Howdy, Stranger!

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

Raynergate isn’t cutting through – politicalbetting.com

124

Comments

  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    DavidL said:

    Well if it’s £45bn a year to have @kjh avoid an extra 20 minutes in a queue now and then that has to be value.
    3 hrs and the cost of the unnecessary hotel in Paris every year for my bike trip plus fast processing a vet and pet passport ( not sure that one is possible) and I'll be happy so if you can all chip in for the cost 👍
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,478

    Houchen/Street wins and Hall within 10 to 15% probably saves Sunak and drives an election call immediately after a Rwanda flight takes off imo, we will see though
    By all accounts Hall is an awful candidate yet polls far higher than her party.

    Why is that ?

    Is it because Khan is a doofus or because Londoners see something in her ?
  • Taz said:

    How on earth can Houchen win ? I get Street, but Houchen. Even ignoring the OTT partisan criticism in some parts he clearly has not delivered and there are many questions that need answering from his second term.
    Local media has been bought by the Houchen team feeding them stories. You have the biggest grift / incompetence story in their back yard and none of them got it. So there is a moron vote who lap up whatever he says despite all the evidence of their own senses demonstrating that its a big lie.

    Plus, Labour had a looooong way to come back after the fiasco of selecting Jessie Jessie Jessie Jessie Joe Jacobs as the Momentum candidate last time.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,587
    TimS said:

    I’ve missed 5 flights in my adult life, which I believe is quite an unusual achievement:

    1. Stansted to Malmo, because of traffic jam on the M11
    2. Paris CDG to home: traffic jam on périphérique
    3. Heathrow to Hamburg: got to the gate and realised I had my sons passport
    4. Schipol to home: delayed flight so sat in the bar, relaxed, and missed final call
    5. Dar es Salaam to home via Bahrain: didn’t reconfirm, flight overbooked, had to spend another 3 days in Tanzania before the next flight

    I almost made it 6 on a return from Miami. Sat in the lounge, flight delayed, have a few drinks, then suddenly flight closing. They fitted me on but with a downgrade from business to economy right at the back.
    My worst experience was arriving penniless and strung out on heroin at Tenerife airport - I didn’t mind being penniless and strung out as I expected to fly home to friends immediately

    Then I realised I was two days EARLY

    I had no money to get a new flight or change the flight I had and there was nothing else I could do and so I spent two days living in Tenerife airport drinking from the water fountains and eating leftover sandwiches, as I went cold turkey

    After about the 27th hour, Tenerife airport gets quite boring
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    Taz said:

    By all accounts Hall is an awful candidate yet polls far higher than her party.

    Why is that ?

    Is it because Khan is a doofus or because Londoners see something in her ?
    I imagine Labour will underperform where they are the incumbents.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,478
    We’re off to book a holiday. Appreciate I’m not a posho like many here so we will be limited somewhat by cash but any views on Cape Verde, Lake Garda and Praia Da Rocha ?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited April 2024

    He only needs one. Of course the majority of the jury will find him guilty, because he is guilty and Trump will give ludicrous defences. But he will get his mistrial and call it being acquitted.
    A true MAGA would not consider reading the NYT even once, the fact even the foreman does suggests he is reasonably balanced (in fact probably more so than the others as they mainly follow and read liberal media, he reads a mixture of conservative and liberal media).

    Even if the verdict was not unanimous that is not an acquittal any more than it is a guilty verdict and charges can be reinstated
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,157

    Five hours and twelve and a half miles into day one, Jess and I have stopped for our first can of marching juice

    Yes I am a lunatic. In my extremely limited packing space, I brought a toy cat for scale..


    Cat. For scale.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited April 2024
    Taz said:

    By all accounts Hall is an awful candidate yet polls far higher than her party.

    Why is that ?

    Is it because Khan is a doofus or because Londoners see something in her ?
    Her approvals are roughly same as Sunak favourable, far far fewer unfavourable (and many DKs), its not 'attractive' its lack of drag

    Edit, and Khan is uber gash
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,478
    edited April 2024

    Local media has been bought by the Houchen team feeding them stories. You have the biggest grift / incompetence story in their back yard and none of them got it. So there is a moron vote who lap up whatever he says despite all the evidence of their own senses demonstrating that its a big lie.

    Plus, Labour had a looooong way to come back after the fiasco of selecting Jessie Jessie Jessie Jessie Joe Jacobs as the Momentum candidate last time.
    Was she momentum ?

    I remember one of her election videos. It was comically bad. I ended up feeling sorry for her. She did one photo call with Jet from Gladiators. Ended up on all the Alan Partridge Facebook groups. Being mocked.

    She Tried for a Stockton seat in the upcoming election. Failed.

    I’m in Durham so don’t see the local tees press but the local politics shows here do hold him to account, even if he doesn’t appear personally.

    Having said that I once had a very pleasant chat with him about the 87 cup final on Facebook. Coventry city striker, Keith,was his uncle. Still is if he’s still with us.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,157
    Leon said:

    It really is NOT "all about the connections". Sure your Daddy might get you a job for a year or two but if you can't do it, you're gone. Journalism is fiercely competitive
    1. Your money/CV gets you the interview
    2. Your blagging ability gets you the job
    3. Your talent gives you the ability to keep it

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited April 2024
    Taz said:

    By all accounts Hall is an awful candidate yet polls far higher than her party.

    Why is that ?

    Is it because Khan is a doofus or because Londoners see something in her ?
    Hall is still polling worse than any London Tory Mayoral candidate since Steve Norris, her vote is more an anti Khan vote than a pro Tory vote
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    Taz said:

    By all accounts Hall is an awful candidate yet polls far higher than her party.

    Why is that ?

    Is it because Khan is a doofus or because Londoners see something in her ?
    She is quite dreadful. She even got skewered by the Khan hating Nick Ferrari over the "theft" on the tube of her purse.

    Khan is very unpopular in Mail and GBNews circles, being both a socialist and Muslim. There is also a negative incumbency effect from some of his bolder transport policies.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    viewcode said:

    Cat. For scale.
    cat. for. scale. might be her current location.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,306
    The EU is developing

    Her approvals are roughly same as Sunak favourable, far far fewer unfavourable (and many DKs), its not 'attractive' its lack of drag

    Edit, and Khan is uber gash
    And, compared with Sunak, she's shored up her right flank better.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,478

    Her approvals are roughly same as Sunak favourable, far far fewer unfavourable (and many DKs), its not 'attractive' its lack of drag

    Edit, and Khan is uber gash
    I asked google what that meant and also googled it. It came up with Uber cash. !!!

    Don’t want to trigger Anabobazina

    I take it Uber gash is not a compliment.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    "Benefits to be axed after a year on the dole to stop it becoming a 'lifestyle choice', Prime Minister announces"

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13330045/Benefits-axed-year-stop-lifestyle-choice-Prime-Minister.html
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    Andy_JS said:

    "Benefits to be axed after a year on the dole to stop it becoming a 'lifestyle choice', Prime Minister announces"

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13330045/Benefits-axed-year-stop-lifestyle-choice-Prime-Minister.html

    He really does despise poor people.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Taz said:

    I asked google what that meant and also googled it. It came up with Uber cash. !!!

    Don’t want to trigger Anabobazina

    I take it Uber gash is not a compliment.
    It is not. It means utterly crapulent. Imo of course, other opinions exist
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,544
    kjh said:

    3 hrs and the cost of the unnecessary hotel in Paris every year for my bike trip plus fast processing a vet and pet passport ( not sure that one is possible) and I'll be happy so if you can all chip in for the cost 👍
    Sounds like it's time to do the London Paris by bike run.
    https://london2paris.co.uk/

    This 5x year old lady did London to Sweden bike-packing on a Brompton :smile:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TegW1u_ltsc
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,215
    Andy_JS said:

    "Benefits to be axed after a year on the dole to stop it becoming a 'lifestyle choice', Prime Minister announces"

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13330045/Benefits-axed-year-stop-lifestyle-choice-Prime-Minister.html

    Will this impact life peers at the Lords who only attend for their fee and daily nap?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,478
    HYUFD said:

    Hall is still polling worse than any London Tory Mayoral candidate since Steve Norris, her vote is more an anti Khan vote than a pro Tory vote
    How did they compare to,the Tories nationally though. Your camp are low 20s consistently. If she’s that terrible wouldn’t she be lower than the average ?
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,306

    He really does despise poor people.
    And from the perspective of chez Sunak, almost everyone else is poor.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Andy_JS said:

    "Benefits to be axed after a year on the dole to stop it becoming a 'lifestyle choice', Prime Minister announces"

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13330045/Benefits-axed-year-stop-lifestyle-choice-Prime-Minister.html

    Yeah, being disabled and living on benefits is sheer luxury, I can attest to that. We all aspire to poor health and subsistence with the government determining your worth as a resource to invest peanuts in.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,478

    It is not. It means utterly crapulent. Imo of course, other opinions exist
    Cheers. I feel I’m getting down wiv da yoof. I may use it at work now. I was worried it was a vaginal reference.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,906

    He really does despise poor people.
    The stuff on benefits recently suggests he's decided to pursue what Paul Scully called the "bell-end" strategy.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited April 2024
    Taz said:

    Cheers. I feel I’m getting down wiv da yoof. I may use it at work now. I was worried it was a vaginal reference.
    Hmmmmm, it might be. I use it to mean garbage/rubbish etc but it does also have 'that' aspect
    I'm in my fifties, I cannot speak for yoofs
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Chris said:

    The stuff on benefits recently suggests he's decided to pursue what Paul Scully called the "bell-end" strategy.
    He's after the 'they are all scroungers' vote without having to actually do anything
    Not so much 'look, squirrel' as 'look, thieving, lazy squirrel'
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    Andy_JS said:

    "Benefits to be axed after a year on the dole to stop it becoming a 'lifestyle choice', Prime Minister announces"

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13330045/Benefits-axed-year-stop-lifestyle-choice-Prime-Minister.html

    Would be a clear shift to a US style welfare system if true, albeit it only seems to apply to those not complying with Jobcentre conditions. 'He said the Tory manifesto would pledge legislation that will mean people will have 'their claim closed and their benefits removed entirely' after 12 months on the dole if they are failing to comply with Jobcentre conditions, such as accepting available work.

    Mr Sunak dismissed concerns the move could leave people destitute, saying that pushing people into work would leave them better off by an average of £7,000 a year. He added: 'There is an enormous amount of support available to these people, and no medical reason why they can't work, but we have half a million currently on benefits for a very long time.

    'And I worry very much about this becoming a lifestyle choice. It's a basic matter of fairness.'

    The fact is a Tory manifesto pledge rather than something to be legislated for now suggests it is also a bit of redmeat thrown in the direction of Reform voters than something the government expects to deliver

  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    edited April 2024
    HYUFD said:

    You forgot to add the fiercely anti Trump NYT 'Juror number one hails from Ireland. The jury foreperson, tasked with overseeing deliberations, he now works in sales and is married. In his spare time, he enjoys anything "outdoorsy", and gets his news from the New York Times, the Daily Mail and Fox News.'

    In fact the most common media mentioned for jurors to read or watch are the NYT followed by CNN, neither of which are pro Trump in any shape or form.

    The case is taking place in Manhattan and Manhattan voted 86% for Biden in 2020, this jury is extremely unlikely to be pro Trump. Indeed the foreman might be the only one on the jury who even considered voting for him looking at the profiles
    I'm happy enough with the Jury as a whole - esp the group description of them as "highly educated" - but that Foreman does give me a queasy feeling. Fox News and the Daily Mail is a worrying combination. I'm hoping he only tunes into those for a giggle (as we all do sometimes).

    Point is, we need 12 out of 12 here. Just the one guy doing a Henry Fonda would ruin things. And the person best placed to try something like that is probably the Foreman. He must be quite assertive to have got the job. Whatever, it's amazing to have finally got a proper criminal trial of Donald Trump up and running and I'm really looking forward to seeing it play out.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited April 2024
    kinabalu said:

    I'm happy enough with the Jury as a whole - esp the group description of them as "highly educated" - but that Foreman does give me a queasy feeling. Fox News and the Daily Mail is a worrying combination. I'm hoping he only tunes into those for a giggle (as we all do sometimes).

    Point is, we need 12 out of 12 here. Just the one guy doing a Henry Fonda would ruin things. And the person best placed to try something like that is probably the Foreman. He must be quite assertive to have got the job. Whatever, it's amazing to have finally got a proper criminal trial of Donald Trump up and running and I'm really looking forward to seeing it play out.
    If the jury is to be representative and fair then they can't all read only the NYT and watch CNN (especially given US wide more watch Fox than either). Indeed the fact even the Foreman reads the NYT alongside Fox and is the only Fox watching juror suggests the jury leans against Trump if anything
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    Taz said:

    How did they compare to,the Tories nationally though. Your camp are low 20s consistently. If she’s that terrible wouldn’t she be lower than the average ?
    She is squeezing Reform better than Rishi and gets an anti incumbent vote other Tories don't
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    HYUFD said:

    If the jury is to be representative and fair then they can't all read only the NYT and watch CNN (especially given US wide more watch Fox than either). Indeed the fact even the Foreman reads the NYT alongside Fox and is the only Fox watching juror suggests the jury leans against Trump if anything
    Fair point. But isn't the NYT kind of a default for New Yorkers?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    ...
    HYUFD said:

    She is squeezing Reform better than Rishi and gets an anti incumbent vote other Tories don't
    Is that because she is a pro-Trump uber right winger?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,215
    kinabalu said:

    I'm happy enough with the Jury as a whole - esp the group description of them as "highly educated" - but that Foreman does give me a queasy feeling. Fox News and the Daily Mail is a worrying combination. I'm hoping he only tunes into those for a giggle (as we all do sometimes).

    Point is, we need 12 out of 12 here. Just the one guy doing a Henry Fonda would ruin things. And the person best placed to try something like that is probably the Foreman. He must be quite assertive to have got the job. Whatever, it's amazing to have finally got a proper criminal trial of Donald Trump up and running and I'm really looking forward to seeing it play out.
    Yes the "problem" isnt that there is a cross section of society its that in this trial you need 12/12 whereas others accept majority verdicts. This is obviously a feature as well as a bug as it reduces the chance of an innocent person being found guilty at the same time as increasing the chance of the guilty getting off. Worth it or not is a matter of preference.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    Sandpit said:

    I know it’s a generally unpopular view on here, but sticking with Liz Truss would have been better than what Sunak is doing at the moment.

    Well, the Torymobile would have shaken itself apart (along with the UK economy), and the incumbent punishing GE would be in the past, so yes.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,910
    edited April 2024
    Andy_JS said:

    "Benefits to be axed after a year on the dole to stop it becoming a 'lifestyle choice', Prime Minister announces"

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13330045/Benefits-axed-year-stop-lifestyle-choice-Prime-Minister.html

    Err. Not quite.
    Only if you aren't complying with the rules such as not accepting a job offer.
    Well. You'll already get sanctioned for that.
    So. No change there then.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    Leon said:

    My worst experience was arriving penniless and strung out on heroin at Tenerife airport - I didn’t mind being penniless and strung out as I expected to fly home to friends immediately

    Then I realised I was two days EARLY

    I had no money to get a new flight or change the flight I had and there was nothing else I could do and so I spent two days living in Tenerife airport drinking from the water fountains and eating leftover sandwiches, as I went cold turkey

    After about the 27th hour, Tenerife airport gets quite boring
    Possibly literal cold turkey in the sandwiches!
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    HYUFD said:

    If the jury is to be representative and fair then they can't all read only the NYT and watch CNN (especially given US wide more watch Fox than either). Indeed the fact even the Foreman reads the NYT alongside Fox and is the only Fox watching juror suggests the jury leans against Trump if anything
    The problem you have is you only need one or two Trumpsters out of 12 and the trial fails, not on its merits but on partisanship. 6 Fox News viewers and 6 CNN viewers may be balanced, but it doesn't lead to a fair trial.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,910
    edited April 2024
    Maybe the government could look at why so many of its own employees are on long-term benefits?
    And possibly at who is so steadfastly determined that they can't be paid enough to be off them.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    Good afternoon everybody. I'm a bit later than usual, due to catching up on assorted correspondence and keeping an eye on assorted sport, especially Essex vs Lancashire, which seems to be avoiding the few showers we've had this morning. One of these days I'll be able to get to Chelmsford again, I hope.
    Also keeping an occasional eye on the blue-tits in our TV accessible nest box, where after what appeared to be a slow start there are now seven eggs, so in a couple of weeks time we should see a great deal of chick-feeding activity.

    On topic, sort of, Sunak's policy re benefits appears to be the sort of cruel, heartless scheme which appeals to retired Daily Mail readers. In particular, the attack on part-time workers seems to lack any thought of compassion or understanding.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    TimS said:

    I’ve missed 5 flights in my adult life, which I believe is quite an unusual achievement:

    1. Stansted to Malmo, because of traffic jam on the M11
    2. Paris CDG to home: traffic jam on périphérique
    3. Heathrow to Hamburg: got to the gate and realised I had my sons passport
    4. Schipol to home: delayed flight so sat in the bar, relaxed, and missed final call
    5. Dar es Salaam to home via Bahrain: didn’t reconfirm, flight overbooked, had to spend another 3 days in Tanzania before the next flight

    I almost made it 6 on a return from Miami. Sat in the lounge, flight delayed, have a few drinks, then suddenly flight closing. They fitted me on but with a downgrade from business to economy right at the back.
    I've only missed one of any distance and it worked out great. Tokyo back to London, I got "embroiled" (as it were) and missed my BA flight. So they put me on one a few hours later and sat me in a completely empty 1st class cabin. It was like having my own luxury plane. Can't remember how the finances worked, whether they charged a penalty or not, but it was expenses so no extra cost to me.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,454
    Good afternoon, everyone.

    F1: planning to put up the pre-race ramble in the afternoon/evening but limited time and some other matters means there's an off-chance it won't be there.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    That Texan blogger/grifter/war correspondent apparently beaten to death by Russian tankers looks EXACTLY like you’d expect him to.


  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185

    He's after the 'they are all scroungers' vote without having to actually do anything
    Not so much 'look, squirrel' as 'look, thieving, lazy squirrel'
    Between O levels and A levels in 1978, the benefits system was so generous one could sign on and get just shy of £30 a week. It never dawned on me or my dickhead friends to sign on until I realised all the ultra poshos like the Bank Manager's daughter and the Sales Director's son had signed on weeks earlier. The day after their last exam was completed in fact.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,587
    France!

    Going under the water into a different country still has a certain magic even to this jaded old travel hack
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Taz said:

    By all accounts Hall is an awful candidate yet polls far higher than her party.

    Why is that ?

    Is it because Khan is a doofus or because Londoners see something in her ?
    I'd assume it's because the party is polling just so badly that even a moderately poor candidate is better than the general impression, and that Khan has had two terms and, as far as I can see, hasn't had all that much to shout about, so they may be a bit l ukewarm about a third term (whilst still seeing it as the best option).
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683

    Yes the "problem" isnt that there is a cross section of society its that in this trial you need 12/12 whereas others accept majority verdicts. This is obviously a feature as well as a bug as it reduces the chance of an innocent person being found guilty at the same time as increasing the chance of the guilty getting off. Worth it or not is a matter of preference.
    You can argue the pros and cons in general but for cases against Trump my hard preference is for permissible majority guilty verdict. My (already slim) hopes for this one sank a little further when I saw it had to be unanimous. But let's see. It's a strong case.

    I don't suppose he'll testify?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    Leon said:

    France!

    Going under the water into a different country still has a certain magic even to this jaded old travel hack

    F*** me! You are Channel crossing by submarine? Bloody show off!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    That Texan blogger/grifter/war correspondent apparently beaten to death by Russian tankers looks EXACTLY like you’d expect him to.


    I expect most of those who support Russia to look like this

  • Good afternoon everybody. I'm a bit later than usual, due to catching up on assorted correspondence and keeping an eye on assorted sport, especially Essex vs Lancashire, which seems to be avoiding the few showers we've had this morning. One of these days I'll be able to get to Chelmsford again, I hope.
    Also keeping an occasional eye on the blue-tits in our TV accessible nest box, where after what appeared to be a slow start there are now seven eggs, so in a couple of weeks time we should see a great deal of chick-feeding activity.

    On topic, sort of, Sunak's policy re benefits appears to be the sort of cruel, heartless scheme which appeals to retired Daily Mail readers. In particular, the attack on part-time workers seems to lack any thought of compassion or understanding.

    An excellent post with which I thoroughly agree, OKC, although I am puzzled by the blue-tits watching TV.

    Do they pay their own licence fee, or can they piggy-back on yours?
  • Between O levels and A levels in 1978, the benefits system was so generous one could sign on and get just shy of £30 a week. It never dawned on me or my dickhead friends to sign on until I realised all the ultra poshos like the Bank Manager's daughter and the Sales Director's son had signed on weeks earlier. The day after their last exam was completed in fact.
    I signed on after A levels in 1978. I recall it was £12 a week. But then I got a job as an assistant in a menswear shop for the princely sum of £27 a week.
  • An excellent post with which I thoroughly agree, OKC, although I am puzzled by the blue-tits watching TV.

    Do they pay their own licence fee, or can they piggy-back on yours?
    Btw there seems to be a bit of a Sam Cook for England campaign going on. He is doing this no harm by showing that in addition to his bowling skills, he's no mug with the bat either.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185

    I signed on after A levels in 1978. I recall it was £12 a week. But then I got a job as an assistant in a menswear shop for the princely sum of £27 a week.
    You may be correct. I seemed to remember 26 quid. Did they pay fortnightly?
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,959

    He's on plus 8 good job/bad job in the poll, the polled appear to moderately like him (although it's 25/17 with 21 'neither' rest DK)
    I heard a bit of feedback which suggested the canvassing was very positive for Houchen. People in Teesside want someone active on jobs and investment, and who is "on their side". Houchen seems to fit that bill. Whether he will win I've no idea. But for a Tory to be even vaguely competitive in a place like Teesside at a time like this shows he isn't lacking political skills. The GE will be a different story.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited April 2024
    HYUFD said:

    If the jury is to be representative and fair then they can't all read only the NYT and watch CNN (especially given US wide more watch Fox than either). Indeed the fact even the Foreman reads the NYT alongside Fox and is the only Fox watching juror suggests the jury leans against Trump if anything
    The case is being tried in the New York State jurisdiction.

    The catchment area for jury selection may be even more localised. In any case, jurors are required to be impartial and one day Trump will stop whingeing like a baby. That will probably be when he dies.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    kinabalu said:

    Point is, we need 12 out of 12 here. Just the one guy doing a Henry Fonda would ruin things. And the person best placed to try something like that is probably the Foreman. He must be quite assertive to have got the job.
    I've seen it reported that in New York the first juror selected is automatically made the foreman.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    kle4 said:

    I expect most of those who support Russia to look like this

    Stick a soul patch on MTG and it would be uncanny.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,215
    kinabalu said:

    You can argue the pros and cons in general but for cases against Trump my hard preference is for permissible majority guilty verdict. My (already slim) hopes for this one sank a little further when I saw it had to be unanimous. But let's see. It's a strong case.

    I don't suppose he'll testify?
    Not unless he has gone full gaga.
  • DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    kinabalu said:

    You can argue the pros and cons in general but for cases against Trump my hard preference is for permissible majority guilty verdict. My (already slim) hopes for this one sank a little further when I saw it had to be unanimous. But let's see. It's a strong case.

    I don't suppose he'll testify?
    How does that work in NYS? Can he decline to go into the witness box, as a defendant can in England, or does he have to go into it and then plead the Fifth?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533

    An excellent post with which I thoroughly agree, OKC, although I am puzzled by the blue-tits watching TV.

    Do they pay their own licence fee, or can they piggy-back on yours?
    No, Peter, we watch the birds. And, thanks to this Conservative government, even OAPs like the Cole’s have to pay the licence fee.
    Whether or not the blue-tits need an Equity card I’m not sure!
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,231
    HYUFD said:

    If the jury is to be representative and fair then they can't all read only the NYT and watch CNN (especially given US wide more watch Fox than either). Indeed the fact even the Foreman reads the NYT alongside Fox and is the only Fox watching juror suggests the jury leans against Trump if anything
    Is representativeness actually a requirement? It's a "right to trial by a jury of your peers", not "by a jury of a statistically balanced sample of your peers". And in practice the jury selection process applies heavy filtering to the initial random selection of possible jurors, both implicit (some groups of people more likely to wangle their way out of jury duty than others) and explicit (excluding jurors based on their answers to questions, social media history, etc). So it's pretty unlikely that the Trump jurors will have opinions that match a randomly selected polling of Manhattan voters, I think; the lawyers between them will have done their best to exclude the most partisan at both ends of the spectrum.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,215
    I see someone has set themselves alight and killed themselves outside Trumps trial. Apparently thought Trump was in league with Biden to organise a coup. Thats a new angle!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    Donkeys said:

    How does that work in NYS? Can he decline to go into the witness box, as a defendant can in England, or does he have to go into it and then plead the Fifth?
    I think he can just choose - they've been holding a hearing about what things the prosecutors can ask him about in terms of prior misconduct (like his other court cases) in the event he testifies, so I assume it's his choice and he'd end up pleading the fifth a lot on those bits if he does (which it sounds like he would be silly to do).
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533

    Btw there seems to be a bit of a Sam Cook for England campaign going on. He is doing this no harm by showing that in addition to his bowling skills, he's no mug with the bat either.
    Aka ‘Little Chef’; a tribute to the now-retired Sir Alastair, known to the Essex cognoscenti as ‘Chef’!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited April 2024
    pm215 said:

    Is representativeness actually a requirement? It's a "right to trial by a jury of your peers", not "by a jury of a statistically balanced sample of your peers". And in practice the jury selection process applies heavy filtering to the initial random selection of possible jurors, both implicit (some groups of people more likely to wangle their way out of jury duty than others) and explicit (excluding jurors based on their answers to questions, social media history, etc). So it's pretty unlikely that the Trump jurors will have opinions that match a randomly selected polling of Manhattan voters, I think; the lawyers between them will have done their best to exclude the most partisan at both ends of the spectrum.
    They will have tried but Manhattan is so overwhelmingly Democrat (indeed almost 90% for Biden in 2020) and New York state also voted heavily for Biden so the jury is bound to lean against Trump overall. It is one of the worst places in the US for Trump to have a jury trial on that basis
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    kinabalu said:

    Fair point. But isn't the NYT kind of a default for New Yorkers?
    No, the NY Post is more pro Trump than the NYT
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418

    You may be correct. I seemed to remember 26 quid. Did they pay fortnightly?
    Pretty sure they used to pay fortnightly.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,418
    Leon said:

    France!

    Going under the water into a different country still has a certain magic even to this jaded old travel hack

    One of the few infrastructure projects we have managed to actually plan, complete and deliver in the last fifty years or more.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533

    Not unless he has gone full gaga.
    I expect .his lawyers will discourage him. Could be disastrous!
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423
    pm215 said:

    Is representativeness actually a requirement? It's a "right to trial by a jury of your peers", not "by a jury of a statistically balanced sample of your peers". And in practice the jury selection process applies heavy filtering to the initial random selection of possible jurors, both implicit (some groups of people more likely to wangle their way out of jury duty than others) and explicit (excluding jurors based on their answers to questions, social media history, etc). So it's pretty unlikely that the Trump jurors will have opinions that match a randomly selected polling of Manhattan voters, I think; the lawyers between them will have done their best to exclude the most partisan at both ends of the spectrum.
    Exactly. There's going to be some Trump voters in there, as there almost certainly was in his other (civil) jury trials, but in itself that doesn't mean its impossible for them to be fair, nor for probably Biden voters to be, to not convict if they are not persuaded by the facts.

    The lawyers do their best to scratch out the most likely to be biased, and they have equal ability to do that, so it's inherently fair.

    In this case the facts seem fairly straightforward, though it's the lower level of felony (and there's a question about the counting of secondary crimes to make it a felony, which will surely be appealed) and involving some shady people. He may well be able to persuade one or more, he may not - but it is the easiest of the trials he faces (not that he will face the others before November), so it is his best chance.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    Donkeys said:

    How does that work in NYS? Can he decline to go into the witness box, as a defendant can in England, or does he have to go into it and then plead the Fifth?
    Same as here, I think. Can choose not to testify.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    kle4 said:

    I've seen it reported that in New York the first juror selected is automatically made the foreman.
    Ah right. That's ok then.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683

    Not unless he has gone full gaga.
    Yes, Trump in the dock would be a bloodsport for any good prosecution lawyer.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    HYUFD said:

    No, the NY Post is more pro Trump than the NYT
    You're raising my hopes now. What chance do you give of a guilty?
  • You may be correct. I seemed to remember 26 quid. Did they pay fortnightly?
    That's it - fortnightly trip to "sign on".
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,610
    HYUFD said:

    Now that the new £37,500 k Visa requirement has been brought in by the government this month that should reduce non EU immigration. EU/EEA immigration has already fallen to the UK since free movement was ended.

    At the moment only the LDs, SNP and Greens back even rejoining the EEA Norway style.

    Starmer Labour is too afraid of allowing the Conservatives to hold redwall seats by restoring free movement and that will probably remain the case for some time
    You say the new visa requirement should reduce immigration, but the Govt has been saying it will reduce immigration for 14 years and yet it is at record highs. Do you think this Govt has any credibility on immigration?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    kinabalu said:

    Yes, Trump in the dock would be a bloodsport for any good prosecution lawyer.
    Since Trump (no doubt against his own legal advice) seems incapable of stopping himself threatening a judge's relatives, further defaming people he's already been convicted of defaming and generally ignoring direct instructions from judges, might he not be able to resist the temptation of letting the court experience his unique genius? Here's hoping.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,423

    Since Trump (no doubt against his own legal advice) seems incapable of stopping himself threatening a judge's relatives, further defaming people he's already been convicted of defaming and generally ignoring direct instructions from judges, might he not be able to resist the temptation of letting the court experience his unique genius? Here's hoping.
    I think he retains just about self-preservation instincts to not do so. He's threatened judges relatives and witnesses because so far he has been able to get away with it, and after what will probably be a finding of contempt and a fine I think he will actually dial that aspect back, if the judge unambigously threatens jail if he does it again - he will have Fox News and others to do the digging and threatening thereon anyway.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    You say the new visa requirement should reduce immigration, but the Govt has been saying it will reduce immigration for 14 years and yet it is at record highs. Do you think this Govt has any credibility on immigration?
    Until this month migrants coming to the UK on the Skilled Worker route currently need to earn £26,200, and Brits or settled people who want to live in the UK with their partners must currently earn £18,600. Now both will need a minimum salary of £38,700.

    That will make a big change so by autumn non EU immigration should have fallen, EU immigration has already fallen after FoM ended
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    kinabalu said:

    You're raising my hopes now. What chance do you give of a guilty?
    High on at least one count. Though probably he may get probation even if convicted as no previous criminal convictions but the impact will be with Independent voters if convicted. Then if he faces further criminal trials he risks jail time if convicted due to a previous conviction
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,215

    Since Trump (no doubt against his own legal advice) seems incapable of stopping himself threatening a judge's relatives, further defaming people he's already been convicted of defaming and generally ignoring direct instructions from judges, might he not be able to resist the temptation of letting the court experience his unique genius? Here's hoping.
    He has made an assessment that the judges are too afraid of him and that their threats are just words, maybe some irrelevant fines. Proven correct so far and probably will be for the foreseeable, but could push it too far and end up in the slammer. Doubt it though, just small fines for threatening a judges daughter, its pathetic.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    edited April 2024
    Confirmation by the Welsh Labour government of changes to the 20mph which should make the policy acceptable and should have been done from the beginning

    https://news.sky.com/story/some-roads-in-wales-to-revert-back-to-30mph-after-half-a-million-call-for-20mph-speed-limit-to-end-13119056
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    It is not. It means utterly crapulent. Imo of course, other opinions exist
    Indeed. It's originally RN slang for rubbish, redundant, waste. The gash chute was the canvas tube rigged over the side of a battleship and emptying into the gash barge (USN: garbage scow) moored below when in harbour.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,492

    I was having a pint last night and ended up talking to a bloke who’s recently left 30 years of shift working to do 30 hours a week as a postie. He loves the job in itself - fresh air, 20,000 steps a day, he’s dropped three stone in three months - but says the Royal Mail is a terrible company to work for. The guys that have been there for 20 or 30 years say it used to be a great job but since privatisation everything’s gone tits up.

    It’s the Tory way - the enshittification of the UK for the masses as long as they and their financial services paymasters are getting richer. Fuck the plebs, right? Your letters might be delayed by a few days but, y’know, that’s not really important, right? ‘Cos the billionaires are getting richer. Why, a cityam article linked here yesterday said that economic growth is being driven by financial services in the city. So that’s nice.

    Reading the comments on here today from Leavers, it’s the same thing with Brexit. Sure, it’s a little bit harder to get into the EU - and will get harder still soon - but we’re doing just fine. Sure, it’s a little bit harder to study in Europe, but we’re doing just fine. Sure, fresh food only lasts a couple of days and shelves are a little bit emptier, but we’re doing just fine. Sure, that parcel you ordered from Germany takes a week longer to arrive than it used to, but we’re doing just fine. Sure, there’s a bit more shit on the beaches and in the rivers, but we’re doing just fine. Sure, our small and medium sized businesses have been grievously impacted by Brexit red-tape, but we’re doing just fine. Sure, your weekly shop is a little more expensive, but we’re doing just fine. Sure, immigration is higher than ever, but we’re doing just fine. Sure the NHS is on its knees, in large part caused by a GP shortage thanks to Brexit, but we’re doing just fine.

    And amongst all those little bits of encroaching enshittification (which apparently we should be grateful for as the price of sovereignty, like we should be pleased with food banks as an example of communities coming together) is the continued refusal to acknowledge the foundational lie of Brexit: There are no downsides, only considerable upsides.

    Have you considered that the Royal Mail may have been affected by a changing world including such things as email and texting ?

    Likewise your previous whine about the decline of Castleford Market - perhaps you'd prefer to return to the era when Ena Sharples and Albert Tatlock were in their prime but most people are happy to use supermarkets or the internet.

    The world changes, sometimes for the worse but usually for the better, sometimes people lose out but usually they gain.

    Wallowing in pretend misery is just a tedious variant of nostalgia for a crap past of harder work and fewer opportunities.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    "Some roads in Wales are set to go back to 30mph after nearly half a million people called for an end to the national 20mph speed limit.

    Ken Skates, the Welsh government's new transport minister, said "there will be a change" to legislation introduced in September which changed the speed limit on nearly all roads from 30mph to 20mph."

    https://news.sky.com/story/some-roads-in-wales-to-revert-back-to-30mph-after-half-a-million-call-for-20mph-speed-limit-to-end-13119056
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285

    One of the few infrastructure projects we have managed to actually plan, complete and deliver in the last fifty years or more.
    But we failed to connect it to other cities in the UK, so a bit of a failure in the end.
  • RandallFlaggRandallFlagg Posts: 1,381

    That analogy doesn't work. It frames the EU as a kind of state of nature from which we have artificially deviated, but the opposite is closer to the truth.

    We can't abolish or repeal Brexit because it's not like that. What would we be 'slicing away' if we gave up having our own approach to AI and handed it over to Brussels?
    The problem is that for anyone below the age of 50 being part of the EU was the state of nature, and from their point of the view the country seems significantly shittier than it was before 2016. That and since the fall of Boris, it's primarily associated with figures such as Braverman, Truss, Patel, Mogg, Bridgen etc. and other NatCon associated loons who enjoy hanging out with Steve Bannon. As Meeks has pointed out, working age people quite frankly think still being pro-Brexit is a bit weird.
    Having said all that, it's possible Brexit's present unpopularity is associated with the present Tory government being incredibly unpopular. That once Starmer gets in and his government inevitably loses support mid-term, support for Rejoin may decrease. But I wouldn't count on in because Brexit supporters really don't have much have of a clue to how to win across younger, pro-EU voters.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,610
    HYUFD said:

    Until this month migrants coming to the UK on the Skilled Worker route currently need to earn £26,200, and Brits or settled people who want to live in the UK with their partners must currently earn £18,600. Now both will need a minimum salary of £38,700.

    That will make a big change so by autumn non EU immigration should have fallen, EU immigration has already fallen after FoM ended
    Those who voted Brexit expected immigration in total to fall, not for EU immigration to fall, but to be replaced by more non-EU immigration.

    There are various exceptions to the Skilled Worker income rules, so I think you are overselling it. Whatever the pros and cons of the scheme, that wasn’t my question, however. My question was whether this Govt has any credibility on immigration. They could introduce the best ever policy and no-one would believe it.

    If Sunak had another 3 years, he could maybe turn opinion around… but he doesn’t.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    Those who voted Brexit expected immigration in total to fall, not for EU immigration to fall, but to be replaced by more non-EU immigration.

    There are various exceptions to the Skilled Worker income rules, so I think you are overselling it. Whatever the pros and cons of the scheme, that wasn’t my question, however. My question was whether this Govt has any credibility on immigration. They could introduce the best ever policy and no-one would believe it.

    If Sunak had another 3 years, he could maybe turn opinion around… but he doesn’t.
    If non EU migration falls by October, that will shift some Reform voters back to the Tories
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,699
    Chris said:

    An odd feature of the affair is that allegedly the Conservative Party was advised that it was fraud but decided not to inform the police because the money belonged to donors rather than to the Conservative Party (?!?).

    https://news.sky.com/story/tories-warned-mark-menzies-misuse-of-funds-claims-constituted-fraud-but-whistleblower-told-there-was-no-duty-to-report-it-13118889
    There’s never a duty to report a crime when you are the victim though

    I don’t understand the point on donor vs Tory party funds unless it was in a segregated fund possibly? But in that situation they should have told the donor - and perhaps they did.

  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,215
    HYUFD said:

    Until this month migrants coming to the UK on the Skilled Worker route currently need to earn £26,200, and Brits or settled people who want to live in the UK with their partners must currently earn £18,600. Now both will need a minimum salary of £38,700.

    That will make a big change so by autumn non EU immigration should have fallen, EU immigration has already fallen after FoM ended
    Is there an election due perchance? I wonder what it would be post election if they somehow won? Best guess is they would avoid indexing it and grant a load of special exemptions to get the workers we need in, most of which end up working in state funded sectors like health and care.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    kle4 said:

    I think he retains just about self-preservation instincts to not do so. He's threatened judges relatives and witnesses because so far he has been able to get away with it, and after what will probably be a finding of contempt and a fine I think he will actually dial that aspect back, if the judge unambigously threatens jail if he does it again - he will have Fox News and others to do the digging and threatening thereon anyway.
    His corner of the court room will be noisy in any case, what with the expostulating, snoring and farting. Can one be charged with involuntary contempt of court?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    Have you considered that the Royal Mail may have been affected by a changing world including such things as email and texting ?

    Likewise your previous whine about the decline of Castleford Market - perhaps you'd prefer to return to the era when Ena Sharples and Albert Tatlock were in their prime but most people are happy to use supermarkets or the internet.

    The world changes, sometimes for the worse but usually for the better, sometimes people lose out but usually they gain.

    Wallowing in pretend misery is just a tedious variant of nostalgia for a crap past of harder work and fewer opportunities.
    And even RM has an expanding parcels market
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,834
    edited April 2024
    Taz said:

    We’re off to book a holiday. Appreciate I’m not a posho like many here so we will be limited somewhat by cash but any views on Cape Verde, Lake Garda and Praia Da Rocha ?

    I’m very surprised nobody has responded to this yet. Usually holiday questions get a deluge of advice.

    Maybe like me nobody’s been to either of those 3. I’ve been nearby to Praia da Rocha though and it’s pleasant enough. Not the most exciting. Have wanted to visit Cape Verde for years but never gone, though not the islands that I think have direct flights, Sal and Boa Vista, as they’re deserts.

    An interestingly eclectic selection of 3 destinations!
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533

    He has made an assessment that the judges are too afraid of him and that their threats are just words, maybe some irrelevant fines. Proven correct so far and probably will be for the foreseeable, but could push it too far and end up in the slammer. Doubt it though, just small fines for threatening a judges daughter, its pathetic.
    I wonder just how thin the ice is, on which he’s skating? Will the judge warn him, or consider he’s been warned enough?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,223
    edited April 2024
    A whole party based round crybabyism.


  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,699
    kinabalu said:

    Oh dear. The jury foreman imbibes the Daily Mail and Fox News:
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-68848665

    I read that as (a) gets his news from the NYT (b) peruses the sidebar of shame and (c) likes glossy blondes
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,587
    TimS said:

    I’m very surprised nobody has responded to this yet. Usually holiday questions get a deluge of advice.

    Maybe like me nobody’s been to either of those 3. I’ve been nearby to Praia da Rocha though and it’s pleasant enough. Not the most exciting. Have wanted to visit Cape Verde for years but never gone, though not the islands that I think have direct flights, Sal and Boa Vista, as they’re deserts.

    An interestingly eclectic selection of 3 destinations!
    I would have replied but I’m on the Eurostar

    I’ve not done Cape Verde but it’s hard to go wrong with lake Garda. One of the most beautiful places on the planet - tho I wouldn’t go in very high season

    Btw the weather in northern France is just as bad as the uk. Ditto the forecast. The incredibly shit
    weather is a Europe wide thing. I’m off to Italy in a couple of weeks and I’ve been checking the weather there. My intended destination is right now 8C

    8C. On the med coast of southern Italy. In late April

    Astonishing. wtf is going on?
This discussion has been closed.