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Record breaking Rishi – politicalbetting.com

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  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,369
    HYUFD said:

    The Conservatives had a 23% lead over Labour amongst Anglicans in 2019, only Jews had a higher percentage of Tories

    "Religion and Party Preference in 2019 |" http://www.brin.ac.uk/figures/religion-and-party-preference-in-2019/
    So with the swing since then, Labour are probably ahead by now.

    (Your core point, that clergy are politically leftier than their congregations, is probably right. In part, that's just because working clergy are of working age and most congregations are dominated by the retired.)
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Perhaps, but I'm right, aren't I?

    There's a difference between seeking to promote your own views (and if others wither and die, then so be it) and going out of your way to destroy others systems so there's no competition to your own.

    The Church in its history has done a lot of the latter and it is absolutely a black mark in their history they bloody well should apologise for.
    No, I don’t think you are right.
    The point of proselytisation is to convert.
    Logically, every convert also means one less subscriber to “alternative belief systems”.

    If the Anglicans want to apologise for something akin to the Taliban destruction of Buddhist monuments, then that’s fine. But they seem to want to apologise just for doing the day job as it were.
  • david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 18,214

    The difference in the number of MPs who will lose their jobs in May and October is about zero.

    They're going to get destroyed either way.
    Indeed. Sunak would basically be asking MPs and ministers to give up their jobs 6 months earlier on the off-chance that it might save a handful of MPs - implicitly agreeing that he'd make things worse if he remained in Downing Street over the summer.

    We literally had the worst-ever Tory vote share with Ipsos/Mori today (and a Lab+27 lead). Even the Lab+14 lead Deltapoll came up with is a bigger lead than either of Blair's landslide victories. That is not the backdrop to call an election against, when holding out is still a credible option.
  • .
    Fishing said:

    Then you're going to be devastatingly disappointed. Labour view the private sector as an ATM to be raided as much as possible for money to shovel towards their interest groups. Their only reflexes are tax, regulate and waste. They will be a disaster for our already stagnating economy.
    The problem is todays Conservative Party also views the private sector as an ATM to be raided as much as possible for money to shovel towards their interest groups. Their only reflexes are tax, regulate and waste. They are a disaster for our already stagnating economy.

    The interest groups vary. For Labour its public sector workers, for the Tories its pensioners. Neither give a damn anymore about the private sector.

    At least public sector workers are working, so perhaps Labour now will be the lesser evil?
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited March 2024

    So with the swing since then, Labour are probably ahead by now.

    (Your core point, that clergy are politically leftier than their congregations, is probably right. In part, that's just because working clergy are of working age and most congregations are dominated by the retired.)
    also that clergy are more inclined to truly believe in God and Jesus ,wheras congregations truly believe in the institution of the Church more and whilst not totally mutually exclusive , clergy like to "do good "and congregations like to mend the church roof and have parish meetings
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,729
    kle4 said:

    But surely that summary suggests even the goal of converting people is wrong, not simply that their actions in pursuit of the goal was wrong? And if they think converting people to Christianity is wrong, what should they be doing instead? Or are they saying Africans should not have become Christians?

    I feel like I will need to read the report as surely they found a way of saying the way they went about it was wrong rather than that converting Africans was bad.
    (Some) Africans became Christians long before anyone on our islands did. North Africa was a centre of early Christianity, with figures including Augustine, Aurelius, Tertullian and Arius.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,266
    rcs1000 - Here's the Wikipedia article on China's demographics: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_China

    The latest TFR (2023) is estimated at 1.07.

    But matters are even worse than that raw numbers implies. If you look at the male/female ratio, you'll see that males outnumber females by more than one would expect, naturally.

    (My apologies for being such a downer on this, but I can't help worrying that "Emperor" Xi realizes that he now has the largest potential army that any Chinese leader is likely to have in the next 40 years or so.)
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,729

    rcs1000 - Here's the Wikipedia article on China's demographics: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_China

    The latest TFR (2023) is estimated at 1.07.

    But matters are even worse than that raw numbers implies. If you look at the male/female ratio, you'll see that males outnumber females by more than one would expect, naturally.

    (My apologies for being such a downer on this, but I can't help worrying that "Emperor" Xi realizes that he now has the largest potential army that any Chinese leader is likely to have in the next 40 years or so.)

    Well, Taiwan's TFR is similar, so that also means Taiwan has the largest potential army that any Chinese leader is likely to face in the next 40 years or so.
  • No, I don’t think you are right.
    The point of proselytisation is to convert.
    Logically, every convert also means one less subscriber to “alternative belief systems”.

    If the Anglicans want to apologise for something akin to the Taliban destruction of Buddhist monuments, then that’s fine. But they seem to want to apologise just for doing the day job as it were.
    But there's a difference between proselytisation and destruction.

    If people convert of their own free will and old beliefs wither and die, then there's absolutely nothing wrong with that.

    But if old beliefs are targeted, discriminated against, vandalised and destroyed then that is a problem.

    Its like democracy versus autocracy. A democratic Conservative [or Labour or anything else] may want to encourage others to vote Conservative [or Labour etc]. They may go knocking up, campaigning etc, that's a form of proselytisation and there's absolutely nothing wrong with it. But they will also respect the right of people who have very different beliefs to keep, hold and act by their beliefs - and for the others to be proselytising too.

    However an autocrat like in Russia will seek to destroy rivals, not via proselytisation, but via murder, violence, repression etc

    One is decent, the other is not. The Church for much of its history operated via the latter camp, not the former.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,278
    edited March 2024

    I have no issue with Anglicanism being an increasingly African communion. I assume that Anglicans wish to continue to proselytise, and indeed Africa is increasingly where global population growth is centred.

    I just think it’s daft to apologise for promoting your own religion, that’s the bloody point, isn’t it? By definition, if you believe in Anglicanism, you must also believe that other religions or belief systems are somehow misguided or at least open to further enlightenment.

    I guess that’s just an unfashionable view now, if not downright racist.

    Rather as a key part of Evangelism in the Missionary era was translating and preaching vernacular languages, a key part now is in working within other cultures.

    For example, in Victorian times converts were expected to adopt Christian names, European clothes, even to have sex in the missionary position. None of these are needed in order to be a Christian.

    Indeed, very often more traditional Christian churches like the Anglicans are being squeezed out by African Christian Churches with a more Charismatic and Pentacostal style. Shortly before Covid I was at a Christian conference centre where our meeting of Church treasurers was sharing the centre with 2 other groups, one of which was a Southern African Church of Zion, all decked out in splendid African robes. Their sessions looked much more fun than our national accounts, and made for interesting chats in the bar.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,148

    That is not the backdrop to call an election against, when holding out is still a credible option.

    Holding out is not a credible option

    The decision will be taken from Richi if he doesn't make it himself

    Some Tories loyal to Sunak fear that this could trigger a fresh bout of leadership speculation and even a confidence vote. It would be better, they suggest, for Sunak to be the master of his own destiny and go to the country at the same time rather than risk being overthrown by his own MPs in a last desperate throw of the dice.
  • Scott_xP said:

    Holding out is not a credible option

    The decision will be taken from Richi if he doesn't make it himself

    Some Tories loyal to Sunak fear that this could trigger a fresh bout of leadership speculation and even a confidence vote. It would be better, they suggest, for Sunak to be the master of his own destiny and go to the country at the same time rather than risk being overthrown by his own MPs in a last desperate throw of the dice.
    They have a majority, holding out is absolutely a credible option.

    It won't win them the next election, but nothing will.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,844
    edited March 2024
    ...

    Or perhaps that's precisely why they should?

    If you accept their actions were wrong, and those wrong actions were central to their operations, then shouldn't they apologise and reform?
    You're dedicated to promoting your set of beliefs all the live long day; should you apologise retrospectively if anyone ever ends up exchanging their traditional beliefs for one of yours?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,569
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  • ...

    You're dedicated to promoting your set of beliefs all the live long day; should you apologise retrospectively if anyone ever ends up exchanging their traditional beliefs for one of yours?
    No.

    Convincing people via a free exchange of ideas is a good thing.

    Convincing people via repression, the barrel of the gun and destroying others beliefs systems is a bad thing.

    Hence why democracy is good, and your beloved Moscow is bad.

    The problem is the Church didn't simply proselytise in the past, that's a complete rewriting of history. It very much sought to destroy alternatives, via malicious means, which is wrong.
  • HYUFD said:

    The problem with the C of E is most of the Bishops and Deans and Archdeacons and administrators at Church House are now Labour voters but most of the congregation of their churches are Telegraph and Mail reading Conservatives.

    There is only so much more woke rubbish and wasting of funds the latter will take from the former before they openly revolt!
    If the COE is down to Telegraph and Mail reading conservatives, then they will be competing with the conservative's membership as to who has the larger followers
  • Scott_xP said:

    Holding out is not a credible option

    The decision will be taken from Richi if he doesn't make it himself

    Some Tories loyal to Sunak fear that this could trigger a fresh bout of leadership speculation and even a confidence vote. It would be better, they suggest, for Sunak to be the master of his own destiny and go to the country at the same time rather than risk being overthrown by his own MPs in a last desperate throw of the dice.
    It will not happen and no matter how many posts you make, it will not change that Sunak will lead into the GE no matter when this year

    Now what follows post the GE no body can know except Sunak will move on to pastures new
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100
    CatMan said:

    Isn't the King leader of the Church of England?
    No, Supreme Governor
  • HYUFD said:

    No, Supreme Governor
    Aren't those synonyms?

    Isn't the Supreme Governor a leader?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100

    The SC have overruled the rights of Blue states to have stricter gun control.
    As the right to bear arms is a constitutional amendment unlike the right to an abortion
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,240

    They have a majority, holding out is absolutely a credible option.

    It won't win them the next election, but nothing will.
    To be fair, it's easy to forget they have a fat majority given how utterly they have failed to make any effective use of it recently...
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,688

    A curious thing has happened on PB - I can no longer see who has 'liked' a particular post. I can see the number of likes but not the list of individuals. Which is a shame.

    Anyone else got that issue?

    Yes, noticed it earlier on.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,569

    A curious thing has happened on PB - I can no longer see who has 'liked' a particular post. I can see the number of likes but not the list of individuals. Which is a shame.

    Anyone else got that issue?

    Same here.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100
    edited March 2024

    Aren't those synonyms?

    Isn't the Supreme Governor a leader?
    No the leader of the Church of England is the Archbishop of Canterbury ie its CEO, the King is effectively its chairman and symbolic head
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,729
    HYUFD said:

    As the right to bear arms is a constitutional amendment unlike the right to an abortion
    The SC's interpretation of the right to bear arms is questionable.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,302

    A curious thing has happened on PB - I can no longer see who has 'liked' a particular post. I can see the number of likes but not the list of individuals. Which is a shame.

    Anyone else got that issue?

    Somebody liked that post. I wonder who?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100

    If the COE is down to Telegraph and Mail reading conservatives, then they will be competing with the conservative's membership as to who has the larger followers
    There are still about three times as many go to a weekly C of E service than are Tory party members, although obviously even
    now far more still vote Conservative. Though the number of Christians of all denominations is still bigger than the number of Conservative voters
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    A curious thing has happened on PB - I can no longer see who has 'liked' a particular post. I can see the number of likes but not the list of individuals. Which is a shame.

    Anyone else got that issue?

    Never been able to do that on my phone, only on my laptop
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,856

    A curious thing has happened on PB - I can no longer see who has 'liked' a particular post. I can see the number of likes but not the list of individuals. Which is a shame.

    Anyone else got that issue?

    Do I not like that.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,314
    dixiedean said:

    Yep.
    I'm not sure where this almost PB consensus arises from?
    I think it's wishful thinking. While I accept there is an argument for May, there are also arguments for every other month between now and January 2025.

    Without knowledge of Sunak's internal thoughts we are just guessing. the fact that PB has reached an almost-consensus on speculation but no evidence just demonstrates the danger of groupthink.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,163
    edited March 2024

    No.

    Convincing people via a free exchange of ideas is a good thing.

    Convincing people via repression, the barrel of the gun and destroying others beliefs systems is a bad thing.

    Hence why democracy is good, and your beloved Moscow is bad.

    The problem is the Church didn't simply proselytise in the past, that's a complete rewriting of history. It very much sought to destroy alternatives, via malicious means, which is wrong.
    People haven't forgotten the soup here. During the famine the Anglican church in Ireland would offer starving people soup on condition that they renounced the Catholic church and joined the Anglican.

    On Shrove Tuesday just past the local Anglican church was offering pancakes, and fortunately matters have improved that such conditions are no longer attached. But the difference was remarked upon.
  • A curious thing has happened on PB - I can no longer see who has 'liked' a particular post. I can see the number of likes but not the list of individuals. Which is a shame.

    Anyone else got that issue?

    Seems so
  • People haven't forgotten the soup here. During the famine the Anglican church in Ireland would offer starving people soup on condition that they renounced the Catholic church and joined the Anglican.

    On Shrove Tuesday just past the local Anglican church was offering pancakes, and fortunately matters have improved that sick conditions are no longer attached. But the difference was remarked upon.
    Yes, the Church (not just Anglican) has a torrid history.

    To rewrite it as "proselytisation" is a complete rewriting of history.

    In the words of Gardenwalker "akin to destroying monuments" (or threats of starvation etc too) is the relevant part of its history that is being discussed.

    To pretend history is all sunshine and roses and honest proseltyisation is to just rewrite and deny history, its not.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076
    "PS – Those who wish to replace Sunak with the Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton will take comfort that even at his nadir Lord Cameron’s ratings were a damn sight better than any other PM since Ipsos polling began."

    But at -38 it's still not that good. Cameron decided to leave whera as al the others were voted out pushed out or were in such a dire position in their party that they jumped before they were pushed. Cameron was liked by Leavers and liked by Tory Remainers, only the non-Tory Remainers gave him bad ratings. Had he had attempted to push Brexit through parliament himself I'm sure his net satisfaction statistic would have been much worse.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,741
    viewcode said:

    I think it's wishful thinking. While I accept there is an argument for May, there are also arguments for every other month between now and January 2025.

    Without knowledge of Sunak's internal thoughts we are just guessing. the fact that PB has reached an almost-consensus on speculation but no evidence just demonstrates the danger of groupthink.
    The reason for going for May 2nd is because if Rishi doesn't there is likely to be a vote of No confidence in him triggered on the 3rd / 6th. So he may as well go early..
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076

    Same here.
    Me too.... Off with the Mod's head!
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,653

    Seems so
    Still, at least we've got those 28x28 pixel image thumbnails to look at.

    So it's not all bad.
  • eek said:

    The reason for going for May 2nd is because if Rishi doesn't there is likely to be a vote of No confidence in him triggered on the 3rd / 6th. So he may as well go early..
    How's that any different from Boris's outriders threatening to call an early election if he was No Confidenced?

    The Party was in no state for an early election then, and its in an even worse state now.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,266
    FWIW, the vanishing names for "likes" affects comments under older headers, as well as the current one.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,653

    Aren't those synonyms?

    Isn't the Supreme Governor a leader?
    This feels like a pub quiz at a Blakes 7 convention.

    And also, I'm extra annoyed that I can't see any potential thumbs up for a faint Servalan reference.

    :: grumpy face emoji constrained to 28px ::
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    How's that any different from Boris's outriders threatening to call an early election if he was No Confidenced?

    The Party was in no state for an early election then, and its in an even worse state now.
    Perhaps Sunny would rather face the country than the plotters in his own party. Better to go on your own terms than be knifed by the rebels, perhaps.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,653

    FWIW, the vanishing names for "likes" affects comments under older headers, as well as the current one.

    Up next - you can't see any previous posts and just have to post your thoughts into the void!
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,314
    ohnotnow said:

    This feels like a pub quiz at a Blakes 7 convention.

    And also, I'm extra annoyed that I can't see any potential thumbs up for a faint Servalan reference.

    :: grumpy face emoji constrained to 28px ::
    She was the Supreme Commander, not the Supreme Governor. Obviously different 😃
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,856
    ohnotnow said:

    Up next - you can't see any previous posts and just have to post your thoughts into the void!
    No, the next step should be to remove the usernames so you can't see who's written the comments.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,314

    No, the next step should be to remove the usernames so you can't see who's written the comments.
    And then make the entire site invisible 😃
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100
    edited March 2024

    The SC's interpretation of the right to bear arms is questionable.
    It isn’t in the sense the 2nd amendment to the US constitution guarantees all Americans a right to bear arms. Unless and until that amendment is repealed the SC is legally entitled to restrict state gun control measures
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,607
    HYUFD said:

    No the leader of the Church of England is the Archbishop of Canterbury ie its CEO, the King is effectively its chairman and symbolic head
    Don’t God or Jesus have any positions of authority?
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,653
    viewcode said:

    She was the Supreme Commander, not the Supreme Governor. Obviously different 😃
    I KNOW. Apart from when she wasn't. (Bonus points for those who know)

    Also, my overriding memory of Jacqueline Pearce is seeing her strut down Oxford Street being followed at a respectful (and fearful) distance by some rather camp B7 fans whilst she grinned like a Cheshire Cat.

    This is why I come to PB. And now I'm even denied knowing who understands.

    I'll be reduced to minor issues like the forthcoming budget, who will be the next US president, etc.

    For shame.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100

    Perhaps Sunny would rather face the country than the plotters in his own party. Better to go on your own terms than be knifed by the rebels, perhaps.
    He knows the plotters don’t have the numbers to remove him nor an alternative candidate commanding a majority of Tory MPs support
  • How's that any different from Boris's outriders threatening to call an early election if he was No Confidenced?

    The Party was in no state for an early election then, and its in an even worse state now.
    I suppose the difference is in the constitutional crisis involved.

    Johnson would have been calling a ludicrously early election with a large majority where another Tory PM could have commanded a majority. That would have been very tricky for the Queen.

    Sunak would be doing it at a perfectly normal time at the natural end to the Parliament. Very much easier for the King.
  • Don’t God or Jesus have any positions of authority?
    Isn't it the case that in England the Archbishop of Canterbury is the head but the Church of Scotland has Jesus Christ as its head
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Don’t God or Jesus have any positions of authority?
    Exactly. Not to mention the Holy Ghost.

    The PM interposes between the Sovereign and the Archbish too when it comes to picking bishops - see Trollope etc ad lib. This has been rather downplayed in recent years but the power can be reimposed with the flick of a fingernail in Pmt.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Yes, the Church (not just Anglican) has a torrid history.

    To rewrite it as "proselytisation" is a complete rewriting of history.

    In the words of Gardenwalker "akin to destroying monuments" (or threats of starvation etc too) is the relevant part of its history that is being discussed.

    To pretend history is all sunshine and roses and honest proseltyisation is to just rewrite and deny history, its not.
    You haven’t really addressed the point, just made vague references to Anglicanism’s torrid history.

    The Irish case mentioned is shameful of course, but for reasons other than the supposed “destruction of traditional beliefs”.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    edited March 2024
    ohnotnow said:

    Up next - you can't see any previous posts and just have to post your thoughts into the void!
    A sort of upmarket intellectual version of yelling at the clouds.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    HYUFD said:

    As the right to bear arms is a constitutional amendment unlike the right to an abortion
    You’re obsessed with abortion.
    We weren’t discussing it.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    A vegan flavour breakthrough.

    Blackburn’s Kirk Haworth makes history on Great British Menu
    https://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/news/24156358.blackburns-kirk-haworth-makes-history-great-british-menu/
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited March 2024

    No, the next step should be to remove the usernames so you can't see who's written the comments.
    That would unacceptably raise the risk of inadvertantly reading a post by

    *****,
    **********, or
    ******************
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782

    That would unacceptably raise the risk of inadvertantly reading a post by

    *****,
    **********, or
    ******************
    Some posters are readily identifiable in any event.
    Though that would also make them relatively easy to simulate.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    An interesting point.

    SCOTUS reliance on 14A Sec 5 power of Congress to enforce Sec 3 is wholly unpersuasive, given that Sec 3 itself delegates to Congress power to lift the disqualification for insurrectionists by a 2/3 vote, not simple majority, as in Sec 5. The specific supersedes the general.
    https://twitter.com/dorfonlaw/status/1764668387135828247

    Today’s ruling does read as though the court’s decision to throw out Trump’s disqualification preceded the construction of the rationale.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100
    edited March 2024

    Isn't it the case that in
    England the Archbishop of
    Canterbury is the head but
    the Church of Scotland has
    Jesus Christ as its head
    No only under Henry VIII was
    the King its head and the
    Archbishop is a leader of it
    not its head. Mary Tudor then restored the Pope as it's head but Elizabeth I made herself only Supreme Governor reflecting the fact Christ was its head
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,266
    edited March 2024
    Religious issues can get complex: For example: "Two men with ties to a white supremacist prison group have been charged in the death of a man and woman whose bodies were found dumped at the side of a road in Maple Valley last November. One of the suspects is also accused of killing a local family’s horse."

    The horse was killed as "a sacrifice to Odin".
    source: https://mynorthwest.com/3951010/two-charged-in-maple-valley-murders/

    Recently, another horse in the same area was found, killed in a similar way.

    (The murders occurred in a rural area, southeast of Seattle. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maple_Valley,_Washington )
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100
    Nigelb said:

    An interesting point.

    SCOTUS reliance on 14A Sec 5 power of Congress to enforce Sec 3 is wholly unpersuasive, given that Sec 3 itself delegates to Congress power to lift the disqualification for insurrectionists by a 2/3 vote, not simple majority, as in Sec 5. The specific supersedes the general.
    https://twitter.com/dorfonlaw/status/1764668387135828247

    Today’s ruling does read as though the court’s decision to throw out Trump’s disqualification preceded the construction of the rationale.

    That doesn't mean blue states like Colorado and Illinois can remove him from the ballot in a Federal election. They can remove state government candidates not Federal government candidates is what the SC made clear. Only Congress can remove Federal government candidates from the ballot
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,301
    HYUFD said:

    He knows the plotters don’t have the numbers to remove him nor an alternative candidate commanding a majority of Tory MPs support
    Will that remain the case following and absolute trouncing in the local elections in May? That seems the moment to pounce if you are a rebel.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,100
    Ratters said:

    Will that remain the case following and absolute trouncing in the local elections in May? That seems the moment to pounce if you are a rebel.
    Yes as all other alternatives poll even worse than Rishi except maybe Mordaunt who doesn't have the numbers of Tory MPs behind her to win
  • HYUFD said:

    No only under Henry VIII was
    the King its head and the
    Archbishop is a leader of it
    not its head. Mary Tudor then restored the Pope as it's head but Elizabeth I made herself only Supreme Governor reflecting the fact Christ was its head
    There can be only one head of the Christian Church and that is Christ - everything else is nonsensical dogma
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,350
    Nigelb said:

    Some posters are readily identifiable in any event.
    Though that would also make them relatively easy to simulate.
    And in one particular case to stimulate.
    Though he isn't picky about stimulants.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    .
    HYUFD said:

    That doesn't mean blue states like Colorado and Illinois can remove him from the ballot in a Federal election. They can remove state government candidates not Federal government candidates is what the SC made clear. Only Congress can remove Federal government candidates from the ballot
    Well done for missing the point completely, again.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,314
    ohnotnow said:

    I KNOW. Apart from when she wasn't. (Bonus points for those who know)

    I didn't even have to look it up... :(



  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,856
    https://twitter.com/IAPolls2022/status/1764738609893277900

    Net Approval Ratings at this time (1,140 days) in office.

    • Biden: -18.1%
    • Truman: -13.7%
    • Trump: -11%
    • H.W. Bush: -9.7%
    • Obama: +2.9%
    • G.W. Bush: +4.5%
    • Clinton: +11.5%
    • Carter: +17.4%
    • Reagan: +17.6%
    • Nixon: +23.7%
    • Eisenhower: +60.8%
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    edited March 2024
    Nigelb said:

    An interesting point.

    SCOTUS reliance on 14A Sec 5 power of Congress to enforce Sec 3 is wholly unpersuasive, given that Sec 3 itself delegates to Congress power to lift the disqualification for insurrectionists by a 2/3 vote, not simple majority, as in Sec 5. The specific supersedes the general.
    https://twitter.com/dorfonlaw/status/1764668387135828247

    Today’s ruling does read as though the court’s decision to throw out Trump’s disqualification preceded the construction of the rationale.

    That would not exactly be unusual for the Court. Politicians in fancy dress and uppity attitudes, with higher than average eloquence.

    Though I can understand why they came to this particular conclusion at least.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,314
    Nigelb said:

    An interesting point.

    SCOTUS reliance on 14A Sec 5 power of Congress to enforce Sec 3 is wholly unpersuasive, given that Sec 3 itself delegates to Congress power to lift the disqualification for insurrectionists by a 2/3 vote, not simple majority, as in Sec 5. The specific supersedes the general.
    https://twitter.com/dorfonlaw/status/1764668387135828247

    Today’s ruling does read as though the court’s decision to throw out Trump’s disqualification preceded the construction of the rationale.

    Unfortunately, you can't appal the SC to a higher court...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    kle4 said:

    That would not exactly be unusual for the Court. Politicians in fancy dress and uppity attitudes, with higher than average eloquence.

    Though I can understand why they came to this particular conclusion at least.
    The “particular conclusion” here is that the disqualification clause is not self executing; a decision which four of the nine justices did not assent to.

    It is fairly well explained in the latter part of this article.
    https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2024/03/supreme-court-trump-colorado-ballot-disaster.html
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,856
    Warming up for Super Tuesday:

    image
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