Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

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

13567

Comments

  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    Vote now on whether House should sit in private
  • IanB2 said:

    There’s a chance that this government might be re-elected? Is this breaking news?

    There's more than a slim chance they are re-elected.

    I absolutely think the polls will narrow and the odds of a Hung Parliament are higher than I think some others might say. Similar to Starmer doing better than many thought after 2019, it is quite possible Sunak does too. He might be a terrible politician thus far but he's not an unintelligent person.
  • sbjme19sbjme19 Posts: 194

    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
    Nice if SNP and Tories could stay out.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546

    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
    If he does (I do not think he will) the Tories should back an SNP MP as Speaker. That would be hilarious.
  • Taz said:

    His record on housebuilding is lamentable.

    For what it is worth Taz, I 100% agree with you!
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    It’s an attitude that has kept PB going for 20 years. (HYUFD waves and BJO waves back).
    I wave at you with one finger
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    As amusing as this mess is, I do hope these sorts of stunts do not become the norm. We don't want a House which is even more just a place to get media clips and to get on the news rather than an actual legislature. See the US Congress.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,797

    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
    Without commenting on this issue, I find Lindsay Hoyle the most likeable speaker since Betty Boothroyd, if not before.
    Also, his dad was mentioned in a sample of a news clip in a song by Carter USM.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,012

    Thread on the failure of sanctions on Russia from Ed Conway:

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

    image

    Not sufficient just to show the expected growth. The base from which it comes should be shown, or previous years' growth.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    IanB2 said:

    There’s a chance that this government might be re-elected? Is this breaking news?

    If it is more than a 5% chance, yes.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited February 2024
    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.
    But it’s odd, isn’t it, that for every other democratically elected body in the land, from the Scottish Parliament through to Little Sodbury Parish Council, parliament sets down a fixed electoral cycle such that everyone knows how long is their term of office, and no-one can play silly buggers with the timetable? Yet somehow, parliament itself feels it needs to be an exception.

    Just as, today, we see fun and games over whether procedurally proper opposition amendments can be tabled and debated in the Commons, whereas in every single other democratic body in the land, this right would be taken as read.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,945
    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....

    Not really. Most people are economically illiterate (me too!).

    "Inflation rises = bad, price rises
    Inflation falls = good, price falls"

    As prices haven't fallen, then people don't believe inflation hasn't fallen.

    It's like the 'debt vs deficit' arguments this site was engaged in more than ten years ago now.
  • Clutch_BromptonClutch_Brompton Posts: 751
    edited February 2024
    On topic - the British public being harsh on inflation but incredibly generous on the other four.

    Mr Sunak doesn't need time to turn this around. He needs a miracle and for his Ministers to stop making fools of themselves - which might count as a second miracle. That applies to the Secretaries for Business and Health especially!

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited February 2024

    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.
    Breaking: evidence at last that our Casino does actually have a mirror at home…. ;)
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,467

    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?
    I doubt either can realistically claim much credit. Do tell us about the detail.
  • kle4 said:

    As amusing as this mess is, I do hope these sorts of stunts do not become the norm. We don't want a House which is even more just a place to get media clips and to get on the news rather than an actual legislature. See the US Congress.

    This is why Hoyle should go. Whatever the rights and wrongs and what happened, a significant amount of bad feeling has been generated and the House should have confidence in the Speaker. I like Hoyle, and he is a significant improvement over his predecessor, but this has happened on his watch and he needs to take responsibility for it.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    Cookie said:

    Without commenting on this issue, I find Lindsay Hoyle the most likeable speaker since Betty Boothroyd, if not before.
    Also, his dad was mentioned in a sample of a news clip in a song by Carter USM.
    He has seemed pretty solid and sound to me thus far. Still gives in to the performative outrage when the government announces things outside the Commons, but the Speaker doing that is as much a part of the role as the robes, it's expected because we want to think we still live in a time when governments did not do it all the time. But I'm hard pressed to think of many other examples of poor behaviour or absurdity.

    Which makes me wonder what Starmer has against him. He surely authorised the statements which have painted Hoyle in such a poor light by suggesting he caved to political threats.
  • Not really. Most people are economically illiterate (me too!).

    "Inflation rises = bad, price rises
    Inflation falls = good, price falls"

    As prices haven't fallen, then people don't believe inflation hasn't fallen.

    It's like the 'debt vs deficit' arguments this site was engaged in more than ten years ago now.
    I think in this particular case I actually feel a bit sorry for Sunak, it's probably the only thing he's vaguely achieved and he can't even get any credit for that. It does feel like the end.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    Speaking of forgotton PMs, today Sunak has equalled the tenure of Spencer Compton, our second Prime Minister.

    Clearly this is a sign that PM trends are cyclical, and Starmer will now govern for 20 years as our final PM.
  • IanB2 said:

    There’s a chance that this government might be re-elected? Is this breaking news?

    :)


  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,467
    edited February 2024

    I think in this particular case I actually feel a bit sorry for Sunak, it's probably the only thing he's vaguely achieved and he can't even get any credit for that. It does feel like the end.
    All economists are economically illiterate. It is the modern alchemy. I think most of them would admit it too (which is an improvement on the alchemists).

    Edit: illiterate is wrong here it's more 'unwise'.
  • AverageNinjaAverageNinja Posts: 1,169
    edited February 2024
    Omnium said:

    I doubt either can realistically claim much credit. Do tell us about the detail.

    Yes I accept in the round that's probably a fair rebuttal. Consider my partisanship on this noted and understood.

    What would you like to know? The whole project itself is pretty cool and virtually unique in terms of what they are doing to get it working "down there". The majority of the Central Line is done, platforms having a lot of bands deployed, including the entire spectrum allocation for O2, EE, Vodafone, Three, so you can get some crazy good speeds on the platforms from the DAS, 700+ Mbps.

    In tunnel they use a leaky feeder, split into two parts, one going to the platforms at either end, in there the MNOs have fewer bands deployed because they don't travel as well but you'll still get 200Mbps easily.

    It's really incredible thus far where it's done. It's a shame it's been so delayed and has had so many issues, including interfering with the signalling so it got paused for some time. But it's progressing slowly now, with Piccadilly and Victoria Lines to come next.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    kle4 said:

    If it is more than a 5% chance, yes.
    William Hills: PM after next election: Rishi Sunak: 7/1. (SKS 1/9)

    Make of that what you will! I am one of the smallish group who think that NOM is quite feasible. But not in my wildest nightmares do I think that Rishi will be PM after the next election.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    One common problem with politicians deservedly getting credit is it is so hard to tell what is actually down to them. Maybe they proposed an idea, but some other political figure oversaw it. Maybe they said they supported something, but it was someone else's idea and they jumped on the bandwagon. Maybe they had no practical involvement on any decisions, but at least ensured the funding taps kept flowing. Maybe they diligently worked behind the scenes on it, but we'd never know.

    Any of these they could rightly claim some credit, they cannot be expected to project manage every idea especially the higher up they go, but the extent of credit might be very little to a lot, yet we the public can rarely assess that.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,257

    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.
    "Calls for". "Fury". They are furious at something. They call for things. Everybody needs a hobby, and getting angry and calling for things fills the time until they get unelected and have to do a proper job.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    What is the point of this sitting in private motion?

    Who proposed it?
  • IanB2 said:

    Breaking: evidence at last that our Casino does actually have a mirror at home…. ;)
    Of course. He is "one of the most objective posters on here", as I believe he wrote himself.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited February 2024

    What is the point of this sitting in private motion?

    Who proposed it?

    So they can embarrass themselves even more than usual, without anyone finding out…at least until they all spill out and start blabbing to the media?
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Why didn’t the government just defeat the opposition motions, exercising and demonstrating its power? I don’t get it.
  • TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,945
    IanB2 said:



    But it’s odd, isn’t it, that for every other democratically elected body in the land, from the Scottish Parliament through to Little Sodbury Parish Council, parliament sets down a fixed electoral cycle such that everyone knows how long is their term of office, and no-one can play silly buggers with the timetable? Yet somehow, parliament itself feels it needs to be an exception.

    It isn't odd really. If you set a five year fixed term, then what happens if during a Parliament the governing party loses its majority due to by-election defeats?

    It could try for a coalition with another party but if that doesn't work out, then you could be left with a government which is nominally in power, but unable to get any business done.

    At the fag end of the 2017-2019 Parliament, after the 20 Conservative MPs were kicked out, the Conservatives were left with a mere 288 MPs, some 43 seats short of a majority.

    There was no way that government was going to be able to limp on to June 2022. A GE had to be held, and the FTPA was an obstruction to that as (unusually) despite being in a minority, the governing party had a significant polling lead, and so the Labour opposition didn't want an election.

    I like the quirkiness. You never know when you might get a GE.
  • kle4 said:

    One common problem with politicians deservedly getting credit is it is so hard to tell what is actually down to them. Maybe they proposed an idea, but some other political figure oversaw it. Maybe they said they supported something, but it was someone else's idea and they jumped on the bandwagon. Maybe they had no practical involvement on any decisions, but at least ensured the funding taps kept flowing. Maybe they diligently worked behind the scenes on it, but we'd never know.

    Any of these they could rightly claim some credit, they cannot be expected to project manage every idea especially the higher up they go, but the extent of credit might be very little to a lot, yet we the public can rarely assess that.

    I think many of the informed population around my neck of the woods give Portillo a lot of create for starting Metrolink which in time turned into a huge success and benefit to the region.
  • I am so lost, what exactly is going on in Parliament.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,814

    It's exactly that.

    Israel/Gaza is effectively a form of political masturbation.
    It's also a tale of intimidation of MPs:

    https://twitter.com/ChaplainChloe/status/1760345776876564728

    Am told Speaker's decision today was motivated by desire to protect MPs from threats by offering range ceasefire amendments - attempting to diffuse v hostile debate

    Understand MPs went to him with concerns in the lead up to vote due to threats to themselves, families, staff...
  • What is the point of this sitting in private motion?

    Who proposed it?

    Quite. “Democracy must be seen to be done! This is an outrage! Let’s sit in private so that nobody can see…
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    edited February 2024
    IanB2 said:

    But it’s odd, isn’t it, that for every other democratically elected body in the land, from the Scottish Parliament through to Little Sodbury Parish Council, parliament sets down a fixed electoral cycle such that everyone knows how long is their term of office, and no-one can play silly buggers with the timetable? Yet somehow, parliament itself feels it needs to be an exception.

    Just as, today, we see fun and games over whether procedurally proper opposition amendments can be tabled and debated in the Commons, whereas in every single other democratic body in the land, this right would be taken as read.
    Procedural silly buggers is not restricted to Westminster of course, even if it might focus on other areas. I don't have an inherent problem with Parliament being a bit different in some aspects, you get that with such a history and evolution.

    I am a bit of a traditionalist, and am happy to keep unique oddities and procedural arcana, as these add character to an institution, so long as they are not activley harmful. If they are harmless then getting rid of them is not really modernising things for any benefit, but can be presented as some grand achievement despite not being so.

    I do still like the principle of fixed terms, I'd like to see it again, but the operation of the FTPA proved very lacking, so it clearly needs a proper rethink if being reintroduced. And given how it went, I think the chances of Labour reintroducing it are very low.
  • Hoyle!
  • Just switched on Sky

    What an utterly shambles and a disgrace on such an important subject
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,467

    Yes I accept in the round that's probably a fair rebuttal. Consider my partisanship on this noted and understood.

    What would you like to know? The whole project itself is pretty cool and virtually unique in terms of what they are doing to get it working "down there". The majority of the Central Line is done, platforms having a lot of bands deployed, including the entire spectrum allocation for O2, EE, Vodafone, Three, so you can get some crazy good speeds on the platforms from the DAS, 700+ Mbps.

    In tunnel they use a leaky feeder, split into two parts, one going to the platforms at either end, in there the MNOs have fewer bands deployed because they don't travel as well but you'll still get 200Mbps easily.

    It's really incredible thus far where it's done. It's a shame it's been so delayed and has had so many issues, including interfering with the signalling so it got paused for some time. But it's progressing slowly now, with Piccadilly and Victoria Lines to come next.
    Very interesting. It sounds like there's work there, that, as an expert, you're proud of.

    Everyone wants that.

    'Shame', 'Progressing slowly' ... etc. What's going wrong there?

    I walk past the statue of Brunel on Paddington station quite frequently - I never pass it without a thought in his direction.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,797
    geoffw said:

    Not sufficient just to show the expected growth. The base from which it comes should be shown, or previous years' growth.
    Also, isn't it a bit dubious to be trusting Russian stats?
    And isn't it a bit dubious to be setting too much store by the stats of a wartime economy? Spending vast amounts on making war adds hugely to GDP figures but doesn't make people any richer, and does make peope considerably more dead.
    I don't buy this thread at all. 800,000 of Russia's brightest and best have fled; 300,000 more have been killed. It is unable to trade with much of its markets. It might have been rescued by POO but POO seems disinclined to help. It is selling its resources to China and India at less than it costs to extract them. Loopholes on sanctions are gradually being tightened. It has spent two thirds of its vast rainy day fund on partial and uncertain control of four Ukrainian provinces. Economically, it is fucked. It is just hanging on hoping for war fatigue in the west to strike first.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546

    It's also a tale of intimidation of MPs:

    https://twitter.com/ChaplainChloe/status/1760345776876564728

    Am told Speaker's decision today was motivated by desire to protect MPs from threats by offering range ceasefire amendments - attempting to diffuse v hostile debate

    Understand MPs went to him with concerns in the lead up to vote due to threats to themselves, families, staff...
    Very laudable of him to have that concern and motivation. I think every MP is quite likely to receive threats over this subject matter.

    Too bad for him Labour sources have said his motivation was keeping his job. Who to believe?
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,105
    Can someone please explain what on earth is happening
  • What is the point of this sitting in private motion?

    Who proposed it?

    Everybody's obviously really worried the evil Zios will murder them on their way home if they vote for the SNP motion
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154

    It's also a tale of intimidation of MPs:

    https://twitter.com/ChaplainChloe/status/1760345776876564728

    Am told Speaker's decision today was motivated by desire to protect MPs from threats by offering range ceasefire amendments - attempting to diffuse v hostile debate

    Understand MPs went to him with concerns in the lead up to vote due to threats to themselves, families, staff...
    So any interest group can start threatening and intimidating MPs now and the speaker will mess around with Parliament. The police and security services should be protecting affected MPs as democracy should be paramount and those who make threats or intimidate MPs should be hit very hard. We are screwed if, in this case, pro-Palestinian protesters can change how democracy works through the fear of violence to MPs.
  • Hoyles authority seriously undermined
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,352

    I am so lost, what exactly is going on in Parliament.

    A lot of virtue signalling nonsense. A complete waste of time.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156

    That is not a concrete measure. People fighting for their existence, as both sides rightly or wrongly think they are doing, do not change course because 1% of the world, or in Irelands case 0.1% of the world want to suspend a trade deal.
    It's more consequential than a mere Parliamentary motion.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    boulay said:

    So any interest group can start threatening and intimidating MPs now and the speaker will mess around with Parliament. The police and security services should be protecting affected MPs as democracy should be paramount and those who make threats or intimidate MPs should be hit very hard. We are screwed if, in this case, pro-Palestinian protesters can change how democracy works through the fear of violence to MPs.
    As South Park once memorably noted, violence works.

    We need to be extra vigilant when it comes to matters like this, since if that sort of thing happens, it will happen again and again, we need to overreact to the slightest hint that intimidation would impact our democratic operations, or it will become normal.

    Again, see America, where baselessly challenging elections (see the many many outcomes) has very quickly turned into disbelieving any adverse election result and even defending people convicted of violently trying to overthrow democracy.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited February 2024
    Hoyles regrets and apologises for his actions today

    He seems near tears
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    kle4 said:

    If he does (I do not think he will) the Tories should back an SNP MP as Speaker. That would be hilarious.
    There's actually some sense in that as a general principle, using a MP from a small party. Less angst in critical votes. The Scottish Parliament some years back elected a Green for PO partly, I believe, for that reason.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099
    edited February 2024

    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.
    To be honest, that bit I can identify with, having been a local councillor for almost thirty years continuous.

    Most of administration, national or local, is the hard slog of intractable problems, or problems which you could tackle if you had money that you don’t have, or problems to which you know the answer but can’t risk the politics of being the first person to propose. Meanwhile you spend much of your time cutting funding from things that are essentially worthwhile. Everything you say and do is tempered by the financial and political realities, and while in opposition you are freed from much of this, even opposition politicians try not to detach themselves entirely from reality, especially if there’s a chance of future administration. And if there isn’t, no-one will care what you say and do, anyway.

    Then along comes some wider policy issue over which you have absolutely no control - and hence relatively few constraints - and with one bound you are suddenly free to posture and promulgate and advocate and emote, and do all the things you imagined that truly free politicians would be able to do.

    Any sort of debate in a chamber that has no, or next to no, power or authority over the outcome is a busperson’s holiday for politicians, and a rare chance to let the hair hang long and give it large….



  • Can someone please explain what on earth is happening

    It's kicking off Prue, that's what's happening. Just in slow motion.

    I'm sat by the lobby watching Tories being instructed to go slow through the lobby's so there is no chance to vote as it cuts of the time. They are laughing about it. Democracy

    https://twitter.com/jessphillips/status/1760378692776128695
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    It isn't odd really. If you set a five year fixed term, then what happens if during a Parliament the governing party loses its majority due to by-election defeats?

    It could try for a coalition with another party but if that doesn't work out, then you could be left with a government which is nominally in power, but unable to get any business done.

    At the fag end of the 2017-2019 Parliament, after the 20 Conservative MPs were kicked out, the Conservatives were left with a mere 288 MPs, some 43 seats short of a majority.

    There was no way that government was going to be able to limp on to June 2022. A GE had to be held, and the FTPA was an obstruction to that as (unusually) despite being in a minority, the governing party had a significant polling lead, and so the Labour opposition didn't want an election.

    I like the quirkiness. You never know when you might get a GE.
    Every other assembly and parliament and council manages to cope.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    RobD said:

    A lot of virtue signalling nonsense. A complete waste of time.
    I would say part of the purpose of Parliament is to signal virtues (not in an Assembly of Saints way, but in a 'these are the issues the public are concerned with and we are acknowledging that' way).

    But it is not the major part of it, and the level of passion on this issue, notwithstanding the very real human tragedies happening in Israel and Gaza, is outsized to its relevance to the governance of this country.
  • SNP says Hoyles position is intolerable
  • Omnium said:

    Very interesting. It sounds like there's work there, that, as an expert, you're proud of.

    Everyone wants that.

    'Shame', 'Progressing slowly' ... etc. What's going wrong there?

    I walk past the statue of Brunel on Paddington station quite frequently - I never pass it without a thought in his direction.
    Depends who you ask. Initially the plan was to have the entire project done by the end of this year but has now been pushed back to sometime next year, so over a year late. The rollout (not of the infrastructure itself which they build during maintenance hours) was paused because of "safety issues" which I interpret as the signalling problems I referred to above.

    Then there is the complexities of working in a very old network of tunnels with all sorts of weird things that come up with that, signals don't travel as you expected them to, where do the cables go etc. there's lots that can go wrong - I am not as close to that side of things so that is as much as I really know.

    I am sure there is a lot of bureaucracy as well, with TfL running rather slowly and reacting to problems slowly too. Trying to get masts built near to the railway takes forever so I am sure they slow it down too.

    Bodlyn has just re-branded and is probably going through internal re-organisations that probably don't help.

    Then the Elizabeth Line doesn't currently support 5G at all because as I said above, when the infrastructure was installed originally they didn't put in support for the higher bands 5G uses for the fastest speeds. So they are going to have to go back and retrospectively add it another time. At least they've got 4G working on the platforms, with the physical sites built in the tunnels and just waiting to be turned on. This all should have gone live a year ago but really did break the signalling and so had to be stopped. I am not quite sure how they managed to build a system which did that but alas they did so they have to be quite careful.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    kle4 said:

    As South Park once memorably noted, violence works.

    We need to be extra vigilant when it comes to matters like this, since if that sort of thing happens, it will happen again and again, we need to overreact to the slightest hint that intimidation would impact our democratic operations, or it will become normal.

    Again, see America, where baselessly challenging elections (see the many many outcomes) has very quickly turned into disbelieving any adverse election result and even defending people convicted of violently trying to overthrow democracy.
    Can you imagine the uproar if this happened over a vote on LGBT rights where a large group were threatening MPs? Or the BNP were threatening on some race related vote?

    It’s disgraceful and Labour especially need to call it out and express clearly to people that they would rather not have the votes of those who support such attempts at manipulation rather than pander to them and soft peddle for some misguided political advantage.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,322
    The big story today in Germany:

    https://www.dw.com/en/bundesliga-scraps-major-investment-deal-amid-fan-revolt/a-68330351

    "The decision came after widespread fan protests against the proposals which had seen matches in the Bundesliga and Bundesliga 2 (Germany's top two divisions) increasingly disrupted by supporters throwing tennis balls and other objects onto pitches, causing delays of up to 30 minutes."

  • DougSeal said:

    Labour amendment passes. Can you imagine all the people huddled around their TVs and portable radios in Israel and Gaza tonight, following the minutiae of the debate, waiting to see which type of ceasefire will be called as its result.

    This feels so utterly pointless. I am sure Israel are going to roll over now the British Labour Party have called for them to stop!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    IanB2 said:

    To be honest, that bit I can identify with, having been a local councillor for almost thirty years continuous.

    Most of administration, national or local, is the hard slog of intractable problems, or problems which you could tackle if you had money that you don’t have, or problems to which you know the answer but can’t risk the politics of being the first person to propose. Meanwhile you spend much of your time cutting funding from things that are essentially worthwhile. Everything you say and do is tempered by the financial and political realities, and while in opposition you are freed from much of this, even opposition politicians try not to detach themselves entirely from reality, especially if there’s a chance of future administration. And if there isn’t, no-one will care what you say and do, anyway.

    Then along comes some wider policy issue over which you have absolutely no control - and hence relatively few constraints - and with one bound you are suddenly free to posture and promulgate and advocate and emote, and do all the things you imagined that truly free politicians would be able to do.

    Any sort of debate in a chamber that has no, or next to no, power or authority over the outcome is a busperson’s holiday for politicians, and a rare chance to let the hair hang long and give it large….



    It's one of the reasons local councillors have fun when they can opine on national issues - where they are also more likely to have disagreements with their opponents, whom they will have much unity on wanting more money from central government, not liking development, and wanting to improve services - and are keen to talk about motions which the national parties spread about from time to time.
  • I am so lost, what exactly is going on in Parliament.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzhPzHhnFl0
  • SNP says Hoyles position is intolerable

    I'm not sure that the House functions any more. Never mind Mr Speaker, Madame Deputy Speaker has also done a massive naughty by waving through the Labour motion without division. I was watching and was baffled.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    SNP says Hoyles position is intolerable

    Intolerable? Sounds like they feel sorry for him. Surely they mean some other word?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Hoyles authority seriously undermined

    Understatement
  • I have never seen anything like this in the HOC

    It is shameful and the office of speaker has been seriously damaged
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    I'm not sure that the House functions any more. Never mind Mr Speaker, Madame Deputy Speaker has also done a massive naughty by waving through the Labour motion without division. I was watching and was baffled.
    I thought the Tories and SNP had flounced off? If so, what opposition to the Labour amendment would there have been?
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154
    DougSeal said:

    Labour amendment passes. Can you imagine all the people huddled around their TVs and portable radios in Israel and Gaza tonight, following the minutiae of the debate, waiting to see which type of ceasefire will be called as its result.

    Sir Keir going for his Tony Blair Bosnian Messiah moment. It’s all you will hear in Gaza tonight “Sir Keir, Sir Keir, made the Israelis ceasefire”.
  • Understatement
    BJO is thinking up a post now about how this should mean Keir Starmer must resign.
  • I'm not sure that the House functions any more. Never mind Mr Speaker, Madame Deputy Speaker has also done a massive naughty by waving through the Labour motion without division. I was watching and was baffled.
    I am watching this live with an open mouth of astonishment and embarrassed by the chaos
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    • Night Tube
    • Ulez
    • Elizabeth Line
    • Ulex
    • 5G Tube

    YES WE KHAN!
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,099

    I have never seen anything like this in the HOC

    It is shameful and the office of speaker has been seriously damaged

    A lot of it is chucking muck hoping that much of it sticks to the odds-on favourite.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    This feels so utterly pointless. I am sure Israel are going to roll over now the British Labour Party have called for them to stop!
    They haven't.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I thought the Tories and SNP had flounced off? If so, what opposition to the Labour amendment would there have been?
    But the SNP motion also passed sans division.

    *confused*
  • • Night Tube
    • Ulez
    • Elizabeth Line
    • Ulex
    • 5G Tube

    YES WE KHAN!

    Okay give it a rest now.
  • • Night Tube
    • Ulez
    • Elizabeth Line
    • Ulex
    • 5G Tube

    YES WE KHAN!

    Khanife Khrime
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546
    Carnyx said:

    There's actually some sense in that as a general principle, using a MP from a small party. Less angst in critical votes. The Scottish Parliament some years back elected a Green for PO partly, I believe, for that reason.
    I think it would give WingsOverScotland and the 'The SNP have gone native in Westminster' crowd a heart attack though.

    I once floated the idea that the Commons should choose a retiring MP as Speaker as the final act before an election*. I'm not a huge fan of the (loosely followed) convention of major parties not opposing the standing Speaker, or the public in that area getting an MP who does not vote most of the time.

    If major parties (usually) stand down to give a free run to an incumbent Speaker then they don't really care that much about providing a range of choice for that constituency, so why have a Speaker who has constituents at all?

    *this could be combined with my other policy of ex-MPs not being able to be made Peers until 10 years or 2 terms has passed, whichever is longer, by saying the exception is unless that MP was picked as Speaker, and could be ennobled once their term as Speaker ends.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    edited February 2024
    I've generally been well disposed towards Hoyle but he may have erred badly. However if Starmer is seen as having made him an offer he can't refuse it might not look too good for the Labour leader either.
  • I am watching this live with an open mouth of astonishment and embarrassed by the chaos
    I am reminded of the dying days of the Johnson government. In minority by its own hand, the Attorney General roaring across the dispatch box demanding the house dissolves itself, with both the government and the speaker powerless to actually drive them to do anything.

    This is great! We need a General Election because the Commons is in absolute chaos, with no control from the government who appear to have triggered some of this chaos by withdrawing.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,018
    edited February 2024
    SNP leader wants to know why Starmer was given a private conversation when he wasn't and it was his opposition day debate

    He is openly saying it is a Labour stitch up

    He has yet to be convinced Hoyle should remain in post
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    SNP says Hoyles position is intolerable

    He presumably means 'untenable'.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    edited February 2024
    DougSeal said:

    Labour amendment passes. Can you imagine all the people huddled around their TVs and portable radios in Israel and Gaza tonight, following the minutiae of the debate, waiting to see which type of ceasefire will be called as its result.

    Indeed. At least now we know. The tension was all too much to bear.
  • It's more consequential than a mere Parliamentary motion.
    I'll accept it is perhaps at best a paper mache measure.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546

    I've generally been well disposed towards Hoyle but he may have erred badly. However if Starmer is seen as having made him an offer he can't refuse it might not look too good for the Labour leader either.

    Don Starmer will disavow he said any such thing, and Hoyle will deny as well I reckon, blame the 'Labour sources' thing on mistaken people. They were anonymous, they can afford to be slammed and their journalist friends annoyed when told it was wrong.
  • Pointless members shouting abuse and outrage. They need to grab the mace or something. This is chaos.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    I'm a bit confused by why there is so much outrage about the speaker allowing an amendment to a moron to be voted on. It seems a bit weird to not allow an amendment that might have a large amount of support but to be voted on.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    BJO is thinking up a post now about how this should mean Keir Starmer must resign.
    Well if he told Hoyle unless he put the Lab amendment he would ensure he was removed after the GE he is disgraceful.

    If Sunak had told Hoyles to rip up the rulebook otherwise he would sack him would you be OK with that.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    Seems like a bit of masterful politicking from Starmer tonight. He's a cunning bugger.
  • I'm a bit confused by why there is so much outrage about the speaker allowing an amendment to a moron to be voted on. It seems a bit weird to not allow an amendment that might have a large amount of support but to be voted on.

    Is that Flynn?
  • • Night Tube
    • Ulez
    • Elizabeth Line
    • Ulex
    • 5G Tube

    YES WE KHAN!

    Crappy Central Line service!
    Completely Pointless Overground renaming!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,546

    Seems like a bit of masterful politicking from Starmer tonight. He's a cunning bugger.

    He could be a remarkably effective PM. Or one too absorbed in his own cleverness.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I am reminded of the dying days of the Johnson government. In minority by its own hand, the Attorney General roaring across the dispatch box demanding the house dissolves itself, with both the government and the speaker powerless to actually drive them to do anything.

    This is great! We need a General Election because the Commons is in absolute chaos, with no control from the government who appear to have triggered some of this chaos by withdrawing.
    Quite the thing, too. We had the SNP accused of wanting to disrupt the HoC on PB earlier. But look what happens. The thought of allowing Scottish MPs to *follow the rules* was too much for SKS and the Speaker ... so SKS has handed the SNP a solid gift to take away: Scottish MPs don't count in the new world of SKS as Prime Minister.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    They haven't.
    Hey @bigjohnowls - I've pasted the Labour amendment below. Can you point out your specific objection to it?

    That this House believes that an Israeli ground offensive in Rafah risks catastrophic humanitarian consequences and therefore must not take place; notes the intolerable loss of Palestinian life, the majority being women and children;

    condemns the terrorism of Hamas who continue to hold hostages;

    supports Australia, Canada and New Zealand’s calls for Hamas to release and return all hostages and for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire, which means an immediate stop to the fighting and a ceasefire that lasts and is observed by all sides, noting that Israel cannot be expected to cease fighting if Hamas continues with violence and that Israelis have the right to the assurance that the horror of 7th October cannot happen again;

    therefore supports diplomatic mediation efforts to achieve a lasting ceasefire; demands that rapid and unimpeded humanitarian relief is provided in Gaza;

    demands an end to settlement expansion and violence; urges Israel to comply with the International Court of Justice’s provisional measures;

    calls for the UN Security Council to be meet urgently;

    and urges all international partners to work together to establish a diplomatic process to deliver the peace of a two-state solution, with a safe and secure Israel alongside a viable Palestinian state, including working with international partners to recognise a Palestinian state as a contribution to rather than outcome of that process, because statehood is the inalienable right of the Palestinian people and not in the gift of any neighbour.
  • This is a classic Westminster bubble debacle that just makes everyone look crap. Perhaps the key takeaway from this is maybe having non-binding votes on matters the HOC can’t influence isn’t a very good use of anyone’s time.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Even though the Speaker has apologised for getting it wrong, I am not convinced he did get it wrong in fact. What should he have done instead? Would MPs have been any more delighted with him.

    Is it possible that MPs got it wrong by breaking with the convention that the Speaker has the last word and makes the rules.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    Sorry for being lazy but in short what was the difference between Labour and SNP motions?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    Seems like a bit of masterful politicking from Starmer tonight. He's a cunning bugger.

    I don't think so. Thinks he can expel the speaker in the same way he has dealt with Socialists or the wrong sort of Jew.

    Nasty man who will be a disasterous PM.

    Mind you Hoyles is the main person responsible for today's farce.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    I'm a bit confused by why there is so much outrage about the speaker allowing an amendment to a moron to be voted on. It seems a bit weird to not allow an amendment that might have a large amount of support but to be voted on.

    I think you mean motion not moron but yes I agree with your point
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    DougSeal said:

    Hey @bigjohnowls - I've pasted the Labour amendment below. Can you point out your specific objection to it?

    That this House believes that an Israeli ground offensive in Rafah risks catastrophic humanitarian consequences and therefore must not take place; notes the intolerable loss of Palestinian life, the majority being women and children;

    condemns the terrorism of Hamas who continue to hold hostages;

    supports Australia, Canada and New Zealand’s calls for Hamas to release and return all hostages and for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire, which means an immediate stop to the fighting and a ceasefire that lasts and is observed by all sides, noting that Israel cannot be expected to cease fighting if Hamas continues with violence and that Israelis have the right to the assurance that the horror of 7th October cannot happen again;

    therefore supports diplomatic mediation efforts to achieve a lasting ceasefire; demands that rapid and unimpeded humanitarian relief is provided in Gaza;

    demands an end to settlement expansion and violence; urges Israel to comply with the International Court of Justice’s provisional measures;

    calls for the UN Security Council to be meet urgently;

    and urges all international partners to work together to establish a diplomatic process to deliver the peace of a two-state solution, with a safe and secure Israel alongside a viable Palestinian state, including working with international partners to recognise a Palestinian state as a contribution to rather than outcome of that process, because statehood is the inalienable right of the Palestinian people and not in the gift of any neighbour.
    It was agreed by SKS?
  • algarkirk said:

    Even though the Speaker has apologised for getting it wrong, I am not convinced he did get it wrong in fact. What should he have done instead? Would MPs have been any more delighted with him.

    Is it possible that MPs got it wrong by breaking with the convention that the Speaker has the last word and makes the rules.

    His ruling was in order. Unconventional, but in order. Procedurally.
    Politically? Oh dear oh dear...
This discussion has been closed.