Howdy, Stranger!

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

Options

Is Sadiq Khan Lon-done? – politicalbetting.com

124

Comments

  • Options
    AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 875

    Leon said:

    Taz said:

    Leon said:

    Another reason why immigration needs, in essence, to end

    I found this extraordinarily bleak account on Conservative Home, giving one reason why so many councils are going bust

    "The Children’s Social Care system is in many cities and larger towns collapsing, in large part as a disastrous consequence of the broken Immigration system...

    "I was recently stunned to the point of initial disbelief during a conversation with a friend during which he mentioned that a child placed in residential care costs the average local council roughly £5,500 per week and rapidly rising. I was equally taken aback when he stated that in large cities, anywhere between 40 per cent and 60 per cent (and rising) of the children being placed in these expensive placements are children whose mothers are immigrants."

    "Bradford Council reports that its average current cost per child residential placement, is at the time of writing £6,498 per week, £337,896 per year, which dwarfs the £4,258 per month, £51,100 per year cost of housing adult immigrants in nice hotels etc. The immigrant child in care is costing more than six adult immigrants in a hotel and the public don’t even know about the scale of it.

    "Sadly, the number of immigrant children in care is rising at shocking rates in major cities throughout the country. Using Bradford Council as an example again, in the 2017-18 Municipal Year, there were 42 children in external care placements, but this had risen to 214 by the end of 2023 at a combined cost at least £65 million to £75 million over the period.

    "With each increase of three children in care placements coming in at a cool £1 million per year, dozens of councils will become effectively bankrupt in a couple of years or so unless there is an urgent, serious intervention."

    https://conservativehome.com/2024/05/03/roger-taylor-migration-is-placing-a-huge-cost-on-childrens-social-care-services/

    The Tories thought it was a wizard idea to import 1.4m people in 2 years. Labour thought it would be amusing to "rub the noses of the right in diversity"

    And here we are

    We’re fucked as a nation. Not just because of this.

    Productivity is low and the productive side of the economy is going to be milked more and more to fund the non productive side while suffering poorer terms and conditions and pensions.

    Labour is the party of the public sector so expect the productivity gap to widen. We a
    already have ONS staff threatening storied action for having to spend some time in the office.

    https://x.com/maxtempers/status/1786322484100276379?s=61
    We REALLY need that AI revolution. Indeed, the world needs it
    We need a British ai. For countless reasons. Create one, and ensure that all public bodies end any work with Chatgpt and others and work with the new one. Every tech-company and their wife seems to have an ai candidate; it can't be that difficult.
    British AI Inc. has already been flogged off to the yanks. Or in more sober terms, Google bought DeepMind. We need to find a way of protecting British assets whilst also funding and nurturing them.
    Sure. And now that's gone. So a new one must come forward. And Government contracts must be contingent upon the output that the ai provides continuing to be UK-optimised. It makes sense to me to have that be British-owned and operated, but that's less important. If Google wants to make the necessary service available, so be it. This would do more for preserving our culture and identity than any number of 'Academies Britannique', and there would be money to be made doing it. It should be a priority of DCMS and the Business Department.
    You're talking about training it on only UK-sourced data?

    If so, I'm not sure that there'd be enough data available - there's no UK equivalent of Reddit or Google to use, so you'd be reduced to feeding it Friends Reunited from 20 years ago and the Daily Mail comments section!

    Maybe you could restrict the RLHF in some way, or do some other form of alignment to make it UK-specific, but I'm not sure I see what the point of that would be.
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,365
    edited May 4

    Khan's price moving in quite quickly now (edit: and so is Street's) with non-trivial amounts staked - and by now there will be a lot of reports from the counts. I think he'll (they'll) be OK.

    If I had to guess I'd say this is based on Keir Starmer's statement that he expects Sadiq Khan to win, and because nothing else has happened in the last hour or so, punters have reacted to it. Not logical because you'd expect Starmer to say it.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,494

    Khan's price moving in quite quickly now (edit: and so is Street's) with non-trivial amounts staked - and by now there will be a lot of reports from the counts. I think he'll (they'll) be OK.

    1.07 Sadiq so punters are still not sure. The market is not even back to where it was before the Hall hype.
    It's not going to either. She should never have been as far out as she was. However, this close the the declaration, the direction of travel strongly indicates the destination.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,494
    edited May 4
    Andy_JS said:

    Khan's price moving in quite quickly now (edit: and so is Street's) with non-trivial amounts staked - and by now there will be a lot of reports from the counts. I think he'll (they'll) be OK.

    If I had to guess I'd say this is based on Keir Starmer's statement that he expects Sadiq Khan to win, and because nothing else has happened in the last hour or so, punters have reacted to it.
    It was coming in even before Starmer's statement though. Has been all morning. Sky reported earlier this morning that senior Labour and Tory "sources" expected Khan to win. Starmer just built on that. Anyway anyone who's put the words "expectation" and "management" together in the same sentence knows that he wouldn't have said it if he were not reasonably confident.
  • Options
    AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 875

    Andy_JS said:

    Hall out towards 11

    It would be surprising if she doesn't come back in to around 5 or 6 at some point today as the rumours swirl around.
    Yes, I think so.

    The speed at which London is counting is deeply frustrating.
    It's more that we're not even getting the ward-level data as they go along this time round, so have no visibility of what's going on until each constituency declares.

    The next government really need to move it back to electronic counting.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,026

    What a master stroke from Kevin Spacey to defend himself against further accusations of being a creepy groper by doing an interview with Dan Wootton. Genius!

    Mutually beneficial, given that work opportunities have rather dried up for both of them.
  • Options
    DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited May 4
    Donkeys said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.

    Indeed they might. Unexpected by pollheads anyway.

    What's happening in the universities is important, and yes, spring is the time for it. This is why I think there might be an early general election, before the universities break up or not long after.

    There's a parallelogram of forces as usual. I think the Tories want to whip up trouble on the campuses so they can win votes by encouraging Islamophobia and racism off the back of it. They would love to say that pro-Palestinian protestors (show non-white faces in the footage) have stopped your children from getting their degrees, because they're unBritishly angry (show scuffles with the police) about some faraway place with a "Z" in its name that ordinary hardworking Brits aren't interested in. (Show sobbing 21-year-old: "I worked so hard for my degree and had a firm offer of employment, but I don't know what I'm going to do now". Cut to newsreaders and experts competing for the prize for having used the word "Hamas" the most times.).
    And here's a flowerpot at Essex University that had a Palestinian flag stuck in it, and it's only three miles from a synagogue - cue BBC newsreader screwing her face up in disgust - and here's someone from the Community Security Trust: "We've logged a 17000% increase in anti-Semitic incidents since the self-defensive entry into Gaza and the beginning of the humanitarian evacuation of civilians to Cyprus. Incidents like the flowerpot carry a terrorist pro-Hamas message, causing many Jews in England to be afraid to leave their homes. References to 'BDS' and 'ICJ' are coded apologies for terrorism. They are no different from saying '1488' or '109'."
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719
    Turnout for The Steve Rotherham Show 23.7%
    Democracy innit
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,037
    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    From the point of winning, a vote won from the Tories, is the equivalent of two lost to the Left.

    Why actually, should Starmer worry that much about alienating left wing voters about Gaza?
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719
    Peston: "They'll be a bit of anxiety [today] around the West Midlands result... Andy Street may therefore again win, partly because of his personal popularity... and partly because Muslim voters may not be turning out for Labour the way they should"

    Dickhead. Labour do not own the Muslim vote
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,734

    Turnout for The Steve Rotherham Show 23.7%
    Democracy innit

    The low turnouts are really depressing to be honest.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,829
    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
  • Options
    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,898
    AlsoLei said:

    Leon said:

    Taz said:

    Leon said:

    Another reason why immigration needs, in essence, to end

    I found this extraordinarily bleak account on Conservative Home, giving one reason why so many councils are going bust

    "The Children’s Social Care system is in many cities and larger towns collapsing, in large part as a disastrous consequence of the broken Immigration system...

    "I was recently stunned to the point of initial disbelief during a conversation with a friend during which he mentioned that a child placed in residential care costs the average local council roughly £5,500 per week and rapidly rising. I was equally taken aback when he stated that in large cities, anywhere between 40 per cent and 60 per cent (and rising) of the children being placed in these expensive placements are children whose mothers are immigrants."

    "Bradford Council reports that its average current cost per child residential placement, is at the time of writing £6,498 per week, £337,896 per year, which dwarfs the £4,258 per month, £51,100 per year cost of housing adult immigrants in nice hotels etc. The immigrant child in care is costing more than six adult immigrants in a hotel and the public don’t even know about the scale of it.

    "Sadly, the number of immigrant children in care is rising at shocking rates in major cities throughout the country. Using Bradford Council as an example again, in the 2017-18 Municipal Year, there were 42 children in external care placements, but this had risen to 214 by the end of 2023 at a combined cost at least £65 million to £75 million over the period.

    "With each increase of three children in care placements coming in at a cool £1 million per year, dozens of councils will become effectively bankrupt in a couple of years or so unless there is an urgent, serious intervention."

    https://conservativehome.com/2024/05/03/roger-taylor-migration-is-placing-a-huge-cost-on-childrens-social-care-services/

    The Tories thought it was a wizard idea to import 1.4m people in 2 years. Labour thought it would be amusing to "rub the noses of the right in diversity"

    And here we are

    We’re fucked as a nation. Not just because of this.

    Productivity is low and the productive side of the economy is going to be milked more and more to fund the non productive side while suffering poorer terms and conditions and pensions.

    Labour is the party of the public sector so expect the productivity gap to widen. We a
    already have ONS staff threatening storied action for having to spend some time in the office.

    https://x.com/maxtempers/status/1786322484100276379?s=61
    We REALLY need that AI revolution. Indeed, the world needs it
    We need a British ai. For countless reasons. Create one, and ensure that all public bodies end any work with Chatgpt and others and work with the new one. Every tech-company and their wife seems to have an ai candidate; it can't be that difficult.
    British AI Inc. has already been flogged off to the yanks. Or in more sober terms, Google bought DeepMind. We need to find a way of protecting British assets whilst also funding and nurturing them.
    Sure. And now that's gone. So a new one must come forward. And Government contracts must be contingent upon the output that the ai provides continuing to be UK-optimised. It makes sense to me to have that be British-owned and operated, but that's less important. If Google wants to make the necessary service available, so be it. This would do more for preserving our culture and identity than any number of 'Academies Britannique', and there would be money to be made doing it. It should be a priority of DCMS and the Business Department.
    You're talking about training it on only UK-sourced data?

    If so, I'm not sure that there'd be enough data available - there's no UK equivalent of Reddit or Google to use, so you'd be reduced to feeding it Friends Reunited from 20 years ago and the Daily Mail comments section!

    Maybe you could restrict the RLHF in some way, or do some other form of alignment to make it UK-specific, but I'm not sure I see what the point of that would be.
    Totally this. Essentially AI is a data aggregation technique. The data is more fundamental than the technique. It's like saying an accounting system is more important than the transaction data that feeds into it.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,972

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    Wait, what?

    Are there actually "Hamas candidates", or people who openly support them?

    I presumed it was amusing hyperbole, but these days, who knows
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,456

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    So Muslim voters who deserted Labour are Hamas supporters? Looking forward to some dickhead Lab SPAD tweeting something to that effect.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,734

    Peston: "They'll be a bit of anxiety [today] around the West Midlands result... Andy Street may therefore again win, partly because of his personal popularity... and partly because Muslim voters may not be turning out for Labour the way they should"

    Dickhead. Labour do not own the Muslim vote

    Wow. That is a terrible tweet.

  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 19,031
    Good morning everyone,

    The things that continue to flabbergast me about the Susan Hall selection / candidacy are:

    1 - That she has such a unique combination of arrogance and ignorance.
    2 - That for a London Assembly member of some years' standing, she seems to have no idea of the powers of the London Mayor or where the boundary of London is actually set. *
    3 - That the Conservatives should have such a death wish. TBF they also stood Caroline Henry as PCC in Notts, where that one has been a laughing stock since 2021.
    4 = The conspiracy theories ! The conspiracy theories !

    * I've noted before her desire to build things by some sort of Diktat in Royal Parks, and do things where the powers belong to the Boroughs.
    Even this week I've seen her blaming Sadiq Khan for a fire in Essex.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,037
    My overall take on the results is that they are very good for Labour, and very bad for the Conservatives, but not as bad as those of the 1993-96 period, overall. The Conservatives are a lot less weak in urban England than they were, going into the 1997 GE. Rural England is harder to call, simply due to the vast number of Residents/independents, but some at least of that vote will go Conservative at national level.

    It looks quite poor for Labour to win a NEV of 33/34%, but again, account must be taken of the very big vote now going to minor parties/residents/independents. It may be that we simply won't see any party will a NEV of 40%+ in the future.

  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,829

    Peston: "They'll be a bit of anxiety [today] around the West Midlands result... Andy Street may therefore again win, partly because of his personal popularity... and partly because Muslim voters may not be turning out for Labour the way they should"

    Dickhead. Labour do not own the Muslim vote

    However, in some places Labour have been owned by the Muslim vote.

    I've seen it in a candidate selection meeting that was a total stitch up.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    .
    Sean_F said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    From the point of winning, a vote won from the Tories, is the equivalent of two lost to the Left.

    Why actually, should Starmer worry that much about alienating left wing voters about Gaza?
    I sort of get this but this isn't much different to George Osborne's attitude to UKIP voters pre 2015. It's better to engage positively and keep making the argument.

    Because otherwise, eventually, it can come back to haunt you.
  • Options
    DougSealDougSeal Posts: 11,494

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    So Muslim voters who deserted Labour are Hamas supporters? Looking forward to some dickhead Lab SPAD tweeting something to that effect.
    You stalk Labour SPAD twitter feeds? Despite not knowing them from Adam. Wow! Creepy!
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719

    Peston: "They'll be a bit of anxiety [today] around the West Midlands result... Andy Street may therefore again win, partly because of his personal popularity... and partly because Muslim voters may not be turning out for Labour the way they should"

    Dickhead. Labour do not own the Muslim vote

    Wow. That is a terrible tweet.

    Not a tweet, he said it on TV, I copied from a Saul Staniforth tweet linking to the clip
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,209
    Leon said:

    Taz said:

    Leon said:

    malcolmg said:

    Chameleon said:

    Donkeys said:

    Is the PB herd wheeling around and preparing to stampede in a different direction?

    I think Khan will win in London. But London is being bigged up across the country in a ramp-up of Islamophobia, xenophobia, and racism. Many who live in London are unaware of what London connotes for many people who don't. This is practically an open goal for the rightwing.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/5/3/whats-next-for-uk-asylum-seekers-facing-deportation-to-rwanda

    As someone who lives in London, the issue isn't all perception. Crime is just ridiculous there days - in the past 16 months the church by my corner shop had a drive by shooting, I then moved and have been mugged, missed an acid attack by 5 minutes, been broken into, and my housemate had a death threat/hate crime attack against him. My experience isn't massively unrepresentative (bar the drive by shooting). Most people don't report a lot of minor crimes (bike theft/phone snatching) etc anymore. Outside of that homophobia is clearly increasing as an issue due to high rates of immigration from backwards places leading to semi-regular attacks on LGBTQ venues, and every Saturday blatant anti-semitism shuts down central London. Bar that London is great.
    Worse to come as they pack in more and more.
    And yet 86% of PB-ers refuse to accept it, or even talk about it, and those that do talk about it get called "racist" for their pains

    It's a pathology, and it is killing us
    Welcome Here. This beggars belief.

    https://x.com/mailonline/status/1786444759524860392?s=61
    We are governed by a caste of virtue-signalling eunuchs who wish us evil. It is hard to conclude anything else

    The man has about 20 serious convictions including "assaulting a motorist with a hammer" and the judge says "I am glad you have leave to remain, as an asylum seeker"
    Has the making of a Reform poster....
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,478
    edited May 4

    Peston: "They'll be a bit of anxiety [today] around the West Midlands result... Andy Street may therefore again win, partly because of his personal popularity... and partly because Muslim voters may not be turning out for Labour the way they should"

    Dickhead. Labour do not own the Muslim vote

    Wow. That is a terrible tweet.

    Prof Peston makes (yet another) terrible tweet / statement...surely not....if there is any evidence that top of media is a closed shop of absolute numpties, he is exhibit #1.
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,912
    edited May 4
    Khan doubled his vote lead in Merton and Wandsworth vs 2021. Lead 18k up on 2021.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,829
    Leon said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    Wait, what?

    Are there actually "Hamas candidates", or people who openly support them?

    I presumed it was amusing hyperbole, but these days, who knows
    Just my shorthand.

    Just lots of independents who happen to have been elected in Muslim areas.
  • Options
    lockhimuplockhimup Posts: 37
    Khan hits 1.01 on BF
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,829

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    So Muslim voters who deserted Labour are Hamas supporters? Looking forward to some dickhead Lab SPAD tweeting something to that effect.
    Hamas apologists, certainly.

    I don't hear many demands for the hostages to be released.
  • Options
    legatuslegatus Posts: 126
    Sean_F said:

    My overall take on the results is that they are very good for Labour, and very bad for the Conservatives, but not as bad as those of the 1993-96 period, overall. The Conservatives are a lot less weak in urban England than they were, going into the 1997 GE. Rural England is harder to call, simply due to the vast number of Residents/independents, but some at least of that vote will go Conservative at national level.

    It looks quite poor for Labour to win a NEV of 33/34%, but again, account must be taken of the very big vote now going to minor parties/residents/independents. It may be that we simply won't see any party will a NEV of 40%+ in the future.

    The results are not as bad for the Tories as the 1968 results were for Labour!
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,712
    AlsoLei said:

    Leon said:

    Taz said:

    Leon said:

    Another reason why immigration needs, in essence, to end

    I found this extraordinarily bleak account on Conservative Home, giving one reason why so many councils are going bust

    "The Children’s Social Care system is in many cities and larger towns collapsing, in large part as a disastrous consequence of the broken Immigration system...

    "I was recently stunned to the point of initial disbelief during a conversation with a friend during which he mentioned that a child placed in residential care costs the average local council roughly £5,500 per week and rapidly rising. I was equally taken aback when he stated that in large cities, anywhere between 40 per cent and 60 per cent (and rising) of the children being placed in these expensive placements are children whose mothers are immigrants."

    "Bradford Council reports that its average current cost per child residential placement, is at the time of writing £6,498 per week, £337,896 per year, which dwarfs the £4,258 per month, £51,100 per year cost of housing adult immigrants in nice hotels etc. The immigrant child in care is costing more than six adult immigrants in a hotel and the public don’t even know about the scale of it.

    "Sadly, the number of immigrant children in care is rising at shocking rates in major cities throughout the country. Using Bradford Council as an example again, in the 2017-18 Municipal Year, there were 42 children in external care placements, but this had risen to 214 by the end of 2023 at a combined cost at least £65 million to £75 million over the period.

    "With each increase of three children in care placements coming in at a cool £1 million per year, dozens of councils will become effectively bankrupt in a couple of years or so unless there is an urgent, serious intervention."

    https://conservativehome.com/2024/05/03/roger-taylor-migration-is-placing-a-huge-cost-on-childrens-social-care-services/

    The Tories thought it was a wizard idea to import 1.4m people in 2 years. Labour thought it would be amusing to "rub the noses of the right in diversity"

    And here we are

    We’re fucked as a nation. Not just because of this.

    Productivity is low and the productive side of the economy is going to be milked more and more to fund the non productive side while suffering poorer terms and conditions and pensions.

    Labour is the party of the public sector so expect the productivity gap to widen. We a
    already have ONS staff threatening storied action for having to spend some time in the office.

    https://x.com/maxtempers/status/1786322484100276379?s=61
    We REALLY need that AI revolution. Indeed, the world needs it
    We need a British ai. For countless reasons. Create one, and ensure that all public bodies end any work with Chatgpt and others and work with the new one. Every tech-company and their wife seems to have an ai candidate; it can't be that difficult.
    British AI Inc. has already been flogged off to the yanks. Or in more sober terms, Google bought DeepMind. We need to find a way of protecting British assets whilst also funding and nurturing them.
    Sure. And now that's gone. So a new one must come forward. And Government contracts must be contingent upon the output that the ai provides continuing to be UK-optimised. It makes sense to me to have that be British-owned and operated, but that's less important. If Google wants to make the necessary service available, so be it. This would do more for preserving our culture and identity than any number of 'Academies Britannique', and there would be money to be made doing it. It should be a priority of DCMS and the Business Department.
    You're talking about training it on only UK-sourced data?

    If so, I'm not sure that there'd be enough data available - there's no UK equivalent of Reddit or Google to use, so you'd be reduced to feeding it Friends Reunited from 20 years ago and the Daily Mail comments section!

    Maybe you could restrict the RLHF in some way, or do some other form of alignment to make it UK-specific, but I'm not sure I see what the point of that would be.
    No, but other ai services aren't trained exclusively on US data sources. There's also plenty of UK data to draw upon, how about all BBC broadcasts ever, UK scholarly journals going back to the 18th century, the civil service including the NHS, Hansard, Wisden, Encyclopedia Britannica, Punch, The Spectator, the Guardian, Who's Who. We have possibly more English language data than any other country. As for not seeing the point of alignment, what is the point in US ai services being so strictly tied to US conventions around spelling and meanings that they cannot translate text into UK spellings and meanings even when repeatedly prompted to do so? The point is the survival and thriving of British culture in the modern age.
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 19,031

    Sunak: "The choice at the next election is clear – only the Conservatives have a plan" - Telegraph article by the man himself.

    The same utterly deluded drivel.

    "A plan versus no plan, bold principled action versus U-turns and prevarication, a clear record of delivery..." etc etc.

    The Telegraph actually reported the results as 'better than expected.' We'll pass quietly over the thought of what 'worse than' might have looked like and gently point out that the antipathy of the electorate is likely to be rather less towards councils than central government. The punishment the Tories received yesterday is therefore likely to be somewhat lighter than what appears to be coming next.

    Electoral Calculus is predicting 85 seats. It could be right.
    I've always maintained that the polling will narrow quite a bit once people really focus on the choice being Starmer's Labour or Tories.

    But I am seriously beginning to wonder whether this really is one of Callaghan's "Seachange" elections.

    Starmer's huge issue is going to be getting the vote out I think. Blair he 'aint. A lot of apathy out there. One of the things that seems to be forgotten about '97 GE was the ground war. The people that Labour and the unions had mobilised to knock on doors and leaflet was astonishing is certainly my memory.


    I think we may get odd variations, depending on past performance. In areas where people are accustomed to voting Labour and have a local authority with the usual mixed record, I doubt if we'll see high Labour turnout (cf. Oxford this week, and maybe London). In areas where a big Tory majority is under threat for the first time, I expect a lot of enthusiasm. So you can get huge swings in Tory seats (cf. Blackpool South) and meh results elsewhere. Which should, in principle, make the vote more efficient.
    I think variation within the red wall may be interesting. I'd posit my area - North Derbys vs North Notts - as potentially interesting.

    I've also been impressed by the scale of the Green Vote, and I wonder whether there are potential vote-split questions on both left and right. I think that tactical voting will be more sophisticated on the left (Galloway and stone age socialists perhaps excepted), so I would see that as an issue for the left mostly where Greens or LDs have a realistic prospect of 1st or 2nd.
  • Options
    legatuslegatus Posts: 126
    Apparently there are some rumours spreading at the West Midlands count that Labour may have pulled it off after all.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,026

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    So Muslim voters who deserted Labour are Hamas supporters? Looking forward to some dickhead Lab SPAD tweeting something to that effect.
    Hamas apologists, certainly.

    I don't hear many demands for the hostages to be released.
    Yes, the one thing that more than anything else would end the war, but I've never seen the protesters call for that.
  • Options
    BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 1,270
    edited May 4
    In 2021, we had a load of Tweets etc. from the Shaun Bailey team that he was going to win. All before the count. He lost.

    In 2024, we've had a load of Tweets etc. from the Susan Hall team saying that she is going to win. All before the count. Sound familiar?

    My anecdotal experience from actually living in London is that Khan is fairly unpopular but nobody thinks Susan Hall will be better, in fact she will be much worse. And what she said particularly on getting mugged, Hammersmith Bridge was laughable nonsense. She's a joke candidate.

    A good Tory would have beaten Khan handsomely. But Susan Hall is not that candidate.

    In Wandsworth, I am not surprised to see Labour doing well as they've run the council very competently since they took over and people have been happy with how they've done.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    Chameleon said:

    Khan doubled his vote lead in Merton and Wandsworth vs 2021. Lead 18k up on 2021.

    Hmm
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,456
    DougSeal said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    So Muslim voters who deserted Labour are Hamas supporters? Looking forward to some dickhead Lab SPAD tweeting something to that effect.
    You stalk Labour SPAD twitter feeds? Despite not knowing them from Adam. Wow! Creepy!
    You’re certainly stalking me, you mentally unbalanced creep.
    Get a hobby, find some friends (not one of your life skills I sense), spend more time on Linkedin, they’ll certainly reduce the tedium level all round.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,734
    legatus said:

    Apparently there are some rumours spreading at the West Midlands count that Labour may have pulled it off after all.

    Lab 1.02 - BF
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,714

    In 2021, we had a load of Tweets etc. from the Shaun Bailey team that he was going to win. All before the count. He lost.

    In 2024, we've had a load of Tweets etc. from the Susan Hall team saying that she is going to win. All before the count. Sound familiar?

    My anecdotal experience from actually living in London is that Khan is fairly unpopular but nobody thinks Susan Hall will be worse. And what she said particularly on getting mugged, Hammersmith Bridge was laughable nonsense. She's a joke candidate.

    A good Tory would have beaten Khan handsomely. But Susan Hall is not that candidate.

    In Wandsworth, I am not surprised to see Labour doing well as they've run the council very competently since they took over and people have been happy with how they've done.

    Is that an autocorrect fail?
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,365
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,346
    Sean_F said:

    And, congratualations to @HYUFD for predicting Epping Forest correctly. He knows Conservative voters far better than his critics do.

    Thanks Sean
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,912
    Really thinly traded market but Labour's come in to 1.01 in WMids.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    Maybe my 35-40% band bet might not come true after all!

    Blast.
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,712
    ydoethur said:

    In 2021, we had a load of Tweets etc. from the Shaun Bailey team that he was going to win. All before the count. He lost.

    In 2024, we've had a load of Tweets etc. from the Susan Hall team saying that she is going to win. All before the count. Sound familiar?

    My anecdotal experience from actually living in London is that Khan is fairly unpopular but nobody thinks Susan Hall will be worse. And what she said particularly on getting mugged, Hammersmith Bridge was laughable nonsense. She's a joke candidate.

    A good Tory would have beaten Khan handsomely. But Susan Hall is not that candidate.

    In Wandsworth, I am not surprised to see Labour doing well as they've run the council very competently since they took over and people have been happy with how they've done.

    Is that an autocorrect fail?
    Freudian slip.
  • Options
    BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 1,270
    edited May 4
    Chameleon said:

    Khan doubled his vote lead in Merton and Wandsworth vs 2021. Lead 18k up on 2021.

    As expected, a swing to Labour in Wandsworth on the back of decent delivery from the council, Khan being "meh" here and Susan Hall being a joke.

    Khan will cruise to victory on those kinds of results, indicating the polls have got it almost spot on.

    Actually living in Wandsworth as I do, I am not surprised to see these results. It was obvious when the Tories were handing out green flyers with Tories in minuscule font that they knew they were on for a drubbing.
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 19,031
    Leon said:

    carnforth said:

    Leon said:

    Another reason why immigration needs, in essence, to end

    I found this extraordinarily bleak account on Conservative Home, giving one reason why so many councils are going bust

    "The Children’s Social Care system is in many cities and larger towns collapsing, in large part as a disastrous consequence of the broken Immigration system...

    "I was recently stunned to the point of initial disbelief during a conversation with a friend during which he mentioned that a child placed in residential care costs the average local council roughly £5,500 per week and rapidly rising. I was equally taken aback when he stated that in large cities, anywhere between 40 per cent and 60 per cent (and rising) of the children being placed in these expensive placements are children whose mothers are immigrants."

    "Bradford Council reports that its average current cost per child residential placement, is at the time of writing £6,498 per week, £337,896 per year, which dwarfs the £4,258 per month, £51,100 per year cost of housing adult immigrants in nice hotels etc. The immigrant child in care is costing more than six adult immigrants in a hotel and the public don’t even know about the scale of it.

    "Sadly, the number of immigrant children in care is rising at shocking rates in major cities throughout the country. Using Bradford Council as an example again, in the 2017-18 Municipal Year, there were 42 children in external care placements, but this had risen to 214 by the end of 2023 at a combined cost at least £65 million to £75 million over the period.

    "With each increase of three children in care placements coming in at a cool £1 million per year, dozens of councils will become effectively bankrupt in a couple of years or so unless there is an urgent, serious intervention."

    https://conservativehome.com/2024/05/03/roger-taylor-migration-is-placing-a-huge-cost-on-childrens-social-care-services/

    The Tories thought it was a wizard idea to import 1.4m people in 2 years. Labour thought it would be amusing to "rub the noses of the right in diversity"

    And here we are

    Banning cousin-marriages would be a start.
    Of course. But that's just the start
    I think that is what I would like to see from Mt Starmer in the main; stolid, boring, gradually reforming competence - proving more significant over time.

    Of course I have some more radical small steps I want to see, starting with an English Right to Roam modelled on the Scottish one, or at least stronger rules around public access. Rishi's ejected Conservatives would squeal; let them squeal.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,269
    Today is, apparently, World Naked Gardening Day.

    Which sounds like a bloody stupid idea.

    I will leave the "pruning your bushes" jokes to @ydoethur and others.

  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,714
    Cyclefree said:

    Today is, apparently, World Naked Gardening Day.

    Which sounds like a bloody stupid idea.

    I will leave the "pruning your bushes" jokes to @ydoethur and others.

    Butt it's such a good punning opportunity...
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,037

    Chameleon said:

    Khan doubled his vote lead in Merton and Wandsworth vs 2021. Lead 18k up on 2021.

    As expected, a swing to Labour in Wandsworth on the back of decent delivery from the council, Khan being "meh" here and Susan Hall being a joke.

    Khan will cruise to victory on those kinds of results, indicating the polls have got it almost spot on.

    Actually living in Wandsworth as I do, I am not surprised to see these results. It was obvious when the Tories were handing out green flyers with Tories in minuscule font that they knew they were on for a drubbing.
    Savanta, rather than Yougov, on that kind of swing.
  • Options
    DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723
    edited May 4

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    Aiming for a hung parliament where Labour hold the balance between the Tories and Hamas, are we? Which side would you form a coalition with?

    It's Satanic to keep screaming "Hamas" when the Israeli army is about to assault Rafah where they've used terror to pen in 1.4 million people.
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,119
    Donkeys said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    Aiming for a hung parliament where Labour hold the balance between the Tories and Hamas, are we?

    It's Satanic to keep screaming "Hamas" when the Israeli army is about to assault Rafah where they've used terror to pen in 1.4 million people.
    What a load of propaganda dross
  • Options
    twistedfirestopper3twistedfirestopper3 Posts: 2,108
    I haven't been following it closely, as I couldn't give a monkey's about the place, but if Hall does win, we're truly at the end of days. No one sane can surely be voting a Tory to run anything, after what they've done to the country.
    Actually, I hope she does win, purely for the comedy value she'll bring. And the chaos.
  • Options
    BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,026
    edited May 4
    MikeL said:

    BBC re London:

    "We're not expecting a result until at least 17:00 BST but it could be hours later than that, especially if it is a close race".

    We are starting to get the first results as ballots are counted in the London mayoral race.

    In Merton and Wandsworth, Sadiq Khan got 48.3% of the vote compared to Susan Hall who got 28.6%. But there was a 5.1 swing from the Conservatives to Labour.

    It was a similar result in Greenwich and Lewisham. Mr Khan got 46.5% compared to Ms Hall on 26.2%. There was a 4.5% swing.

    Hall out to 120
  • Options
    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 726
    Sky not showing vote change / swing figures for these first couple of London results which is a bit poor.
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 14,768

    I haven't been following it closely, as I couldn't give a monkey's about the place, but if Hall does win, we're truly at the end of days. No one sane can surely be voting a Tory to run anything, after what they've done to the country.
    Actually, I hope she does win, purely for the comedy value she'll bring. And the chaos.

    As someone living in Greater London, I don't endorse this message.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,829
    Donkeys said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    Aiming for a hung parliament where Labour hold the balance between the Tories and Hamas, are we? Which side would you form a coalition with?

    It's Satanic to keep screaming "Hamas" when the Israeli army is about to assault Rafah where they've used terror to pen in 1.4 million people.
    Care to remind us what precipitated the war?
  • Options
    AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 875
    Greenwich & Lewisham: 83729 Khan, 26822 Hall, 11209 Garbett
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.
  • Options
    twistedfirestopper3twistedfirestopper3 Posts: 2,108

    I haven't been following it closely, as I couldn't give a monkey's about the place, but if Hall does win, we're truly at the end of days. No one sane can surely be voting a Tory to run anything, after what they've done to the country.
    Actually, I hope she does win, purely for the comedy value she'll bring. And the chaos.

    As someone living in Greater London, I don't endorse this message.
    At times like this, think of it as London doing its bit to cheer the rest of the country up.
  • Options
    LeonLeon Posts: 47,972
    I predicted Khan would win (who didn't?) but my predix of it just being a 6 point lead look wildly out of whack

    Lot more than that, it seems

    oh well. The boring joyless homonculus for another 4 years of drift; fab
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,365

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    The Tories need some very strong results elsewhere in London to counteract these first two results.
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719
    From memory I predicted Khan by 12. I reckon that might be adjacent
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    Andy_JS said:

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    The Tories need some very strong results elsewhere in London to counteract these first two results.
    Yes, I agree. Looks like the polls were right, to be fair.
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,912
    edited May 4
    Andy_JS said:

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    The Tories need some very strong results elsewhere in London to counteract these first two results.
    Reform standing this time could be the difference... If so very much a sneak peak of what will happen in the GE.
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719
    Liverpool City Region Mayoral Election:

    🌹 Rotherham (LAB): 68.0% (+9.7)
    🌳 Marsden (CON): 10.2% (-9.4)
    🌍 Crone (GRN): 9.8% (-2.0)
    🔶 McAllister-Bell (LDM): 7.9% (-2.4)
    🙋 Smith (IND): 4.1% (New)

    Labour HOLD.
    Changes w/ 2021.

    Jade hangs on to second by a whisker
  • Options
    ChrisChris Posts: 11,174
    AlsoLei said:

    Greenwich & Lewisham: 83729 Khan, 26822 Hall, 11209 Garbett

    Last time first preferences were 76731 Khan, 43306 Bailey.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,999
    Where's the best place to see the London results as they come in?

    (Apart from here obvs).
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,116
    Barnesian said:

    MikeL said:

    BBC re London:

    "We're not expecting a result until at least 17:00 BST but it could be hours later than that, especially if it is a close race".

    We are starting to get the first results as ballots are counted in the London mayoral race.

    In Merton and Wandsworth, Sadiq Khan got 48.3% of the vote compared to Susan Hall who got 28.6%. But there was a 5.1 swing from the Conservatives to Labour.

    It was a similar result in Greenwich and Lewisham. Mr Khan got 46.5% compared to Ms Hall on 26.2%. There was a 4.5% swing.

    Hall out to 120
    So, about a 5% swing to Khan, pretty much what the polling said.

    Polls are far more reliable than random social media speculation. Remember this always.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    West Midlands: Street still odds on at 1.15 with money for Labour at 2, but very illiquid.
  • Options
    AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 875

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    Yes, a much lower swing to Khan in inner London than you'd expect given the national polls and the move to FPTP. And, as you say, the outer boroughs may well be different.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,999
    Cyclefree said:

    Today is, apparently, World Naked Gardening Day.

    Which sounds like a bloody stupid idea.

    I will leave the "pruning your bushes" jokes to @ydoethur and others.

    Sun is shining here, so I'll let Mrs P. know. (Although it's still a bit nippy to be fair.)
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905

    Barnesian said:

    MikeL said:

    BBC re London:

    "We're not expecting a result until at least 17:00 BST but it could be hours later than that, especially if it is a close race".

    We are starting to get the first results as ballots are counted in the London mayoral race.

    In Merton and Wandsworth, Sadiq Khan got 48.3% of the vote compared to Susan Hall who got 28.6%. But there was a 5.1 swing from the Conservatives to Labour.

    It was a similar result in Greenwich and Lewisham. Mr Khan got 46.5% compared to Ms Hall on 26.2%. There was a 4.5% swing.

    Hall out to 120
    So, about a 5% swing to Khan, pretty much what the polling said.

    Polls are far more reliable than random social media speculation. Remember this always.
    Well, last time they were out by a long way, to be fair.
  • Options
    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,994
    Looks like it's going to be a case of Yes We Khan?
  • Options
    CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 265
    I am going to pull my hair out at the roots if Hall wins. People wanted to punish labour for Gaza and in return they put a far right crackpot like Hall... talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face. It reminds me of brexit.... that also went through due to passive voters. 🤷🤷🤷
  • Options
    EPGEPG Posts: 6,097

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    Yes, we have lost votes and seats to Hamas candidates in various towns and cities, including in my patch on Bradford Council. But we've been gaining votes and seats from the Tories where it matters.

    The right strategy with the right result.
    So Muslim voters who deserted Labour are Hamas supporters? Looking forward to some dickhead Lab SPAD tweeting something to that effect.
    Hamas apologists, certainly.

    I don't hear many demands for the hostages to be released.
    Yes, the one thing that more than anything else would end the war, but I've never seen the protesters call for that.
    Ending the war while Israeli hostages remain captive is a war aim of Hamas. Even the western governments who oppose Israel don't want this, but makes sense that the 100%-solidarity people do.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    Chameleon said:

    Really thinly traded market but Labour's come in to 1.01 in WMids.

    Which market is this please?

    I'm looking at Exchange where Street is still available at 1.15
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,365

    Where's the best place to see the London results as they come in?

    (Apart from here obvs).

    Live stream.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mWkotIMNbQ
  • Options
    SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 6,435

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    Tories are also hit in Merton by the Lib Dems, who are targeting the Wimbledon part hard. Tories had a very poor set of local elections there in 2022, slipping to a fairly distant third across Merton.

    I agree it will vary a fair bit, but also that it's looking unpromising for Hall.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,714

    Cyclefree said:

    Today is, apparently, World Naked Gardening Day.

    Which sounds like a bloody stupid idea.

    I will leave the "pruning your bushes" jokes to @ydoethur and others.

    Sun is shining here, so I'll let Mrs P. know. (Although it's still a bit nippy to be fair.)
    It's down to the bare minimum.
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 14,768

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    That's the medium term problem the Conservatives have to face.

    Go back a few decades, and there were a decent number of urban young professionals on the right. The sort of people who drove the Wandsworth 1990 win.

    Now... rather less so. Going after Red Wall Man has its benefits, as 2019 showed. But it isn't cost-free.
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,912
    edited May 4

    Chameleon said:

    Really thinly traded market but Labour's come in to 1.01 in WMids.

    Which market is this please?

    I'm looking at Exchange where Street is still available at 1.15
    Was the Exchange for half an hour or so. They're now back out to 2.1 with Street at 1.15. Someone clearly decided to use £100 to gobble up any liquidity on Labour.
  • Options
    ClippPClippP Posts: 1,725
    NeilVW said:

    Sky not showing vote change / swing figures for these first couple of London results which is a bit poor.

    Not much point. It is a different voting system.

    Thank you Mr Johnson. Another fine mess you have got us into.
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719
    edited May 4
    Looking at those first two results, Hall is matching her YouGov predicted London wide total in Khan friendly areas, so pivot to Savanta as a guide now? YouGov is very bearish on Tory VI in all formats compared to others
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,905
    Chameleon said:

    Chameleon said:

    Really thinly traded market but Labour's come in to 1.01 in WMids.

    Which market is this please?

    I'm looking at Exchange where Street is still available at 1.15
    Was the Exchange for half an hour or so. They're now back out to 2.1 with Street at 1.15. Someone clearly decided to use £100 to gobble up any liquidity on Labour.
    Labour back out to 4 now.

    I'm not sure anyone knows (yet) else it would all be gone.
  • Options
    rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 7,939
    Sean_F said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Roger said:

    I can't help thinking SKS tethering himself to Netanyahu and the IDF wasn't smart. It served him well in establishing his anti anti-semitism credentials but it's landed him in a trap.

    Israel's PR is going down the toilet. Countries are queuing up to take them to various courts for war crimes. Their country is being openly called 'apartheid'.

    Obviously it's not going down well with the 6.5% of Muslims in the UK but more important it's not going down well with those who were once known as 'Guardianistas'.

    The student revolts in the US are now spreading to Europe as are the demonstrations. Sweden are campaigning for them to be kicked out of the Eurovision song contest. 'If Russian could be thrown out so should Israel' their argument goes.

    Spring is the time for these movements to veer out of control. Starmer is already being asked difficult questions. "Why did you say Israel had the right to switch off electricity and water to Gaza when it's a war crime?"

    He lied and they have the footage. Things might start to move in unexpected ways.



    His biggest political mistake so far I think. He tried to pick the safe course and failed. I know one lady who's planning to abstain (she lives in marginal seat) as a result.

    Personally I think she'll regret it - she hates the Tories and will be gutted if they get in again and can't really expect a Starmer condemnation to actually help anyone in Gaza... but it's her vote not mine...
    From the point of winning, a vote won from the Tories, is the equivalent of two lost to the Left.

    Why actually, should Starmer worry that much about alienating left wing voters about Gaza?
    That's generally true and indeed Starmers strategy is generally very good.

    But Tories are not going to be swayed by a Gaza stance... either they agree govt is shit or they're die hard Tories who won't vote Labour anyway.
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 3,912
    edited May 4

    One note of caution: other London boroughs could show a very different story, although I now don't doubt Khan has won.

    Merton and Wandsworth is the sort of place with urban young professionals you'd expect to swing to Labour.

    That's the medium term problem the Conservatives have to face.

    Go back a few decades, and there were a decent number of urban young professionals on the right. The sort of people who drove the Wandsworth 1990 win.

    Now... rather less so. Going after Red Wall Man has its benefits, as 2019 showed. But it isn't cost-free.
    There's still millions of them - but the Tories refuse to run people who may appeal to them. If the Tories ran Rob Blackie on a YIMBY platform they'd be very very close.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,116

    Barnesian said:

    MikeL said:

    BBC re London:

    "We're not expecting a result until at least 17:00 BST but it could be hours later than that, especially if it is a close race".

    We are starting to get the first results as ballots are counted in the London mayoral race.

    In Merton and Wandsworth, Sadiq Khan got 48.3% of the vote compared to Susan Hall who got 28.6%. But there was a 5.1 swing from the Conservatives to Labour.

    It was a similar result in Greenwich and Lewisham. Mr Khan got 46.5% compared to Ms Hall on 26.2%. There was a 4.5% swing.

    Hall out to 120
    So, about a 5% swing to Khan, pretty much what the polling said.

    Polls are far more reliable than random social media speculation. Remember this always.
    Well, last time they were out by a long way, to be fair.
    They were close in the three mayoral contests before that. They were somewhat out last time (although those who were predicting a Hall win would have required a much greater polling fail).

    Even last time, the polls said Khan would win, while some random social media speculation said Bailey would win… and Khan did win. So, I remain of the view than polls are far more reliable than random social media speculation.

    That said, clearly there are trading opportunities given how people react to speculation when counting takes a long time to produce an answer.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,116

    I am going to pull my hair out at the roots if Hall wins. People wanted to punish labour for Gaza and in return they put a far right crackpot like Hall... talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face. It reminds me of brexit.... that also went through due to passive voters. 🤷🤷🤷

    Hall has lost. Stop worrying.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,829

    Chameleon said:

    Chameleon said:

    Really thinly traded market but Labour's come in to 1.01 in WMids.

    Which market is this please?

    I'm looking at Exchange where Street is still available at 1.15
    Was the Exchange for half an hour or so. They're now back out to 2.1 with Street at 1.15. Someone clearly decided to use £100 to gobble up any liquidity on Labour.
    Labour back out to 4 now.

    I'm not sure anyone knows (yet) else it would all be gone.
    So Street's ahead.
  • Options
    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 726
    edited May 4
    ClippP said:

    NeilVW said:

    Sky not showing vote change / swing figures for these first couple of London results which is a bit poor.

    Not much point. It is a different voting system.

    Thank you Mr Johnson. Another fine mess you have got us into.
    Comparing with first preferences last time out would surely be a decent indicator, if caveats provided.
  • Options
    TheValiantTheValiant Posts: 1,738

    Liverpool City Region Mayoral Election:

    🌹 Rotherham (LAB): 68.0% (+9.7)
    🌳 Marsden (CON): 10.2% (-9.4)
    🌍 Crone (GRN): 9.8% (-2.0)
    🔶 McAllister-Bell (LDM): 7.9% (-2.4)
    🙋 Smith (IND): 4.1% (New)

    Labour HOLD.
    Changes w/ 2021.

    Jade hangs on to second by a whisker

    68% for Rotherham?! What an amateur. He really needs to take a leaf out of Bootle's book.
    Anything less than 110% for Labour is a fail..............
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,734

    I am going to pull my hair out at the roots if Hall wins. People wanted to punish labour for Gaza and in return they put a far right crackpot like Hall... talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face. It reminds me of brexit.... that also went through due to passive voters. 🤷🤷🤷

    And same could have in USA.

    Young dont bother voting for Biden and then find themselves in Gilead.
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,719
    Oliver Coppard retains South Yorkshire for labour on a 3.9% swing. Tory vote unchanged
  • Options
    ClippPClippP Posts: 1,725
    NeilVW said:

    ClippP said:

    NeilVW said:

    Sky not showing vote change / swing figures for these first couple of London results which is a bit poor.

    Not much point. It is a different voting system.

    Thank you Mr Johnson. Another fine mess you have got us into.
    Comparing with first preferences last time out would sure be a decent indicator, if caveats provided.
    No, because the squeeze is already on.
  • Options
    AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 875
    NeilVW said:

    ClippP said:

    NeilVW said:

    Sky not showing vote change / swing figures for these first couple of London results which is a bit poor.

    Not much point. It is a different voting system.

    Thank you Mr Johnson. Another fine mess you have got us into.
    Comparing with first preferences last time out would sure be a decent indicator, if caveats provided.
    Disagree. FPTP functions more like the second preference in SV for anyone paying attention. Of course, most people don't pay attention so you can't compare with the second prefs from last time, either...
  • Options
    AramintaMoonbeamQCAramintaMoonbeamQC Posts: 3,648

    Liverpool City Region Mayoral Election:

    🌹 Rotherham (LAB): 68.0% (+9.7)
    🌳 Marsden (CON): 10.2% (-9.4)
    🌍 Crone (GRN): 9.8% (-2.0)
    🔶 McAllister-Bell (LDM): 7.9% (-2.4)
    🙋 Smith (IND): 4.1% (New)

    Labour HOLD.
    Changes w/ 2021.

    Jade hangs on to second by a whisker

    68% for Rotherham?! What an amateur. He really needs to take a leaf out of Bootle's book.
    Anything less than 110% for Labour is a fail..............
    Greens finishing 3rd? Slackers.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,209
    Puppy-shooter Kristi Noem, Republican Governor of South Dakota, now having to admit the story in her memoir of meeting North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was, how to put this, a lie.

    I think you can safely strike her from the list of Trump's 2024 running mates....
  • Options
    SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 6,435
    ClippP said:

    NeilVW said:

    Sky not showing vote change / swing figures for these first couple of London results which is a bit poor.

    Not much point. It is a different voting system.

    Thank you Mr Johnson. Another fine mess you have got us into.
    There is, surely, a point in comparing votes this time with first choice votes last time?

    People will change behaviour a bit due to the change of system, that would mainly be at the level of Lib Dems, Greens and RefUK no longer having the luxury of a first choice which they can then switch to the "real" contest - so they may be more inclined to vote tactially. But swing is between the top two parties anyway, and the essential point is that Hall needs a swing to her compared with first choice votes in 2021.
  • Options
    CookieCookie Posts: 11,638

    I am going to pull my hair out at the roots if Hall wins. People wanted to punish labour for Gaza and in return they put a far right crackpot like Hall... talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face. It reminds me of brexit.... that also went through due to passive voters. 🤷🤷🤷

    I really don't think it's reasonable to call Hall a far-right crackpot.
This discussion has been closed.