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Not the performance of a government that is going to be re-elected – politicalbetting.com

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  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    AlsoLei said:

    On topic, it's fascinating to see that people believe by 67% to 22% that Sunak is failing even on the pledge to reduce inflation

    I mean, I'm about as far from being a Sunakian as it's possible to get, and even I'll admit that inflation has fallen from where it was a year ago!

    So 67% of the population are prepared to kick Sunak for any reason, whether valid or not....

    The logic of that is various.

    1) The government claimed that inflation was a global matter and of course no fault of the UK government. It is reasonable to suppose that reducing inflation is also nothing to do with government.

    2) Many people believe that reducing inflation = prices falling. They have not. So therefore no credit to anyone.

    BTW, I am intrigued by the people (11%) who feel that borrowing over £100 billion in the past, current and next year = doing well in cutting debt.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    Agree 100%

    It is mad to wait. There is no outlook for anything but more difficult electioneering. All the political issues are total moo and in decline. And yet smarkets have very low % for a April-June GE. I just don't get it 🤷 frustration is going to build in the electorate too and Starmer is going to call them yellow. They need to go to the people right now... look at the defense stories adding to tory misery today. Two failed trident launches and we are left without a credible deterrent... all under the tories. More rot will show I guarantee it.
    5 months ago I'd have said it was worth waiting to see if things turn around. Now it is pretty clear things might get even worse the longer it goes on.

    But choosing to go early and lose big is hard, even if intellectually they think they'll lose bigger later. Hope springs eternal.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509
    Leon said:

    The flashing blue light makes no sense. Where is it coming from?

    The lower half of the dog’s body is weird

    Some elements in the background don’t quite add up

    But it took me 3 goes to start seeing that. So in a movie length feature you’d get away with it fine, plus this technology will only improve - and perhaps at exponential speed

    We will see real life impacts pretty soon
    Yes the lower half of the dogs body is weird and the background is odd when you zoom in. Good spots. I didn't see either.

    The blue flashing light jumped out at me when watching, but I just assumed there was meant to be a blue flashing light out of shot.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    kle4 said:

    It was in the manifesto of Labour and the Tories, so most of the parliament wanted this.

    I liked the principle but in the end it just got bloody silly.
    Yes silly, but not as silly as the mess we got into when we had the FTPA.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735

    Agree 100%

    It is mad to wait. There is no outlook for anything but more difficult electioneering. All the political issues are total moo and in decline. And yet smarkets have very low % for a April-June GE. I just don't get it 🤷 frustration is going to build in the electorate too and Starmer is going to call them yellow. They need to go to the people right now... look at the defense stories adding to tory misery today. Two failed trident launches and we are left without a credible deterrent... all under the tories. More rot will show I guarantee it.
    Last night the broker who is sorting out Eek twin A’s mortgage sorted out mortgages for everyone he is dealing with who hadn’t got it finalized because mortgage rates are creeping up again
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    Most of all it’s the boats. Boat crossings will be up this year, then Badenoch and Jenrick will say we told you this surge was coming, then all hell will break loose before and during the actual campaign. 😞
    Sunak will be praying for a windy summer, or some as-yet unidentified security weakness at the Channel Tunnel or ferry ports giving crossers an easier option.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    Agree 100%

    It is mad to wait. There is no outlook for anything but more difficult electioneering. All the political issues are total moo and in decline. And yet smarkets have very low % for a April-June GE. I just don't get it 🤷 frustration is going to build in the electorate too and Starmer is going to call them yellow. They need to go to the people right now... look at the defense stories adding to tory misery today. Two failed trident launches and we are left without a credible deterrent... all under the tories. More rot will show I guarantee it.
    December worked last time - maybe it's magic December!? We're still in a slow moving car crash, so the later the better in terms of will the next government have to own it. Annoyingly, Labour have, with Starmer and Reeves, become a just about plausible story for passing the parcel next time. At some point somebody has to get in bed with the LibDems so that the blame can be dumped on them.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    algarkirk said:

    Yes silly, but not as silly as the mess we got into when we had the FTPA.
    I meant I liked the principle of FTPA but that was what got too silly.

    A government unable to get a GE, but then passing an Act to get one with enough votes to trigger one under FTPA.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    "France backs UK as banking mecca, denying Germany win in Brexit surprise"

    https://www.politico.eu/article/france-helped-britain-keep-euro-clearing-london-brexit/
  • Indeed it did. Which is why the tax year starts on April 6th.
    The difference in days between March 25th and April 6th due to the realignment of calenders in September 1752 by losing 12 days.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564

    "France backs UK as banking mecca, denying Germany win in Brexit surprise"

    https://www.politico.eu/article/france-helped-britain-keep-euro-clearing-london-brexit/

    Us not being in the tent has not wholly removed it being occasionally convenient for either to side with us over the other.
  • Or they just don't understand what inflation is a measure of. How many of them think inflation falling = prices falling? Lots, I'd guess. Including most politicians.
    I said this many, many months ago. That Sunak had failed to explain what his policy means. And because he didn't do that, the public think he has failed. No sense.
  • Same, I love a good constitutional crisis.

    With Sir Peter Bottomley standing down at the election, who is likely to be the Father/Mother of the House after the general election?

    Their first act will be to preside over the election/re-election of a Speaker.

    Anyhoo, pop quiz PBers, what was so special about Henry Campbell-Bannerman's stint as Father of the House?
    Only Father of the House to be a serving, as opposed to ex-, PM?
  • Another major project delivery on Khan's cv. He might not be the most inspiring mayor ever, but he gets shit done.

    • Night Tube
    • Crossrail
    • Ulez
    • Ulez-X
    • Underground mobile
    I think SKS will surprise on the upside based on what he has done with Labour. But I accept I am a bit biased!

    Will proudly vote for Sadiq for the third time though.
  • “ When Sunak sees this polling he will rule out a May election because he thinks he will need more time to turn the polling around.”

    On topic. Will you stop your nonsense! This is a betting site. 😠

    The only way the May 2nd can be cancelled now, is if the modelling and war gaming shows it’s a better result held in Autumn. Timing these things is scientific, not whimsical. Objective, not subjective.

    Interest rates And high new mortgages arn’t going away by Christmas, nor will figures published this side of an election show much if any economic growth. In fact energy prices tipped to send inflation back upwards by end of the year. That’s the science behind picking the date. And the politics to waiting after May is the growth in boat crossings - showing as very much up on last year then all manner of hell could break out in Tory circles, as not just voters go to reform, but, members, councillors, MPs.

    Do you actually want the Conservative Party to get the worst result possible? Is that your game? I think you do. For some reason you can judge as astutely as the rest of us, that May 2nd is the safest moment to fight before the narrative starts to go properly bad - and you are using headers not to guide betting but coax Sunak to Chuck the future existence of the party into a roulette wheel.

    But that worse result of 50-100 MPs less from backdrop of a summer and autumn of proper melting down, will not bring a fiscally conservative, working class aspirational, pro business, liberal minded Conservative Party back any quicker, for us can both vote for - it will just make it worse. It will just end up with an even less conservative, even more mindlessly populist main right wing party for ever. ☹️

    you pushing the Tories out into all that dangerous narrative the other side of a summer where the boats keep coming, is very dangerous.

    I am so flipping cross.

    My word, you're even wronger now than when you said the Privileges Committee wouldn't suspend Boris Johnson two days before they suspended him.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    Agree 100%

    It is mad to wait. There is no outlook for anything but more difficult electioneering. All the political issues are total moo and in decline. And yet smarkets have very low % for a April-June GE. I just don't get it 🤷 frustration is going to build in the electorate too and Starmer is going to call them yellow. They need to go to the people right now... look at the defense stories adding to tory misery today. Two failed trident launches and we are left without a credible deterrent... all under the tories. More rot will show I guarantee it.
    Betting wise there is potential value (Smarkets) in all quarterly markets except the current one (!) and Oct-Dec (80%). IMHO July-September is best value but DYOR.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    TimS said:

    Sunak will be praying for a windy summer, or some as-yet unidentified security weakness at the Channel Tunnel or ferry ports giving crossers an easier option.
    If not for fear of a boat heavy summer I still wonder if Cameron would have reached his EU deal so early.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073

    My word, you're even wronger now than when you said the Privileges Committee wouldn't suspend Boris Johnson two days before they suspended him.
    I have nothing more to say to you, or on the matter 😤
  • Another major project delivery on Khan's cv. He might not be the most inspiring mayor ever, but he gets shit done.

    • Night Tube
    • Crossrail
    • Ulez
    • Ulez-X
    • Underground mobile
    • Crappy Central Line service...
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    kle4 said:

    I meant I liked the principle of FTPA but that was what got too silly.

    A government unable to get a GE, but then passing an Act to get one with enough votes to trigger one under FTPA.
    Apart from anything else the FTPA working as it should would prevent most or much political/betting discussion as it currently stands on PB, where the issue of when the next election might be is constantly raised from about 2 years in, like right now, by me, and others. Long may this pointless and compelling discussion be allowed to continue.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Why are our elected politicians twatting around about a ceasefire in a conflict between two combatants who couldn't really give a toss about what we want them to do? What's the point? Any sane person (difficult to find in this parliament, admittedly) would say a ceasefire in any conflict would be a damn fine thing. What's to discuss? Haven't they got stuff to debate around things they actually do have control of, like the PO scandal, the state of the economy, why the armed forces are on their arse...
    Or is that too hard for them?

    Spot on.

    I watch the Daily Politics (or whatever it's called these days) daily and I reckon 60% of this week's output so far has been on the exact wording of a ceasefire call from four UK political parties that have no method of effecting such a ceasefire in a country that is a) several thousands of miles away and b) is the theatre of a war in which neither belligerent wants a ceasefire.

    It's totally bizarre. As you say, it's not as if there aren't lots of major problems that our beloved politicians are responsible for that need addressing.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Most of all it’s the boats. Boat crossings will be up this year, then Badenoch and Jenrick will say we told you this surge was coming, then all hell will break loose before and during the actual campaign. 😞
    I am starting to come round to your view that there might be some influencers within government that think 2 May is the least-worst option. I don't even get the feeling that Sunny Boy cares that much about being PM much longer, in any case.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,688

    • Crappy Central Line service...
    I think that was delivered many years before Khan!
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Omnium said:

    How can anyone think that Truss isn't the worst PM ever, let alone the worst recent PM?
    Some look back on those six weeks as the halcyon days of British government, @Ominium, the gold standard by which all other administrations – worldwide – must be measured.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    Spot on.

    I watch the Daily Politics (or whatever it's called these days) daily and I reckon 60% of this week's output so far has been on the exact wording of a ceasefire call from four UK political parties that have no method of effecting such a ceasefire in a country that is a) several thousands of miles away and b) is the theatre of a war in which neither belligerent wants a ceasefire.

    It's totally bizarre. As you say, it's not as if there aren't lots of major problems that our beloved politicians are responsible for that need addressing.
    It's much easier for politicians to spend time talking about things they can't actually do anything about than things they can.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    edited February 2024
    Omnium said:

    How can anyone think that Truss isn't the worst PM ever, let alone the worst recent PM?
    Perhaps they are familiar with the record of Lord Goderich?

    Or indeed William Pulteney, Earl of Bath?
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480
    edited February 2024

    Some look back on those six weeks as the halcyon days of British government, @Ominium, the gold standard by which all other administrations – worldwide – must be measured.
    I'm going to get all picky about your 'some'.

    You imply more than one. I don't believe a word of that.

    Anyway, too busy listening to the tie-wearing Corbyn talk nonsense to wish to compete.

    Edit: Corbyn: What a chump
  • • Crappy Central Line service...
    Perhaps the Tories should stop cutting his funding.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    Omnium said:

    I'm going to get all picky about your 'some'.

    You imply more than one. I don't believe a word of that.

    Anyway, too busy listening to the tie-wearing Corbyn talk nonsense to wish to compete.

    Edit: Corbyn: What a chump
    He was better in the old days when he was no noose.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    edited February 2024

    Spot on.

    I watch the Daily Politics (or whatever it's called these days) daily and I reckon 60% of this week's output so far has been on the exact wording of a ceasefire call from four UK political parties that have no method of effecting such a ceasefire in a country that is a) several thousands of miles away and b) is the theatre of a war in which neither belligerent wants a ceasefire.

    It's totally bizarre. As you say, it's not as if there aren't lots of major problems that our beloved politicians are responsible for that need addressing.
    FWIW it's because the exact wording, and also who is proposing the wording, give very particular political messages about who is in charge and who you actually support.

    The Tories: basically support Israel but want a resolution and don't want to be found on the wrong side of history

    Labour: want to be the government, our government has always supported Israel so they must too, but vast numbers of their members and traditional voters don't, and support Palestine. But they need 2 million Tory voters on board urgently and now.

    The SNP: basically support Palestine and are accusing Israel of a war crime.

    Lenin's question: Who? Whom? is the top issue here.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    algarkirk said:

    FWIW it's because the exact wording, and also who is proposing the wording, give very particular political messages about who is in charge and who you actually support.

    The Tories: basically support Israel but want a resolution and don't want to be found on the wrong side of history

    Labour: want to be the government, our government has always supported Israel so they must too, but vast numbers of their members and traditional voters don't, and support Palestine. But they need 2 million Tory voters on board urgently and now.

    The SNP: basically support Palestine and are accusing Israel of a war crime.

    Lenin's question: Who? Whom? is the top issue here.
    I know why they think it matters, but it doesn't – not to The Man on the Clapham Omnibus. It's Westminster Village in the extreme.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Omnium said:

    I'm going to get all picky about your 'some'.

    You imply more than one. I don't believe a word of that.

    Anyway, too busy listening to the tie-wearing Corbyn talk nonsense to wish to compete.

    Edit: Corbyn: What a chump
    Well there is Elizabeth Truss, Mary Truss and ME Truss – so that's at least three without even thinking too hard.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735
    edited February 2024

    Some look back on those six weeks as the halcyon days of British government, @Ominium, the gold standard by which all other administrations – worldwide – must be measured.
    Who are those people? Masochists or Comedians?

    Edit - just realized I forgot Ms Truss’s extracurricular interests
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    Well there is Elizabeth Truss, Mary Truss and ME Truss – so that's at least three without even thinking too hard.
    Was it Truss who assumed some great military rank? (Maybe it was Mordaunt, although I feel perhaps she actually has some military history)
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,522
    TimS said:

    Sunak will be praying for a windy summer, or some as-yet unidentified security weakness at the Channel Tunnel or ferry ports giving crossers an easier option.
    Irregular crossings by vehicle or ferry are up 60% year on year, and if you were to be really cynical you might wonder if the government are already quietly trying to ease up controls around that...

    https://inews.co.uk/news/migrant-crushed-death-lorry-crossings-2880646
  • Perhaps the Tories should stop cutting his funding.
    :innocent:
    image
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,607
    kjh said:

    That is good. What flaws did you see? The only thing for me was the paws typing seemed unreal, but that is probably not a flaw but the fact that, well dogs don't have paws that can type like humans, so that might be what they would look like if they did type.
    It’s very confused about the lighting - the blue light illuminates the rear of the monitor and the dogs face simultaneously. I think it’s been trained to expect things in front of monitors to be illuminated by the blue tinted glow of a white screen, but then has extended this lighting to the back of the monitor because it doesn’t understand that that isn’t how light works.

    But it’s still very impressive. As someone has pointed out elsewhere: this is the worst this technology is ever going to be. How good is it going to get is the question.
  • stjohnstjohn Posts: 1,897
    edited February 2024
    ydoethur said:

    He was the only Father of the House to be the incumbent Prime Minister.
    Who is the only Leader of the House to be the recumbent Prime embodiment of arrogance, entitlement, disrespect and contempt for Parliament? Answers in picture form please.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    Omnium said:

    Was it Truss who assumed some great military rank? (Maybe it was Mordaunt, although I feel perhaps she actually has some military history)
    I thought it was Field Marshal Paul Nuttall VC.

    (seriously, though, I think it was Mordaunt, who made a junior rank in the RNVR sound grander than it was.)
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Omnium said:

    Was it Truss who assumed some great military rank? (Maybe it was Mordaunt, although I feel perhaps she actually has some military history)
    Field Marshall Air Chief Marshall Admiral Mary Elizabeth Truss?

    Yes, you remember correctly.
  • :innocent:
    image
    So are you a Tory now?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624

    Perhaps the Tories should stop cutting his funding.
    When he succeeds it’s his genius. When he fails it’s ruddy Tories.

    😂😂😂😂
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    stjohn said:

    Who is the only Leader of the House to be the recumbent Prime embodiment of arrogance, entitlement, disrespect and contempt for Parliament?
    Well, he sounds a veritable beast, perhaps a Moggster.
  • algarkirk said:

    FWIW it's because the exact wording, and also who is proposing the wording, give very particular political messages about who is in charge and who you actually support.

    The Tories: basically support Israel but want a resolution and don't want to be found on the wrong side of history

    Labour: want to be the government, our government has always supported Israel so they must too, but vast numbers of their members and traditional voters don't, and support Palestine. But they need 2 million Tory voters on board urgently and now.

    The SNP: basically support Palestine and are accusing Israel of a war crime.

    Lenin's question: Who? Whom? is the top issue here.
    It doesn't matter to our population. I can't see the average Joe hunkered down in some Gaza rubble caring too much about it. Our politicians love a bit of wanky performance art, though.
  • ydoethur said:

    I thought it was Field Marshal Paul Nuttall VC.

    (seriously, though, I think it was Mordaunt, who made a junior rank in the RNVR sound grander than it was.)

    Isn't Vorders a Group Captain?
  • I know why they think it matters, but it doesn't – not to The Man on the Clapham Omnibus. It's Westminster Village in the extreme.
    What if the whole population fill out oneof those recall petition thingies? Get an early election that way!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536


    Isn't Vorders a Group Captain?
    Admirals are the ones who count down, shurely?
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154


    Isn't Vorders a Group Captain?
    She must be senior army as I keep hearing that she gets lots of privates standing to attention.
  • Another major project delivery on Khan's cv. He might not be the most inspiring mayor ever, but he gets shit done.

    • Night Tube
    • Crossrail
    • Ulez
    • Ulez-X
    • Underground mobile
    Get this through your head: Sadiq had fuck all to do with Crossrail getting "done".

    I was there. He was a complete melon obsessed only by PR and media and someone no-one respected.

    He was in office and simply that. Nothing more nothing less.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536
    boulay said:

    She must be senior army as I keep hearing that she gets lots of privates standing to attention.
    She gets saluted by numbers.
  • It doesn't matter to our population. I can't see the average Joe hunkered down in some Gaza rubble caring too much about it. Our politicians love a bit of wanky performance art, though.
    If there is one thing all politicians across the party political divide love, it’s grandstanding on international affairs despite the fact that this country has not had a truly independent foreign policy for decades.

    I think they all enjoy pretending it’s the 1930s and these debates have some kind of seismic bearing on international affairs.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,597

    :innocent:
    image
    The service is Epping terrible.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Get this through your head: Sadiq had fuck all to do with Crossrail getting "done".

    I was there. He was a complete melon obsessed only by PR and media and someone no-one respected.

    He was in office and simply that. Nothing more nothing less.
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2020/10/01/sadiq-khan-takes-control-crossrail/
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    What if the whole population fill out oneof those recall petition thingies? Get an early election that way!
    Genius idea!!!
  • stjohnstjohn Posts: 1,897
    In other news, Stats watchdog criticises Treasury tax cut claims. Chair of the UK statistics watchdog has rebuked a Treasury minister for 'Trotting out nonsense' that risked "miselading" or "confusing" the public.'
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Tories taken their bats home.
  • https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2020/10/01/sadiq-khan-takes-control-crossrail/
    That was Andy Byford, not Sadiq Khan.

    Sadiq did fuck all. The man's an idiot.

    I know some ex-New Labour SPads - two of whom worked on the project- who laughed when his name was mentioned.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Jeez can the Tories in the Commons get a grip . Talk about a hysterical reaction to Hoyles earlier decision .
  • It doesn't matter to our population. I can't see the average Joe hunkered down in some Gaza rubble caring too much about it. Our politicians love a bit of wanky performance art, though.
    It's exactly that.

    Israel/Gaza is effectively a form of political masturbation.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Mordant says Tories ot taking any further part in today's opposition day debate as they have no confidence in Hoyle after he caved to SKS pressure
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,038
    Seems to be a Tory and SNP alliance developing in fury at the Speaker allowing this Labour amendment on Gaza.

    A Tory MP just shouted 'Eleanor for Speaker'
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Surely now Labour's amendment passes
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    LDs voting for SNP and Labour motions so House votes for ceasefire
  • Taz said:

    When he succeeds it’s his genius. When he fails it’s ruddy Tories.

    😂😂😂😂
    His posts are hilarious.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Pathetic and childish toys out of the pram by the Tories who having failed to embarrass Labour now throw a strop .

  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    That was Andy Byford, not Sadiq Khan.

    Sadiq did fuck all. The man's an idiot.

    I know some ex-New Labour SPads - two of whom worked on the project- who laughed when his name was mentioned.
    Khan seems to have not quite done anything, not quite been guilty of anything, and so far as anyone can tell just banking his salary. A remarkably smart dimwit.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    nico679 said:

    Pathetic and childish toys out of the pram by the Tories who having failed to embarrass Labour now throw a strop .

    Well if they had not done this they would have won surely as they have the numbers?
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Omnium said:

    Khan seems to have not quite done anything, not quite been guilty of anything, and so far as anyone can tell just banking his salary. A remarkably smart dimwit.
    Indeed, his strong record of major project delivery just happened by pure accident.

    Only on PB.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    Well if they had not done this they would have won surely as they have the numbers?
    The Tories would easily win their vote so it’s really pathetic grandstanding.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    Indeed, his strong record of major project delivery just happened by pure accident.

    Only on PB.
    Go on then - tell me about Khan's skills in major project delivery.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624
    nico679 said:

    Pathetic and childish toys out of the pram by the Tories who having failed to embarrass Labour now throw a strop .

    Ah, the apologist for Azhar Ali has rocked up. The man who the concerns about his antisemitism was fake offence from Tories.

    How did that work out for you ?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    edited February 2024
    Thread on the failure of sanctions on Russia from Ed Conway:

    https://twitter.com/EdConwaySky/status/1760348194741891241

    image
  • ydoethur said:

    Admirals are the ones who count down, shurely?
    Rear Admiral Rachel Riley really rolls off the tongue
  • AverageNinjaAverageNinja Posts: 1,169
    edited February 2024
    There would have been no London Underground 4G/5G without Mayor Khan.

    I was involved with the delivery of the project on behalf of one of the four MNOs.

    He might be absolutely useless on the rest of it but I can speak to that one specific example where he pushed it forward. Johnson never bothered.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624
    edited February 2024
    Omnium said:

    Khan seems to have not quite done anything, not quite been guilty of anything, and so far as anyone can tell just banking his salary. A remarkably smart dimwit.
    He’s clearly not stupid and he is, like Boris, lucky with his opponents but his so called achievements are clearly overstated by partisan labour supporters. His record on housebuilding is lamentable.

    I couldn’t vote for any candidate in London, if I lived there.

    WiFi on the underground was being worked on when I was working at tubelines 15 years ago.
  • His posts are hilarious.
    I learn from the very best.
  • Indeed, his strong record of major project delivery just happened by pure accident.

    Only on PB.
    HE HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH IT.

    You are ignorant of the facts. But, if there's one thing I've learned over the years, it's that total ignorance of the facts is absolutely no obstacle to people having strong and irrefutable opinions they insist are correct.
  • Taz said:

    He’s clearly not stupid and he is, like Boris, lucky with his opponents but his so called achievements are clearly overstated by partisan labour supporters. His record on housebuilding is lamentable.

    WiFi on the underground was being worked on when I was working at tubelines 15 years ago.
    Wi-Fi has absolutely nothing to do with the current project. The Wi-Fi project was so laughably unambitious they didn’t even get past the platforms. Wi-Fi was a fallback when they couldn’t get a supplier for 3G at the time.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624

    The service is Epping terrible.

    Is it TPE levels of poor performance ?
  • HE HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH IT.

    You are ignorant of the facts. But, if there's one thing I've learned over the years, it's that total ignorance of the facts is absolutely no obstacle to people having strong and irrefutable opinions they insist are correct.
    I don’t doubt what you say on Crossrail at all but on the 4G/5G rollout he absolutely was.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    There would have been no London Underground 4G/5G without Mayor Khan.

    I was involved with the delivery of the project on behalf of one of the four MNOs.

    He might be absolutely useless on the rest of it but I can speak to that one specific example where he pushed it forward. Johnson never bothered.

    There would have been no advance from the stone ages without ...

    It's ridiculous to associate progress with those who happen to be in office when it takes place.

    If you did then in the UK the Tories would be unassailable,
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    edited February 2024

    Mordant says Tories ot taking any further part in today's opposition day debate as they have no confidence in Hoyle after he caved to SKS pressure

    Bit of an overreaction to be honest. If the Labour sources' account are true then Hoyle sold his integrity as Speaker for sake of personal politics, but it's still only a single procedural ruling.

    Do they plan to boycott the Commons until he goes? If not, then what's gained by just pulling out for the day?
  • Well if they had not done this they would have won surely as they have the numbers?
    Presumably, there was enough in the SNP motion that the Conservatives could justify to themselves voting against, whereas the Labour motion didn't give them that option without looking unacceptably heartless.

    Fairly pathetic game playing all round, really.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    HE HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH IT.

    You are ignorant of the facts. But, if there's one thing I've learned over the years, it's that total ignorance of the facts is absolutely no obstacle to people having strong and irrefutable opinions they insist are correct.
    In recent years they've been put straight in the Cabinet.
  • AverageNinjaAverageNinja Posts: 1,169
    edited February 2024
    Omnium said:

    There would have been no advance from the stone ages without ...

    It's ridiculous to associate progress with those who happen to be in office when it takes place.

    If you did then in the UK the Tories would be unassailable,
    Johnson had two terms to deliver a 3G/4G solution and could not be bothered to. Khan delivered it on round two.

    Now I don't doubt Johnson's successor would have delivered it too but in reality he didn't despite having ample time to do so.

    So this is really not an attempt at partisanship in this particular case, I am speaking from my work.

    London in general has poor mobile coverage compared to our competitors and Khan has not been good on that. He has not challenged the silly NIMBYs and councillors rejecting the infrastructure for no reason and for that he's had strong criticism from me.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    edited February 2024

    What if the whole population fill out oneof those recall petition thingies? Get an early election that way!
    Recall petitions require a triggering event, to avoid being abused by people just not liking an MP or the way they vote, which is what elections are for. So we may need to get even more creative.
  • There would have been no London Underground 4G/5G without Mayor Khan.

    I was involved with the delivery of the project on behalf of one of the four MNOs.

    He might be absolutely useless on the rest of it but I can speak to that one specific example where he pushed it forward. Johnson never bothered.

    Well, that isn't true. The sponsors instruction from TfL to rollout 4G on Crossrail and integrate into LU came out to us in 2015, when Boris Johnson was still mayor.
  • To be fair to the Tory supporters, Bodlyn has been fairly poor on the rollout thus far, with many delays and milestones missed.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,480

    Johnson had two terms to deliver a 3G/4G solution and could not be bothered to. Khan delivered it on round two.

    Now I don't doubt Johnson's successor would have delivered it too but in reality he didn't despite having ample time to do so.

    So this is really not an attempt at partisanship in this particular case, I am speaking from my work.

    London in general has poor mobile coverage compared to our competitors and Khan has not been good on that. He has not challenged the silly NIMBYs and councillors rejecting the infrastructure for no reason and for that he's had strong criticism from me.
    Well its daft to tar governments with a lack of incidental progress too. (Not sure what you're saying)
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624

    Wi-Fi has absolutely nothing to do with the current project. The Wi-Fi project was so laughably unambitious they didn’t even get past the platforms. Wi-Fi was a fallback when they couldn’t get a supplier for 3G at the time.
    I know WiFi’ is not 4G or 5G you doofus.

    I’m saying trying to get communication onto the underground is nothing new, has been worked on in one guise or another for many years, and this is not down to Khan’s genius. In spite of whatever tribal crap you spout.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    algarkirk said:

    FWIW it's because the exact wording, and also who is proposing the wording, give very particular political messages about who is in charge and who you actually support.

    The Tories: basically support Israel but want a resolution and don't want to be found on the wrong side of history

    Labour: want to be the government, our government has always supported Israel so they must too, but vast numbers of their members and traditional voters don't, and support Palestine. But they need 2 million Tory voters on board urgently and now.

    The SNP: basically support Palestine and are accusing Israel of a war crime.

    Lenin's question: Who? Whom? is the top issue here.
    I really doubt if Labour would take that much of a hit if they did what their members wanted on this one. It might not accord with some of those former Tory voters they want the votes of, but there's many other factors drawing them in which would not be affected.
  • Well, that isn't true. The sponsors instruction from TfL to rollout 4G on Crossrail and integrate into LU came out to us in 2015, when Boris Johnson was still mayor.
    The instruction to deliver 4G on the Tube came way after that. I am not talking about Crossrail, I am talking about the Tube.

    Crossrail was done seperately and has been latterly joined up. Actually one of the reasons it is currently stuck on 4G only is because the infrastructure they installed is not capable of N78.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    kle4 said:

    Bit of an overreaction to be honest. If the Labour sources' account are true then Hoyle sold his integrity as Speaker for sake of personal politics, but it's still only a single procedural ruling.

    Do they plan to boycott the Commons until he goes? If not, then what's gained by just pulling out for the day?
    SNP and Tories have now both walked out.

    SNP claim now that their are only 2 options theirs should be put first.

    Deputy Speaker says no.

    Looks like there may be no tellers so no vote at all.

    Hoyle needs to go
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    Taz said:

    When he succeeds it’s his genius. When he fails it’s ruddy Tories.

    😂😂😂😂
    That's just standard politics - take credit for the good things, blame others for the bad things. So it's hard to get that especially mad at Khan for doing it.
  • Taz said:

    I know WiFi’ is not 4G or 5G you doofus.

    I’m saying trying to get communication onto the underground is nothing new, has been worked on in one guise or another for many years, and this is not down to Khan’s genius. In spite of whatever tribal crap you spout.
    I don't know what you're so angry about.

    It has not been worked on until the work Bodlyn started last year, there was a small pilot in 2020 on the Jubilee Line involving leaky feeders but they have NEVER done a commercial rollout prior to that. Boris Johnson did not achieve it. Those are the facts.

    I am here talking to you with good grace, you could at least afford me the same courtesy.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    What a mess in the HoC. The deputy speaker has the patience of a saint.
  • Omnium said:

    Well its daft to tar governments with a lack of incidental progress too. (Not sure what you're saying)
    I was only saying that Boris Johnson didn't deliver 3G/4G on the Tube in his entire time as Mayor and Khan has. That's all I am saying.

    I was then trying to talk about the technicalities of the project having been involved in it but if that's not of interest I am very happy to move onto something else?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,564
    ydoethur said:

    Perhaps they are familiar with the record of Lord Goderich?

    Or indeed William Pulteney, Earl of Bath?
    I think Liz Truss is a key supporter of him being counted as an official PM.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,106
    There’s a chance that this government might be re-elected? Is this breaking news?
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,597

    HE HAD NOTHING TO DO WITH IT.

    You are ignorant of the facts. But, if there's one thing I've learned over the years, it's that total ignorance of the facts is absolutely no obstacle to people having strong and irrefutable opinions they insist are correct.
    It’s an attitude that has kept PB going for 20 years. (HYUFD waves and BJO waves back).
This discussion has been closed.