

    Quite a lot of Greens claim they want 3) - but I wonder which way they will break when the reality hits.

  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 23,373
    edited October 2023
    darkage said:

    There are a few points here.
    Size - 70sqm is the minimum possible size for a 2 storey house under the technical housing standards. Most family sized houses are more like 90-100 sqm.
    The build cost calculator you linked to is from a website marketing tradesmans services. A better one is on the website 'build-it' linked to below. But the figure of £1700/£1800 sqm is generally possible in theory in the North.
    The increase though is exponential with 10 years ago, they have doubled.

    Build costs are only technically about building, you still have to resolve other issues, like services, in addition to land. Obviously there are planning payments/contributions as well IE through the community infrastructure levy, but if you remove them, how do you fund for the new roads/motorways?

    https://www.self-build.co.uk/build-cost-calculator/
    I didn't say 2 bed Semi, I said starter home.

    60-70 sqm is fine for a flat as a starter home, which as we've determined is from less than £90k build costs, including labour. So can you get a 60-70 sqm flat in London or Manchester for not that much more than £90k? Or a 100sqm semi from not much more than £140k?

    If not, why not?

    Could the answer be . . . land + consent?
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405

    Worse than a Nazi, Greta's a hypocrite. She wants us to stand with Gaza but she is sitting down.
    As long as she doesn't try to make me stand with Gazza. I've still not forgiven him for that goal against Scotland in Euro 96.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238

    A one bedroom “house”.
    I’d call this a granny-flat.
    I'd buy it if I could afford it! It's freehold and has a living room separate from the kitchen. You sleep in the living room, lodger in the bedroom, £625pcm from your lodger for 4 nights a week, tax free and short occupancy not affecting your council tax, job's a good-un. I have seen a lot worse.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,785

    If the Tories have any sense they'd do well to listen to this kind of analysis. Mind you, if the Tories had any sense neither they nor the country would be in the absolute state they are now.
    Translation: I'd never vote Tory, but I'd like them to align with all my political views, and then lose bigly in the election so my guy can come in, kthxbye.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    kinabalu said:

    Again, I 100% agree Supply is key - but there other important factors. We've touched on a few: Rates. Social Housing. Developers Business Practices. Private Sector Landlords. Financialization vs Place To Live. It's not just Supply. We have a particular (and rather weird) approach to the whole topic in this country. It reminds me of our private schools fetish slightly. I think it comes from the same place. I don't suppose you know what I'm talking about. I wonder if I do? Yes, I think so but one can never be sure.

    But ok, there's only one way to finish this, forget all of the above and let me say here and now with no clutter or caveat - we should BUILD MORE HOUSES. There. :smile:
    It's a bit like tulips. Mad scarcity vs demand and they become a financial instrument. Sufficient supply and they go back to being nice flowers.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Very true. When I lived in Luffy, I went to Nottingham probably 5 times as often as Leicester.
    Just a far superior city.
  • Who knew you could have a fury wank over a kid's stuffed octopus? Never ever underestimate PB.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076
    Sandpit said:

    Yes, their daily politics is about the value of stuff sent to Ukraine, but with no discussion about how their valuations are derived.

    A bunch of stuff that was going to be scrapped next year anyway, is worth nothing to any company that does accounts. Shipping it to Ukraine costs a few tens of thousands, not tens of billions. So send every ATACMS and HIMARS left in the stocks, we’ve already seen how good they are in theatre in Ukraine.
    Yes a bunch of clowns. Claiming the billions they have supposedly spent when in fact most of what they have sent is zero cost as it was to be scrapped and has actually saved them money. They could have really helped the Ukranians a lot more instead of shilly shallowing and dargging out every item. Germany are another lot that take forever to do anything.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    eek said:

    The 40% who can't be bothered to vote aren't rampant right wingers they are likely to be middle of the road centralist voters who aren't that bothered by SKS winning and Labour being in power from 2024 onwards.

    So why on earth are the Tory party seeking right wing voters at the expense of the middle of the road centralist former Tory voter...
    Worth remembering that to most people, a crazed political anorak is someone who knows the name of their MP.

    To the "normal" people, the mood music is on "The Conservatives are shit" and "Labour are quietly OK".

    there's not much that can change that now - certainly not going down weird byways like the woke comedy.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,648
    .

    Translation: I'd never vote Tory, but I'd like them to align with all my political views, and then lose bigly in the election so my guy can come in, kthxbye.
    Dude, they're going to lose bigly with their current nonsense.
    Who are you trying to kid ?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177

    Worse than a Nazi, Greta's a hypocrite. She wants us to stand with Gaza but she is sitting down.
    Piece of advice about Metallica. Be careful. Or their drummer will come round your house with 10,000 lawyers.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,276
    edited October 2023

    Translation: I'd never vote Tory, but I'd like them to align with all my political views, and then lose bigly in the election so my guy can come in, kthxbye.
    There is a common feeling of despair among habitual Conservative voters despite 13 years in government. This is curious but I *think* that these voters feel that although their party has long been in government it has not been in power. If that makes any sense?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177

    As long as she doesn't try to make me stand with Gazza. I've still not forgiven him for that goal against Scotland in Euro 96.
    But he'll rock up at yours with a takeaway, beer and a fishing rod.

    Hamas would never do that for you.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,497

    60-70sqm is plenty for a starter home, as is semi-detached, and even self-builds (with hired trades) can be £1400 as per the source I shared.

    So anywhere in the country a home ought to be affordable for £1500 * 60 = £90,000 build cost. Even making it 100sqm which is above the national average still means from £140,000 in build costs. Which includes parts and labour, including the profit on the labour, and would bring prices right back in line with historical norms.

    If house prices are considerably higher than that, its because of problems elsewhere in the supply chain. Problems which can be fixed, like land & planning.
    It's all the land. I remember reading somewhere that in the 1930s the land was 2% of the cost of a house, while today it's 60-70% on average. Nor is there any mystery as to why, because when you get planning permission to build on farmland, its value can rise by 1000x. The pricing mechanism is telling us that we desperately need houses, and don't really need farmland, yet for some reason in this country we make building houses fantastically difficult and subsidise and protect virtually useless farmers.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    edited October 2023
    https://www.reuters.com/world/finland-contacts-china-russia-regarding-baltic-sea-pipeline-investigation-2023-10-20/

    An investigation into the damage to the Balticonnector gas pipeline is currently focused on the role of the Chinese NewNew Polar Bear container vessel, Finland's National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) said on Friday.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,954
    edited October 2023

    Piece of advice about Metallica. Be careful. Or their drummer will come round your house with 10,000 lawyers.
    Their litigiousness led to one of one of my bits of schaudenfraude ever, in which their own live stream was replaced by 8 bit elevator music due to DMCA legislation.

    Edit: Link to better, longer clip: https://www.stereogum.com/2116933/metallica-twitch-concert-audio-swapped-with-twinkly-8-bit-music-because-of-copyright-fears/news/
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Who knew you could have a fury wank over a kid's stuffed octopus? Never ever underestimate PB.

    Makes you wonder what PB would do if I put a pic of my stuffed koala on.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155
    Stocky said:

    There is a common feeling of despair among habitual Conservative voters despite 13 years in government. This is curious but I *think* that these voters feel that although in government their party has not been in power. If that makes any sense?
    Which comes down to dangerous conspiracist nonsense to excuse the failures of Conservative government.
  • Fishing said:

    It's all the land. I remember reading somewhere that in the 1930s the land was 2% of the cost of a house, while today it's 60-70% on average. Nor is there any mystery as to why, because when you get planning permission to build on farmland, its value can rise by 1000x. The pricing mechanism is telling us that we desperately need houses, and don't really need farmland, yet for some reason in this country we make building houses fantastically difficult and subsidise and protect virtually useless farmers.
    100%

    Return land back to circa 2% of the cost of the house and your average house would cost about £100k.

    Today's housing costs just make no sense, economically or otherwise.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    @KevinASchofield

    Update: The BBC says Tim Davie meets a range of people as part of his role and will also be meeting with Labour parliamentarians in the coming weeks.

    But Labour sources say there’s no plans for him to address a meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,339
    Carnyx said:

    Makes you wonder what PB would do if I put a pic of my stuffed koala on.
    I really hope that's not a euphemism...
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    I might have written Pakistan off too soon @Sandpit

    Big chase on in Bangalore.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited October 2023
    Looks like a close finish at the cricket world cup, for practically the first time in the competition.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/live/cricket/66858257
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I really hope that's not a euphemism...
    No, it really exists (actually my mum's, dad brouight it back from Oz when in the navy). I do wonder what hidden meanings our Wokehunters would discern in it.
  • I might have written Pakistan off too soon @Sandpit

    Big chase on in Bangalore.

    3 sixes in last five balls certainly makes it more viable.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,078
    @benrileysmith

    JUST IN: Rishi Sunak's first comments on the pair of by-election defeats. "Obviously disappointing results"

    “It’s important to remember the context. Mid-term by-elections are always difficult for incumbent governments and of course there are also local factors at play here"
  • I want Pakistan to win, because of traditional support anyone against Australia.

    But looking at table, should we want Australia to win to help England's chances of getting through to Semis?
  • Carnyx said:

    Makes you wonder what PB would do if I put a pic of my stuffed koala on.
    I heard a koala was the mascot of the SS Sturmbrigade-Dirlewanger.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited October 2023

    I want Pakistan to win, because of traditional support anyone against Australia.

    But looking at table, should we want Australia to win to help England's chances of getting through to Semis?

    Fair point. Let's just enjoy the match, I guess. (Like you, I was, of course, rooting for Pakistan)
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238

    I really hope that's not a euphemism...
    I'm wondering what he stuffed it with.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238
    "Mid-term"

    (OK, being fair to him is that actually true? It's 3yrs and 10mths since GE2019. Is this technically "mid-term"?)
  • Translation: I'd never vote Tory, but I'd like them to align with all my political views, and then lose bigly in the election so my guy can come in, kthxbye.
    Reminds me of the PB Tories of yore, when they wanted the LDs to replace the Labour party while simultaneously agreeing with Tory policies.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076

    There is enough room for pedestrians to walk beside the phone mast, and probably wheelchair users too. Cyclists should be in the road imo and not terrorising pedestrians but in any case there is enough space for them too, even if they have to slow down and pass in single file.
    It is a show, a blind man would have located it better. Must have been a moron of the highest order that installed that.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,521

    Already lost with plenty of votes to go, and Brian Fitzpatrick confirmed as a further loss by Jordan (as he'd indicated yesterday).
    Jordan has lost three more Republicans.

    Another episode of Shitshow beckons.
  • viewcode said:

    "Mid-term"

    (OK, being fair to him is that actually true? It's 3yrs and 10mths since GE2019. Is this technically "mid-term"?)

    Yes I think that's fair. Using 2015 as precedence, Tories never had a single poll lead between March 2012 until May 2014.

    Even then, those polls seemed rogues, the Tories weren't consistently level-ish or in the lead in the polls as often as behind until 2015 itself.
  • viewcode said:

    "Mid-term"

    (OK, being fair to him is that actually true? It's 3yrs and 10mths since GE2019. Is this technically "mid-term"?)

    It might very well be the mid-point of his term as PM given he's been in post since October 2022, and October 2024 is pretty heavily tipped as General Election month.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,978
    malcolmg said:

    Yes a bunch of clowns. Claiming the billions they have supposedly spent when in fact most of what they have sent is zero cost as it was to be scrapped and has actually saved them money. They could have really helped the Ukranians a lot more instead of shilly shallowing and dargging out every item. Germany are another lot that take forever to do anything.
    If so, its possibly a mistake. It's allowing the nutcase MAGA Republicans to zero in the cost as an excuse for pulling support.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,287
    Scott_xP said:

    @benrileysmith

    JUST IN: Rishi Sunak's first comments on the pair of by-election defeats. "Obviously disappointing results"

    “It’s important to remember the context. Mid-term by-elections are always difficult for incumbent governments and of course there are also local factors at play here"

    Mid of his term I guess

    Seems like a copy and pasted comment really
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited October 2023

    That’s not how I remember it. And I was there.
    Thatcher was the most rightwing Tory leader since at least Bonar Law when she was elected, that is just the reality. Few gave her a hope of beating Wilson or then Callaghan when she became leader.

    Indeed a year or 2 into her leadership some Tory MPs even wanted to bring back Ted Heath
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076

    A one bedroom “house”.
    I’d call this a granny-flat.
    Worth about 50K max, you woudl have to be off your rocker to pay that kind of money for a rabbit hutch.
  • I might have written Pakistan off too soon @Sandpit

    Big chase on in Bangalore.

    You cursed them!

    Both set batsman out in quick succession after you wrote this.
  • https://www.reuters.com/world/finland-contacts-china-russia-regarding-baltic-sea-pipeline-investigation-2023-10-20/

    An investigation into the damage to the Balticonnector gas pipeline is currently focused on the role of the Chinese NewNew Polar Bear container vessel, Finland's National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) said on Friday.

    That is worrying, if China is joining Russia is sabotaging Western infrastructure.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,177
    viewcode said:

    "Mid-term"

    (OK, being fair to him is that actually true? It's 3yrs and 10mths since GE2019. Is this technically "mid-term"?)

    Fair? fair?!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzZO4lxCRys
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited October 2023
    kinabalu said:

    I think having Sunak as leader rather caps the number of Reform voters they can win back.
    True but the more Tories lose voters to Reform and stay home, not just Labour or LD, the more the Conservatives will move further right in opposition to try and win them back
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I want Pakistan to win, because of traditional support anyone against Australia.

    But looking at table, should we want Australia to win to help England's chances of getting through to Semis?

    Fair point.

    You cursed them!

    Both set batsman out in quick succession after you wrote this.
    Yep, sorry.
  • theakestheakes Posts: 958
    By elections coming up in January at Blackpool South and Wellingborough?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,194
    Pretty damning opinion of Sunak and his policies, even by Con voters in todays Yougov daily:


  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,076

    I didn't say 2 bed Semi, I said starter home.

    60-70 sqm is fine for a flat as a starter home, which as we've determined is from less than £90k build costs, including labour. So can you get a 60-70 sqm flat in London or Manchester for not that much more than £90k? Or a 100sqm semi from not much more than £140k?

    If not, why not?

    Could the answer be . . . land + consent?
    Another squadron of pigs flew past my window, when will they sedate you. Like a broken record.
  • Jordan has lost three more Republicans.

    Another episode of Shitshow beckons.
    I'm not sure there's a way forward for him with 194 votes on that one, down from 200 and 199 in the first two. McCarthy never dropped below 200 in the 15 votes in his Speaker battle in January. The very aggressive tactics have also clearly deeply upset a group of Republicans. It's hard to see a route, and I wonder if Jordan is gone.
  • malcolmg said:

    Another squadron of pigs flew past my window, when will they sedate you. Like a broken record.
    There is no reason other than politics for our current housing crisis or insane housing prices.

    So its entirely apt for a political discussion.

    Worth noting that at that price level house to income ratios would return back to what they were . . . in the 1990s. Not exactly a century ago.
  • rcs1000 said:

    McCarthy knows that Jordan will not be elected Speaker, and is therefore sensibly burnishing his conservative credentials by nominating him. If Jordan continues to lose votes, then the (eventually) the Republicans will be forced to look for a compromise candidate who with the impeccable credentials of having backed Jordan.

    Step forward Kevin McCarthy.

    At least, that I think is McCarthy's plan.
    Agree with the burnishing part, no so much with the step forward bit.

    Most interesting number from today vote = 6 = number of GOPers who voted for Patrick McHenry (aka KMcC's Mini-Me).

    Which (I think) which I think is a signal in favor of making him Acting Speaker, so that House can actually do something other than sit around waiting for yet another performance of the Rabid Squirrel Flying Circus.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    @ElectionMapsUK
    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 48% (+4)
    CON: 27% (-1)
    LDM: 10% (+1)
    RFM: 7% (=)
    GRN: 4% (-2)
    SNP: 2% (-1)

    Via
    @Omnisis
    , 19-20 Oct.
    Changes w/ 12-13 Oct.
    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1715361114958000233?s=20
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,841
    Scott_xP said:

    @benrileysmith

    JUST IN: Rishi Sunak's first comments on the pair of by-election defeats. "Obviously disappointing results"

    “It’s important to remember the context. Mid-term by-elections are always difficult for incumbent governments and of course there are also local factors at play here"

    What else can he say? He's the biggest serial loser in British politics since Gordon Brown and his "response" is very Brownian...
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238

    Fair? fair?!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzZO4lxCRys
    To be, or not to be?

    (Big explosion in background. Lights cigar)

    Not to be... :)
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712
    HYUFD said:

    @ElectionMapsUK
    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 48% (+4)
    CON: 27% (-1)
    LDM: 10% (+1)
    RFM: 7% (=)
    GRN: 4% (-2)
    SNP: 2% (-1)

    Via
    @Omnisis
    , 19-20 Oct.
    Changes w/ 12-13 Oct.
    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1715361114958000233?s=20

    Labour majority of 274 there....
  • I'm not sure there's a way forward for him with 194 votes on that one, down from 200 and 199 in the first two. McCarthy never dropped below 200 in the 15 votes in his Speaker battle in January. The very aggressive tactics have also clearly deeply upset a group of Republicans. It's hard to see a route, and I wonder if Jordan is gone.
    Jim Jordan (aka Coach Jockstrap) is a WRECKER impure & simple, that's what his entire political career is all about.

    Don't bet on him folding his toxic tent anytime soon . . . unless you get VERY good odds, or it some kind of fancy spread betting thing.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,521

    I'm not sure there's a way forward for him with 194 votes on that one, down from 200 and 199 in the first two. McCarthy never dropped below 200 in the 15 votes in his Speaker battle in January. The very aggressive tactics have also clearly deeply upset a group of Republicans. It's hard to see a route, and I wonder if Jordan is gone.
    We can hope. He is an even bigger PoS than Trump.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,978
    HYUFD said:

    Thatcher was the most rightwing Tory leader since at least Bonar Law when she was elected, that is just the reality. Few gave her a hope of beating Wilson or then Callaghan when she became leader.

    Indeed a year or 2 into her leadership some Tory MPs even wanted to bring back Ted Heath
    I can remember that there was a sense that Labour were doing OK under Callaghan who seemed experienced and reassuring. The Winter of Discontent did for that, and for him. Nothing inevitable at all about Mrs T winning in 79. The hubris of the unions is wot won it.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    edited October 2023

    I constantly ignore the arguments on the economic benefits of HS rail, as you put it, because many of them are rubbish, pulled out of various anti's odorous posteriors.

    Again, if the economic benefits of HS rail are so poor, as you think, then why is every major country, bar the US, building them? What do you know that they do not?

    As for HS2's cost over-runs, they are themselves overplayed; you may want to read the following thread:
    https://twitter.com/kitchentowel/status/1712546872802599273

    Also remember that the WCML Upgrade of the early 2000s was delivered years late after massive disruption, under-specification (*) and ten times over budget.

    (*) No new signalling system and no 140MPH running
    LOL. I never knew the OECD was oderous anti. Nor the EU. Both of whom have produced reports showing that HS rail systems in France such as the TGV Mediterranean had little to no impact on overalll GDP and certainly nothing recordable for the region itself.

    And just to remind you that you were the one pouring your normal scorn on the £85 billion cost projection a couple of years ago - which is now considered to be an underextomate even by the most ardent advocates of the programme.

    Why should we trust you on this when you have been so consistently wrong?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    GIN1138 said:

    What else can he say? He's the biggest serial loser in British politics since Gordon Brown and his "response" is very Brownian...
    Well we are 13 years into a Tory government as Brown was 13 years into a Labour government in 2010, the only other time a government got under 30% this century (as polls suggest Sunak's will).

    Sunak has more money in retirement however than Gordon did
  • NYT live blog - The eight Republicans led by Matt Gaetz of Florida who voted to oust Kevin McCarthy as speaker have sent a letter to their colleagues saying they are willing to accept some form of punishment if that will move holdouts to vote in favor of Jim Jordan.

    SSI - likely reply from their colleagues (I paraphase) - Go eat (more) shit and bark at the moon!
  • I can remember that there was a sense that Labour were doing OK under Callaghan who seemed experienced and reassuring. The Winter of Discontent did for that, and for him. Nothing inevitable at all about Mrs T winning in 79. The hubris of the unions is wot won it.
    In hindsight, it is easy to believe the Unions were doing it on purpose.
  • Fishing said:

    We need to BUILD MORE HIGH QUALITY AND ATTRACTIVE HOUSES WHERE PEOPLE ACTUALLY WANT TO LIVE. If we just focus on numbers, like we did in the 50s and 60s, we'll just end up with prefab slums, many of which are either barely inhabitable or have to be pulled down in a few decades, and all of which are eyesores. Big developers and government only care about short-term profits and numbers respectively.And if we build them places where nobody wants to live (e.g. much of the North), we'll just attract the dregs and they'll become sink estates.

    Whitehall is so captured by the big developers and so contempuous of the people who pay its salaries that this staggeringly obvious solution isn't on the agenda, but it's difficult to see how to fix the housing crisis sustainably and long-term without a big expansion of self-build, from 10% now to the levels seen in France or Germany (60%) or Austria (80%).
    35 years ago, just under 40% of all new houses were built by SME housebuilders. Now that figure is 10%. A major issue is that the red tape surrounding the whole process is so gargantuan and expensive that only the largest housebuilders can cope. Planning only forms one part of this, and focussing on this alone will not solve the overriding issue.

    Large housebuilders will focus only on very large developments (where numbers of units are in their 100s), and, yes, sure, these sort of plots are becoming harder to find. But there are massive numbers of smaller plots (where, say, 20-50 houses could be built) that SMEs could buy, obtain planning and develop, were it made viable for them to do so.

    The biggest thing a government can do is to make it an attractive option for people to set up small housebuilding companies, and make it easier for current SMEs to cope with the ever burgeoning regulations. Get that ratio between large/small housebuilders back up from 90/10 to 75/25 Sadly, I don't see either
    main party remotely grasping this, and suspect it'll only get worse.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712
    See Georgia now have 3 key witnesses lined up against Trump


    BREAKING: Third Trump co-defendant pleads guilty: Kenneth Chesebro to cooperate with Georgia prosecutors

    https://themessenger.com/politics/trump-kenneth-chesebro-guilty-plea-georgia
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    LOL. I never knew the OECD was oderous anti. Nor the EU. Both of whom have produced reports showing that HS rail systems in France such as the TGV Mediterranean had little to no impact on overalll GDP and certainly nothing recordable for the region itself.

    And just to remind you that you were the one pouring your normal scorn on the £85 billion cost projection a couple of years ago - which is now considered to be an underextomate even by the most ardent advocates of the programme.

    Why should we trust you on this when you have been so consistently wrong?
    Um I love to know where you are getting your figures from because HS2 costs haven't actually increased. Most people who understand the finances of the project know that Rishi is playing incredibly fast and loose with the finances to justify cancelling HS2.

    I really did think you were far more intelligent and far less likely to be taken in than your posts today on HS2 have shown....
  • 35 years ago, just under 40% of all new houses were built by SME housebuilders. Now that figure is 10%. A major issue is that the red tape surrounding the whole process is so gargantuan and expensive that only the largest housebuilders can cope. Planning only forms one part of this, and focussing on this alone will not solve the overriding issue.

    Large housebuilders will focus only on very large developments (where numbers of units are in their 100s), and, yes, sure, these sort of plots are becoming harder to find. But there are massive numbers of smaller plots (where, say, 20-50 houses could be built) that SMEs could buy, obtain planning and develop, were it made viable for them to do so.

    The biggest thing a government can do is to make it an attractive option for people to set up small housebuilding companies, and make it easier for current SMEs to cope with the ever burgeoning regulations. Get that ratio between large/small housebuilders back up from 90/10 to 75/25 Sadly, I don't see either
    main party remotely grasping this, and suspect it'll only get worse.
    In other countries houses aren't built (or more importantly rebuilt) 20-50 at a time, or 100+ at a time, but more 1 at a time.

    Which means houses are built for those who want them, to their specs and cost, where they want them, not for the demands of others.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    HYUFD said:

    @ElectionMapsUK
    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 48% (+4)
    CON: 27% (-1)
    LDM: 10% (+1)
    RFM: 7% (=)
    GRN: 4% (-2)
    SNP: 2% (-1)

    Via
    @Omnisis
    , 19-20 Oct.
    Changes w/ 12-13 Oct.
    https://x.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1715361114958000233?s=20

    No mention of Plaid Cymru?
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,978

    In hindsight, it is easy to believe the Unions were doing it on purpose.
    There was a major breakdown in relations. The whole point of Callaghan was that he was close to the unions and would bring industrial peace. He was the one who torpedoed In Place of Strife, of course. And the country was bruised after the Three Day Week under the previous Tory Govt. The Winter of Discontent completely did for that. What was the point of Labour now?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,559
    Aussies win.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154

    35 years ago, just under 40% of all new houses were built by SME housebuilders. Now that figure is 10%. A major issue is that the red tape surrounding the whole process is so gargantuan and expensive that only the largest housebuilders can cope. Planning only forms one part of this, and focussing on this alone will not solve the overriding issue.

    Large housebuilders will focus only on very large developments (where numbers of units are in their 100s), and, yes, sure, these sort of plots are becoming harder to find. But there are massive numbers of smaller plots (where, say, 20-50 houses could be built) that SMEs could buy, obtain planning and develop, were it made viable for them to do so.

    The biggest thing a government can do is to make it an attractive option for people to set up small housebuilding companies, and make it easier for current SMEs to cope with the ever burgeoning regulations. Get that ratio between large/small housebuilders back up from 90/10 to 75/25 Sadly, I don't see either
    main party remotely grasping this, and suspect it'll only get worse.
    I saw this below the other day and it looked like the sort of cul de sac development that would hopefully be acceptable on the edge of villages in nice country areas to assuage the horror of nimby objectors. I like the way each house is oriented to have a view without seeming to be on top of the other houses but nice use of natural stone whilst also having a low profile but lots of natural light.


  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,521
    edited October 2023
    eek said:

    See Georgia now have 3 key witnesses lined up against Trump


    BREAKING: Third Trump co-defendant pleads guilty: Kenneth Chesebro to cooperate with Georgia prosecutors

    https://themessenger.com/politics/trump-kenneth-chesebro-guilty-plea-georgia

    Trump facing sanction for not taking down a post naming court clerk. A possible sanction is jail.

    *popcorn futures spike*
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238
    As you know, several famous film directors are in their late-period and their latest/upcoming film may be their last. Spielberg underperformed with The Fabelmans, Ridley Scott may I think drop a big huge steaming fetid one with Napoleon, Michael Mann could go either way with Ferrari, but Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon is out and the reviews, whilst not stellar, are good. I can breathe out a little bit. :)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5cCHLb_zhA (Chris Stuckmann)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x235HyFF1jM (Jeremy Jahns)


  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited October 2023
    HYUFD said:

    Well we are 13 years into a Tory government as Brown was 13 years into a Labour government in 2010, the only other time a government got under 30% this century (as polls suggest Sunak's will).

    Sunak has more money in retirement however than Gordon did
    Indeed only 3 UK PMs in British history have seen their party fall below 30% when losing power at a general election.

    Brown's in 2010 and Wellington's in 1832 (and arguably Lloyd George's in 1922). Looks like Sunak may make it a 4th.

    Even Major in 1997 scraped 30%
  • In other countries houses aren't built (or more importantly rebuilt) 20-50 at a time, or 100+ at a time, but more 1 at a time.

    Which means houses are built for those who want them, to their specs and cost, where they want them, not for the demands of others.
    Don't disagree Bart, but this is a long term aim when there needs to be a short term fix as well. It's going to be much easier to get 1500 SMEs to build an extra 100 houses each per year than find 150,000 people a year from a stanidng start. It'll take decades, so - while it's absolutely a long term plan worthy of consideration - we also need a short term fix. Empowering SMEs offers that, and if the process becomes easier for SMEs, it'll also become easier for individuals.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,339

    LOL. I never knew the OECD was oderous anti. Nor the EU. Both of whom have produced reports showing that HS rail systems in France such as the TGV Mediterranean had little to no impact on overalll GDP and certainly nothing recordable for the region itself.

    And just to remind you that you were the one pouring your normal scorn on the £85 billion cost projection a couple of years ago - which is now considered to be an underextomate even by the most ardent advocates of the programme.

    Why should we trust you on this when you have been so consistently wrong?
    I suggest you read that thread i linked to, and think about something called inflation.

    If we're talking about fallacious arguments, perhaps I should remind you how you thought remote working would kill off the need fir rail. The pandemic hasn't shown that to be true. Patterns changed, that's all, and rail usage is far higher than it was few years before the pandemic.

    But I guess we should remember that you know better than all those governments building her....
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,801
    Wow

    image
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    edited October 2023

    Wow

    image

    So looks like Democrats and Independents want to still send weapons only to Ukraine not Israel while Republicans want to switch weapons being sent to Ukraine and send them to Israel instead.

  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,780
    eek said:

    Um I love to know where you are getting your figures from because HS2 costs haven't actually increased. Most people who understand the finances of the project know that Rishi is playing incredibly fast and loose with the finances to justify cancelling HS2.

    I really did think you were far more intelligent and far less likely to be taken in than your posts today on HS2 have shown....
    So basically you're calling Richard thick and gullible.

    As you no doubt think the Guardian's Transport Correspondent is.

    From last month, before the cancellation:
    "When it was first given the go-ahead by the government in 2012, the whole network was supposed to cost £32.7bn, including a north-eastern leg going to Leeds. Exact figures now are hard to pin down but the latest published Department for Transport update said the cost could reach £71bn, at 2019 prices – without any north-eastern leg. Given the official commitment to a spur to the east Midlands, and general inflation since 2019, a current estimated cost of about £100bn at 2023 prices seems reasonable. And that’s before you buy trains. Others believe it could be much higher."
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/25/why-has-hs2-ended-up-being-so-expensive
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,238
    boulay said:

    I saw this below the other day and it looked like the sort of cul de sac development that would hopefully be acceptable on the edge of villages in nice country areas to assuage the horror of nimby objectors. I like the way each house is oriented to have a view without seeming to be on top of the other houses but nice use of natural stone whilst also having a low profile but lots of natural light.


    One entrance in, one exit out. A single bastich at the bottleneck can make the entire close hellish. No footpaths to alternate routes out.

    Every flat should have its own front door to the external world (no shared hallways) with its own letter box. Each front door should have at least two distinct routes to exit the estate and a safe place to park the car that you can walk to without crossing somebody else's land. Bad people should not be able to find a choke point on the paths. Green spaces eventually develop desire paths so look out for them.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,500
    HS2 to Manchester was a manifesto commitment in 2019.

    I had forgotten that.

    Sunak breaks manifesto.

    Pretty sure social care fix was also. Again cancelled by Sunak.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,992
    Jim Jordan fails on his 3rd attempt to become US House Speaker, getting his lowest total yet, just 194 votes.

    210 vote for Jeffries and 25 for Others

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-us-canada-67153521
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712
    edited October 2023

    So basically you're calling Richard thick and gullible.

    As you no doubt think the Guardian's Transport Correspondent is.

    From last month, before the cancellation:
    "When it was first given the go-ahead by the government in 2012, the whole network was supposed to cost £32.7bn, including a north-eastern leg going to Leeds. Exact figures now are hard to pin down but the latest published Department for Transport update said the cost could reach £71bn, at 2019 prices – without any north-eastern leg. Given the official commitment to a spur to the east Midlands, and general inflation since 2019, a current estimated cost of about £100bn at 2023 prices seems reasonable. And that’s before you buy trains. Others believe it could be much higher."
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/25/why-has-hs2-ended-up-being-so-expensive
    Strangely in June HS2 was running on budget https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/hs2-6-monthly-report-to-parliament-june-2023

    But the thing to remember is that the WCML sahows that improving existing lines is beyond painful so you need to create completely new ones as that allows you to increase capacity.

    And regardless of any desire for a East West connections all 3 North South lines are at capacity so the greatest need is there. Other lines can then follow later...
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,621

    HS2 to Manchester was a manifesto commitment in 2019.

    I had forgotten that.

    Sunak breaks manifesto.

    Pretty sure social care fix was also. Again cancelled by Sunak.

    I’m loathe to defend him as he is shit, but circumstances at the time of writing that manifesto are very different now, the pandemic and war have seen to that.
    And let’s be honest - do you actually believe manifesto promises?
  • eekeek Posts: 29,712

    I’m loathe to defend him as he is shit, but circumstances at the time of writing that manifesto are very different now, the pandemic and war have seen to that.
    And let’s be honest - do you actually believe manifesto promises?
    All parties committed to HS2 - the fact the promise was broken just shows how incompetent we are as a country for all the reasons I've posted multiple times today.

    Things that could be easily fixed if we had a medium or long term plan with teams of people starting project 1 and then moving on to child projects 2,3, 4 and 5 so the skills and knowledge was used in subsequent projects rather than getting lost.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,194
    viewcode said:

    One entrance in, one exit out. A single bastich at the bottleneck can make the entire close hellish. No footpaths to alternate routes out.

    Every flat should have its own front door to the external world (no shared hallways) with its own letter box. Each front door should have at least two distinct routes to exit the estate and a safe place to park the car that you can walk to without crossing somebody else's land. Bad people should not be able to find a choke point on the paths. Green spaces eventually develop desire paths so look out for them.
    They were built in 1963, and seem a major success. While I like a walled courtyard as an idea, it does seem less social.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fredensborg_Houses
  • NYT live blog - [in response to "offer" by GOP mega-MAGA-maniac brigade behind Jim Jordan]

    > Representative Carlos Gimenez of Florida, another Jordan holdout, said their stance was based on principle. "There’s nothing we want,” he said, “so there’s nothing he can offer us.” Gimenez added that grinding through more ballots will only lose Jordan support, and that some members may leave Washington for the weekend, shaking up Jordan’s math.

    > Representative Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida, one of the holdouts, says: “There’s nothing that people can give us. There’s nothing that people can trade. That’s not what this is about.”

    > House Republicans are about to meet behind closed doors in the basement to try to figure out next steps.

    SSI -

    Theater of the Absurd 1953 - Waiting for Godot
    Theater of the Absurd 2023 - Waiting for Speaker
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,208
    HYUFD said:

    Jim Jordan fails on his 3rd attempt to become US House Speaker, getting his lowest total yet, just 194 votes.

    210 vote for Jeffries and 25 for Others

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/world-us-canada-67153521

    Wonder if some GOP might go over to Hakeem
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,775

    It's a bit like tulips. Mad scarcity vs demand and they become a financial instrument. Sufficient supply and they go back to being nice flowers.
    Oh no you couldn't leave it, could you. I gave you an elegant judicious closer but you have to say something else.

    Ok, cute analogy but Yes and No. It's not just the supply deficit that has led to our bizarre unhealthy irrational approach to residential property. There are those other factors I've mentioned. They're important. Trust me they are.
  • eek said:

    All parties committed to HS2 - the fact the promise was broken just shows how incompetent we are as a country for all the reasons I've posted multiple times today.

    Things that could be easily fixed if we had a medium or long term plan with teams of people starting project 1 and then moving on to child projects 2,3, 4 and 5 so the skills and knowledge was used in subsequent projects rather than getting lost.
    Indeed.

    David Cameron used to tout "long term economic plan" and that's exactly what we need with infrastructure too, a long term plan.

    Not a single white elephant that is "too big to fail [or succeed]".

    For instance on transportation we should have a half dozen plus entirely new major motorways getting built across the country. But not all at once, build a few mile stretches at a time starting where they'll have an immediate impact [like the original "Preston bypass"] that eventually hook up into each other completing the long-term vision.

    When one is close to finishing completion, we should be in the final stages of considering what the next one will be after that, rather than resting on our laurels.
This discussion has been closed.