Howdy, Stranger!

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

Options

How Betfair has been reacting over the last few days – politicalbetting.com

124678

Comments

  • Options
    Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 4,876

    Pro_Rata said:

    CatMan said:

    City & East Results:

    Labour 108977
    Tory 38626
    Green 13256
    Lib Dem 7551
    Reform 6898

    2021 Results:

    Labour 99971
    Tory 58145

    Does City and East include some of the bits where one might have expected Gaza effect swings against Labour?
    Yes
    They are not occurring evenly and predictably.

    If they don't apply to mayoral votes, then perhaps Birmingham has delivered for Labour?

    What was the Birmingham swing in the PCC election?
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,567
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616
    Street steady at 6
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,968
    Trump, and fallout.

    The selected auditor for Trump Media, which is the one with the reverse takeover headed for a pump and dump, has been punished heavily by the regulator with a permanent suspension plus $14m of civil penalties.

    It's called BG Borgias, and has rapidly developed a large client base amongst listed companies.

    That is a result of intense micro-media attention to Trump & his dealings. Apparently missed by MSM, with a bit of followup coverage in the FT.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGkjsruWVvw

  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616
    LOL.

    As I typed he fell to 2.5
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,156
    edited May 4

    algarkirk said:

    BBC, as usual, have far too many talking heads, politicians speeches and politicians spinning.

    Not enough analysis or emerging trends from the count.

    I am trying to remember the local elections years back, where in the early hours of the morning they had one of the presenters (Jeremy Vine??) doing weird thing dressed in a toy shop cowboy costume (no really) - something about a shoot out. They managed to not announce the actual results when they came in….
    Jeremy Vine it was, and,IIRC, a General Election. Was it the same year as they kept going to a bunch of drunk partying people in a boat on the Thames. I think Andrew Neil was part of it.

    This GE I shall go to bed at 10 pm with Radio 4 quietly nearby and hope that Jim Naughtie is on the team; you reach a certain age when the all nighter has no charms at all.
    I found 1997 fairly boring because the result was so obvious. I expect the same will apply.
    Boring? Best election night. Ever. Edgbaston. Stephen Twigg. Portillo. D:ream. A new day has dawned, has it not. What a time to be alive.
    Castle Point going Labour was the icing for me! First time I’d voted Labour in a GE since 1964.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,071

    algarkirk said:

    BBC, as usual, have far too many talking heads, politicians speeches and politicians spinning.

    Not enough analysis or emerging trends from the count.

    I am trying to remember the local elections years back, where in the early hours of the morning they had one of the presenters (Jeremy Vine??) doing weird thing dressed in a toy shop cowboy costume (no really) - something about a shoot out. They managed to not announce the actual results when they came in….
    Jeremy Vine it was, and,IIRC, a General Election. Was it the same year as they kept going to a bunch of drunk partying people in a boat on the Thames. I think Andrew Neil was part of it.

    This GE I shall go to bed at 10 pm with Radio 4 quietly nearby and hope that Jim Naughtie is on the team; you reach a certain age when the all nighter has no charms at all.
    I found 1997 fairly boring because the result was so obvious. I expect the same will apply.
    Boring? Best election night. Ever. Edgbaston. Stephen Twigg. Portillo. D:ream. A new day has dawned, has it not. What a time to be alive.
    But we knew that was going to happen as soon as the exit poll was out. One might enjoy the journey, but the destination was known.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,801
    Andy_JS said:

    Rumours (Harry Horton Lab sources) Tories have requested a recount in West Mids and its within 3000 votes, Street may well lose

    All the money is now against Street on Betfair so that might be true.

    It's possible he has just lost.
    Ironic if he loses because of a swing to Labour in Solihull.
    Solihull includes places like Chelmsley Wood. It ain't all Terry & June country.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616
    I topped my Street bet up at 6.

    Good times on BF
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196
    Havering & Redbridge

    Hall 82,859
    Khan 50,780

    Almost no swing again.
  • Options
    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,819
    Havering & Redbridge Results:

    Tory 82859
    Labour 50780
    Green 7859
    Reform 7554
    Lib Dem 6417

    2021 Results:

    Tory 82361
    Labour 49818
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,852

    I topped my Street bet up at 6.

    Good times on BF

    Good strategy, but I'm not chasing the market.

    I just don't have enough information.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,255
    So I essayed a bit of gardening - planting out hostas, geums and brunneras. I am not exactly sylph-like though I have been slowly losing weight. Anyway, as I dug and planted and weeded, I found my trousers slowly falling down until - well, how can I put this - I was gardening in my pants which seemed to be making the same attempt to force me to become a Naked Gardener. Then I fell over into the honey bush - euphorbia mellifera, for any filthy minds out there.

    Nice as it is to find one's clothes a bit too big for you, this was not the time to discover this. And so I had to retreat into the house - muddy and au naturel - before I scandalised the local birds, sheep and passing dog-walkers.

    A picture of the euphorbia below - it has a magnificent smell of honey and the orange bracts set against the zingy green leaves make it look like an abstract painting. It is a thug, mind, and does need cutting back so falling into it and the enforced pruning that followed was probably necessary. Even if I reached that conclusion in a somewhat unconventional manner.


  • Options
    Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,642

    legatus said:

    Sean_F said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Solihull:

    Street 62.5%
    Parker 20.8%

    5% swing to Lab compared to 2021

    Lol, that's total knife edge, Street might be in trouble
    Except that Labour's Gaza problem wouldn't manifest itself very much in Solihull.
    Labour's running-a-shit-show in Birmingham is more of a problem.
    My back of the envelope calculation is that Labour will carry Birmingham by 25-30k, and that is probably not enough.
    Sean_F said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Solihull:

    Street 62.5%
    Parker 20.8%

    5% swing to Lab compared to 2021

    Lol, that's total knife edge, Street might be in trouble
    Except that Labour's Gaza problem wouldn't manifest itself very much in Solihull.
    Labour's running-a-shit-show in Birmingham is more of a problem.
    My back of the envelope calculation is that Labour will carry Birmingham by 25-30k, and that is probably not enough.
    The Tory lead in Solihull was 23,500.
    In 2021, the Tory lead in Solihull was 32,400. So the Tory lead in Solihull fell by 8,900 compared to 2021.

    Over the whole West Midlands, in 2021 Street won by 47,000.

    So even though Solihull accounts for only 9.4% of the total votes cast in 2024, the Tories have already lost about 19% of their winning 2021 margin of 47,000.

    At face value, even allowing for a poor result for Labour in Birmingham, my reaction is that that looks bad for Street.

    Put another way, even if Labour only maintained its 2021 margin of 17,500 over the Conservatives in Birmingham, Labour only has to improve the margin by 7,800 in each of Wolverhampton, Walsall, Dudley, Sandwell and Coventry to get over the winning line. And the number of votes cast in 2024 in each of those five boroughs averaged about one-third more than the number cast in Solihull.
    Wolverhampton: Parker ahead of Street by 7,900. In 2021 Labour were 2,800 behind. So that's another 10,700 off Street's 2021 majority.

    The results from Wolverhampton and Solihull alone mean that Street's 2021 majority of 47,000 has already been reduced by 19,600 or 42%, and those two boroughs account for only 19% of the votes cast.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616

    Andy_JS said:

    Rumours (Harry Horton Lab sources) Tories have requested a recount in West Mids and its within 3000 votes, Street may well lose

    All the money is now against Street on Betfair so that might be true.

    It's possible he has just lost.
    Ironic if he loses because of a swing to Labour in Solihull.
    Solihull includes places like Chelmsley Wood. It ain't all Terry & June country.
    This Town.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,118
    edited May 4

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196
    Lambeth & Southwark

    Khan 106,861
    Hall 26,347
  • Options
    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,819
    Lambeth & Southwark Results:

    Labour 106861
    Tory 26347
    Green 12446
    Lib Dem 11463
    Reform 3990

    2021 Results:

    Labour 93437
    Tory 36471
  • Options
    legatuslegatus Posts: 126
    If there is to be a recount, they will have to count the lot!
  • Options
    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 726
    edited May 4

    algarkirk said:

    BBC, as usual, have far too many talking heads, politicians speeches and politicians spinning.

    Not enough analysis or emerging trends from the count.

    I am trying to remember the local elections years back, where in the early hours of the morning they had one of the presenters (Jeremy Vine??) doing weird thing dressed in a toy shop cowboy costume (no really) - something about a shoot out. They managed to not announce the actual results when they came in….
    Jeremy Vine it was, and,IIRC, a General Election. Was it the same year as they kept going to a bunch of drunk partying people in a boat on the Thames. I think Andrew Neil was part of it.

    This GE I shall go to bed at 10 pm with Radio 4 quietly nearby and hope that Jim Naughtie is on the team; you reach a certain age when the all nighter has no charms at all.
    The Boat Party of the Damned was 2010 GE. IIRC, Vine’s awful cowboy skit was for the local elections, maybe even the year before?

    But yes, both events were symptomatic of a sharp decline in the quality of BBC election night coverage. They have recovered a bit since, to be fair, though hardly spectacularly.
    Did a YouTube search. The cowboy thing, with Vine performing a shoot-out in a saloon, was the 2008 local elections. I was thinking it was a GE but thankfully not. Who knows what graphics and AI will be conjured this time. The Elizabeth Tower swingometer stuff was good in 2015.


  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,968
    Cyclefree said:

    So I essayed a bit of gardening - planting out hostas, geums and brunneras. I am not exactly sylph-like though I have been slowly losing weight. Anyway, as I dug and planted and weeded, I found my trousers slowly falling down until - well, how can I put this - I was gardening in my pants which seemed to be making the same attempt to force me to become a Naked Gardener. Then I fell over into the honey bush - euphorbia mellifera, for any filthy minds out there.

    Nice as it is to find one's clothes a bit too big for you, this was not the time to discover this. And so I had to retreat into the house - muddy and au naturel - before I scandalised the local birds, sheep and passing dog-walkers.

    A picture of the euphorbia below - it has a magnificent smell of honey and the orange bracts set against the zingy green leaves make it look like an abstract painting. It is a thug, mind, and does need cutting back so falling into it and the enforced pruning that followed was probably necessary. Even if I reached that conclusion in a somewhat unconventional manner.


    At least it wasn't a mother-in-law's pincushion cactus :smiley: .
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,013
    Havering and Redbridge is more proof Reform amount to little.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,118
    This is the new Green Party councillor for Gipton & Harehills, celebrating by waving the Palestinian flag and chanting "Allahu Akbar" which I presume means "please recycle responsibly".
    I wonder which carbon he wants to reduce first?


    https://x.com/leokearse/status/1786742972123402626?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q
  • Options
    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 726
    edited May 4
    The drunken boat party was indeed the 2010 GE, in the midst of the Euro economic crisis. Quite surreal.
  • Options
    SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 6,382

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    I like the really close finishes in multi-member wards where one candidate for a particular party doesn't want a recount because they are just in, and the other very much does!
  • Options
    OllyTOllyT Posts: 4,927

    OllyT said:

    I see inside source claims that the Labour Party leadership are extremely concerned with the prediction of a hung parliament after the General Election. Senior Labour figures are drawing up plans to consider a coalition with the Tories!

    Sinil Cheers and blames the Greens

    Labour are going to be saying that right up to election day to get out every vote and squeeze every tactical vote they can. I suspect at least half the Green voters from yesterday will be voting Labour at the GE to make sure there is no chance of the Tories getting back - I know several people who didn't vote Labour yesterday but fully intend to at a GE.

    I think your obsessional hatred of Starmer blinds you to what's really going on. I liked some of Corbyn's policies, I like some of the Green's policies but the reality is that under our electoral system the only choice is Labour if you don't want to wake up on the morning after polling day to discover that we have 5 more years of Sunak, Truss and co. I think most people understand that .

    1997 was driven predominantly by people liking Blair, the next GE is going to be driven by people wanting the Tories out at any cost.

    The most significant result yesterday was Blackpool South - the one election where the vote was based entirely on Westminster politics and Labour had their third highest swing ever I believe.
    I remember 1997 being driven predominantly by people wanting the Tories out at any cost.
    Both apply but in 1997 there was more enthusiasm for Blair and Labour than I detect for Starmer and Labour but hatred of Sunak, Truss etc is far, far greater than I remember it being for Major.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,951
    edited May 4
    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
  • Options
    DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 24,727
    ping said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Solihull:

    Street 62.5%
    Parker 20.8%

    5% swing to Lab compared to 2021

    I assume the Solihull west & Shirley constituency is being held open for Street if he wants it, whether he wins or loses today.

    100/1 for next con leader looks generous to me, in the admittedly unlikely scenario where the Patel/Badenoch/Braverman’s all knock each other out and the sane wing of the Tory party prevails.
    Andy Street is 100/1 (as you say) with William Hill. It might be a trading hedge if he loses today, which is starting to look likely but it is hard to see him going straight from Mayor to party leader.

    The same firm has Aaron Bell 200/1.
  • Options
    Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 7,656
    It seems like an eternity since Street was nailed on and Hall was in with a shout.
    Now, Khan is nailed on and Street is in with a shout.

    I think the sangfroid in the Tory Party over the results as a whole will be severely tested by Monday.
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,567
    Dudley a small Street win but another 10k off his majority
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,968
    I can confirm that Mr Vine seems to be more interested in our former PCC's 5 speeding tickets, than in his Election Night 2008 Rootin' Tootin' Shootin' performance.

    He has retweeted the former, bit not the latter (so far),
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616
    isam said:

    This is the new Green Party councillor for Gipton & Harehills, celebrating by waving the Palestinian flag and chanting "Allahu Akbar" which I presume means "please recycle responsibly".
    I wonder which carbon he wants to reduce first?


    https://x.com/leokearse/status/1786742972123402626?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    maybe he misunderstood the green colour bit of Green?
  • Options
    BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 1,206
    edited May 4
    https://twitter.com/Samfr/status/1751615691734520212/photo/1

    "Moreover, although most people expect a clear Blair victory, there is little evidence of positive enthusiasm for Labour, or of high expectations of what the party would do in office."

    Not 2024, 1997.
  • Options
    wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 7,567
    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196
    Sean_F said:

    Havering and Redbridge is more proof Reform amount to little.

    No point in voting Reform in these circumstances.
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,522
    Wow. All Weather only then to the 2000G and wins. Mine came 2nd.

    And wtf was all that "it's close" about yesterday on London Mayor? I got semi worried!
  • Options
    Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 7,656

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
  • Options
    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,819
    I think that's all the London Mayor Results, which would make the provisional results

    Khan 1,088,225 43.8%
    Hall 811,518 32.7%
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,118

    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
    I was just recounting the logic of the sensible centrists
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,071
    This time yesterday, people thought Street had won easily and London would be down to the wire. Now Khan has won easily and W Mids is down to the wire.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,951

    isam said:

    This is the new Green Party councillor for Gipton & Harehills, celebrating by waving the Palestinian flag and chanting "Allahu Akbar" which I presume means "please recycle responsibly".
    I wonder which carbon he wants to reduce first?


    https://x.com/leokearse/status/1786742972123402626?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    maybe he misunderstood the green colour bit of Green?
    When did the SWP take over the Greens?
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,071
    Khan win now official
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,307
    edited May 4
    Susan Hall gets 32.6% of the vote on current votes in. So that beats the 27% Steve Norris got in 2000 on first preferences and the 29% he got in 2004. So she avoids the worst performance by a Conservative candidate in a London Mayoral election albeit still a clear Khan win
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,013

    This time yesterday, people thought Street had won easily and London would be down to the wire. Now Khan has won easily and W Mids is down to the wire.

    Once a party concedes defeat (which West Mids Labour seemed to do), one believes them.
  • Options
    DonkeysDonkeys Posts: 723

    algarkirk said:

    BBC, as usual, have far too many talking heads, politicians speeches and politicians spinning.

    Not enough analysis or emerging trends from the count.

    I am trying to remember the local elections years back, where in the early hours of the morning they had one of the presenters (Jeremy Vine??) doing weird thing dressed in a toy shop cowboy costume (no really) - something about a shoot out. They managed to not announce the actual results when they came in….
    Jeremy Vine it was, and,IIRC, a General Election. Was it the same year as they kept going to a bunch of drunk partying people in a boat on the Thames. I think Andrew Neil was part of it.

    This GE I shall go to bed at 10 pm with Radio 4 quietly nearby and hope that Jim Naughtie is on the team; you reach a certain age when the all nighter has no charms at all.
    The Boat Party of the Damned was 2010 GE. IIRC, Vine’s awful cowboy skit was for the local elections, maybe even the year before?

    But yes, both events were symptomatic of a sharp decline in the quality of BBC election night coverage. They have recovered a bit since, to be fair, though hardly spectacularly.
    I know Jeremy Vine. He's got quite a sense of humour. The cowboy skit was hilarious. Totally unselfconscious!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7JX8D1Kb88
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,951
    edited May 4
    isam said:

    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
    I was just recounting the logic of the sensible centrists
    At the risk of getting into a silly argument with you, your example simply illustrates OKC's point that winning sides don't ask for recounts.

    Still, well done on bring up Brexit once again, it must brighten up your otherwise depressing day.
  • Options
    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,819
    edited May 4

    Khan win now official

    Not until it's announced at City Hall!
  • Options
    GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 20,890
    Street would have won had he stood as an Independent.
  • Options
    Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 599

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
    More a cul-de-sac...
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,968

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
    There's only one way from here.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,951
    edited May 4

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
    Not so fast, the vote is Close.
  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,118

    isam said:

    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
    I was just recounting the logic of the sensible centrists
    At the risk of getting into a silly argument with you, your example simply illustrates OKC's point that winning sides don't ask for recounts.

    Still, well done on bring up Brexit once again, it must brighten up your otherwise depressing day.
    Yes I was being sarcastic. Are you really too stupid to realise this?

    Why have I had a depressing day? What are you going on about?
  • Options
    kamskikamski Posts: 4,340
    OllyT said:

    OllyT said:

    I see inside source claims that the Labour Party leadership are extremely concerned with the prediction of a hung parliament after the General Election. Senior Labour figures are drawing up plans to consider a coalition with the Tories!

    Sinil Cheers and blames the Greens

    Labour are going to be saying that right up to election day to get out every vote and squeeze every tactical vote they can. I suspect at least half the Green voters from yesterday will be voting Labour at the GE to make sure there is no chance of the Tories getting back - I know several people who didn't vote Labour yesterday but fully intend to at a GE.

    I think your obsessional hatred of Starmer blinds you to what's really going on. I liked some of Corbyn's policies, I like some of the Green's policies but the reality is that under our electoral system the only choice is Labour if you don't want to wake up on the morning after polling day to discover that we have 5 more years of Sunak, Truss and co. I think most people understand that .

    1997 was driven predominantly by people liking Blair, the next GE is going to be driven by people wanting the Tories out at any cost.

    The most significant result yesterday was Blackpool South - the one election where the vote was based entirely on Westminster politics and Labour had their third highest swing ever I believe.
    I remember 1997 being driven predominantly by people wanting the Tories out at any cost.
    Both apply but in 1997 there was more enthusiasm for Blair and Labour than I detect for Starmer and Labour but hatred of Sunak, Truss etc is far, far greater than I remember it being for Major.
    I think the 90s were just a more optimistic time
  • Options
    SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 6,382
    I wonder if the change in electoral system has actually bitten the Tories on the arse in the West Midlands? Probably not, as Labour did pick up more second choices than Street in 2021 - but it was reasonably close, you'd assume RefUK would predominantly have gone for Street, and he's burnished his "not like other Tories" image with HS2 so may well have done better on second choices than last time. We'll never know.
  • Options
    numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,556
    So it looks like the Tories can’t even play the expectation management game properly now….
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196
    Street and Hall both lose, it seems.
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,801

    This time yesterday, people thought Street had won easily and London would be down to the wire. Now Khan has won easily and W Mids is down to the wire.

    Great expectation management from Team Sunak.
  • Options
    BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 31,951
    isam said:

    isam said:

    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
    I was just recounting the logic of the sensible centrists
    At the risk of getting into a silly argument with you, your example simply illustrates OKC's point that winning sides don't ask for recounts.

    Still, well done on bring up Brexit once again, it must brighten up your otherwise depressing day.
    Yes I was being sarcastic. Are you really too stupid to realise this?

    Why have I had a depressing day? What are you going on about?
    Lol: "I made a dumb comment; I'll pretend I was being sarcastic."
  • Options
    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,801

    isam said:

    This is the new Green Party councillor for Gipton & Harehills, celebrating by waving the Palestinian flag and chanting "Allahu Akbar" which I presume means "please recycle responsibly".
    I wonder which carbon he wants to reduce first?


    https://x.com/leokearse/status/1786742972123402626?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    maybe he misunderstood the green colour bit of Green?
    When did the SWP take over the Greens?
    The day BJO joined?
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196
    The problem for the Tories in London is that their voters are constantly moving out of the capital to places like Essex and Kent. The process has been going on for decades.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616
    Candidates are waiting to hear whether there’s going to be a full recount of votes, or bundle checks to verify the numbers. Either way, there’s a tense wait ahead.

    Guardian
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,968
    edited May 4

    isam said:

    This is the new Green Party councillor for Gipton & Harehills, celebrating by waving the Palestinian flag and chanting "Allahu Akbar" which I presume means "please recycle responsibly".
    I wonder which carbon he wants to reduce first?


    https://x.com/leokearse/status/1786742972123402626?s=46&t=CW4pL-mMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    maybe he misunderstood the green colour bit of Green?
    When did the SWP take over the Greens?
    As it happens ...

    There was a significant influx after the Comrade Delta rape scandal in the SWP around 2010, where the SWP leadership wanted a rape allegation against a member of the senior leadership to be dealt with via the structures of the SWP, not a report to the police.

    It was huge on the left / far left at the time.

    But the Greens have long had virulently anti-Israel, sometimes (intentionally or unintentionally) stepping over into anti-Jewish looking, rhetoric (phrasing it for the the benefit of OGHM) from some elements.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Smith_(activist)
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 14,716

    Street would have won had he stood as an Independent.

    IKWYM, but he did need the "vote for a donkey with a blue rosette" vote as well, which he'd have lost as an indy. He'd have needed the Conservative candidate to accidentally mess up their nomination form or something.

    Rory the ex Tory pointed out that FPTP makes it much harder for independents to break through.
  • Options
    OllyTOllyT Posts: 4,927
    kamski said:

    OllyT said:

    OllyT said:

    I see inside source claims that the Labour Party leadership are extremely concerned with the prediction of a hung parliament after the General Election. Senior Labour figures are drawing up plans to consider a coalition with the Tories!

    Sinil Cheers and blames the Greens

    Labour are going to be saying that right up to election day to get out every vote and squeeze every tactical vote they can. I suspect at least half the Green voters from yesterday will be voting Labour at the GE to make sure there is no chance of the Tories getting back - I know several people who didn't vote Labour yesterday but fully intend to at a GE.

    I think your obsessional hatred of Starmer blinds you to what's really going on. I liked some of Corbyn's policies, I like some of the Green's policies but the reality is that under our electoral system the only choice is Labour if you don't want to wake up on the morning after polling day to discover that we have 5 more years of Sunak, Truss and co. I think most people understand that .

    1997 was driven predominantly by people liking Blair, the next GE is going to be driven by people wanting the Tories out at any cost.

    The most significant result yesterday was Blackpool South - the one election where the vote was based entirely on Westminster politics and Labour had their third highest swing ever I believe.
    I remember 1997 being driven predominantly by people wanting the Tories out at any cost.
    Both apply but in 1997 there was more enthusiasm for Blair and Labour than I detect for Starmer and Labour but hatred of Sunak, Truss etc is far, far greater than I remember it being for Major.
    I think the 90s were just a more optimistic time
    There is definitely something in that.
  • Options
    BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 1,206
    Andy_JS said:

    The problem for the Tories in London is that their voters are constantly moving out of the capital to places like Essex and Kent. The process has been going on for decades.

    That famous Labour mayor Boris Johnson agrees.
  • Options
    londonpubmanlondonpubman Posts: 3,252
    Maybe the June/early July election is back on now if CON rebels decide to move against Rishi and he calls the GE in response?

    Has @MoonRabbit called it?
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616

    Street would have won had he stood as an Independent.

    Totally agree. He should have resigned over HS2 and run as an independent 'get things done' guy.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,137
    Man, that Soros is a busy guy, is there anything he doesn't fund?

  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 32,156
    isam said:

    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
    I was just recounting the logic of the sensible centrists
    One of my favourite recount moments was when I was Liberal agent in Feb 74 and was called, with the candidates and the other agents to a meeting with the Returning Officer. If, he said, we need a recount I’m going to lock the hall and we’ll all come back the next morning. As we’d just saved our deposit in 1966 and lost it in 1970 I asked what would happen if we were just shy of saving our deposit. The RO looked at me in astonishment and admitted he’d never thought of that happening.
    In the event the result was clear and we were well above the lost deposit level.
  • Options
    MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 12,689


    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    38m
    One other thing to remember. The Tories didn't just build Susan Hall's campaign around a failed core vote strategy. Rishi Sunak tore up his own strategy after Uxbridge and tried to build a national campaign on the same basis.

    https://twitter.com/DPJHodges/status/1786754139294138610

    To me, that was the turning point. Sunak’s Premiership was quite sane till that point. Winning an Uxbridge election, a blip on a bad night that won all the headlines despite all record swings against them same time, led to the Sunak credibility slide.
  • Options
    Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,346
    HYUFD said:

    Susan Hall gets 32.6% of the vote on current votes in. So that beats the 27% Steve Norris got in 2000 on first preferences and the 29% he got in 2004. So she avoids the worst performance by a Conservative candidate in a London Mayoral election albeit still a clear Khan win

    There's very little justice in politics. I know from people who worked with him that Steve Norris was a pleasant chap and very capable politician. Yet he was beaten in the mayoral race by an evil hard-Left anti-Semite and didn't do as well as a raving swivel-eyed Trumpian.
  • Options
    noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 20,947
    Andy_JS said:

    The problem for the Tories in London is that their voters are constantly moving out of the capital to places like Essex and Kent. The process has been going on for decades.

    If they picked someone like Rory he could have won. But Rory is no longer welcome in the Tory party. Its not as simple as geographic movements, the Tory party has also moved far away from where it was just a decade ago, and aligned itself with some quite anti-London viewpoints as well.
  • Options
    numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,556
    Andy_JS said:

    The problem for the Tories in London is that their voters are constantly moving out of the capital to places like Essex and Kent. The process has been going on for decades.

    The Tories can win London with the right candidate and the right national circumstances, I think. The problem is that they keep nominating poor candidates.

  • Options
    isamisam Posts: 41,118

    isam said:

    isam said:

    isam said:

    Brum:

    In five of the seven local authorities in the West Midlands, election agents for the candidates have requested ‘bundle checks’ on their votes - not a full blown recount but an extra check on the number of bundled votes - suggesting the result could be very tight.

    Guarduan

    It looks very tight.

    Not sure what more data is available.
    A bit more from an ITV journo:

    NEW: Senior Labour source says the Conservatives have asked for a recount in the West Midlands - which would suggest the Tories fear Andy Street may have lost.

    I’m told fewer than 3,000 votes in it.


    https://twitter.com/harry_horton/status/1786765852764676217
    One doesn’t ask for a recount if one’s ahead, does one? Grab the win with both hands, and give thanks.
    Don’t be silly; Remainers said that Leave should welcome a second referendum in 2017-19 if they were confident of winning again! Who cares if the upside.was zero because they’d already won?

    That truly was the age of partisanship ruling people’s heads. They really thought they meant it
    Yebbut Leave sensibly didn't ask for a recount, which supports OKC's point.
    I was just recounting the logic of the sensible centrists
    At the risk of getting into a silly argument with you, your example simply illustrates OKC's point that winning sides don't ask for recounts.

    Still, well done on bring up Brexit once again, it must brighten up your otherwise depressing day.
    Yes I was being sarcastic. Are you really too stupid to realise this?

    Why have I had a depressing day? What are you going on about?
    Lol: "I made a dumb comment; I'll pretend I was being sarcastic."
    You can’t be this thick. Are you really prepared to look this stupid rather than concede you misread something?
  • Options
    FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,077
    CatMan said:

    I think that's all the London Mayor Results, which would make the provisional results

    Khan 1,088,225 43.8%
    Hall 811,518 32.7%

    I'd like to see the full figures and a breakdown by borough. What of the remaining 24%.
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 14,716
    That "Labour candidate reported to the police" thing...

    ... It was mischief-making bollocks, wasn't it?
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196
    Final London result

    Khan 43.8%
    Hall 32.7%
  • Options
    OllyTOllyT Posts: 4,927
    edited May 4

    So it looks like the Tories can’t even play the expectation management game properly now….

    If Street does lose Sunak celebrating the Tees Vally mayor victory despite a 16%+ swing against the Conservatives and with a candidate that distanced himself from the party as far as could comes across as desperate stuff, he would have been better keeping schtumm.
  • Options
    SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 6,382

    So it looks like the Tories can’t even play the expectation management game properly now….

    Well, Sunak has played it well in a way. The papers were full of stories today about the backbench rebels calling off the dogs based on Tees Valley, the expectation of West Mids, and the hope of London. They may backtrack now, but the momentum may have gone a bit.
  • Options
    OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,236

    Khan win now official

    Might dip into Facebook later to savour the howls of rage from elderly Kent residents whose posts involve a lot of union jacks and poor punctuation.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,616
    kle4 said:

    Man, that Soros is a busy guy, is there anything he doesn't fund?

    Your occasional reminder that Soros is 93!

  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 27,196

    CatMan said:

    I think that's all the London Mayor Results, which would make the provisional results

    Khan 1,088,225 43.8%
    Hall 811,518 32.7%

    I'd like to see the full figures and a breakdown by borough. What of the remaining 24%.
    See here.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_London_mayoral_election#Results_2
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,137

    Candidates are waiting to hear whether there’s going to be a full recount of votes, or bundle checks to verify the numbers. Either way, there’s a tense wait ahead.

    Guardian

    It's probably not possible, since you get the recount before any declaration, but it would be interesting to see how often it has changed a result. Probably not often, as counting is accurate and most races are not close enough to be affected by a few bundles.
  • Options
    kamskikamski Posts: 4,340

    This time yesterday, people thought Street had won easily and London would be down to the wire. Now Khan has won easily and W Mids is down to the wire.

    Great expectation management from Team Sunak.
    I get he's a poor politician, but this is really basic stuff and he must have some advisers - so what's going on?
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,918

    algarkirk said:

    BBC, as usual, have far too many talking heads, politicians speeches and politicians spinning.

    Not enough analysis or emerging trends from the count.

    I am trying to remember the local elections years back, where in the early hours of the morning they had one of the presenters (Jeremy Vine??) doing weird thing dressed in a toy shop cowboy costume (no really) - something about a shoot out. They managed to not announce the actual results when they came in….
    Jeremy Vine it was, and,IIRC, a General Election. Was it the same year as they kept going to a bunch of drunk partying people in a boat on the Thames. I think Andrew Neil was part of it.

    This GE I shall go to bed at 10 pm with Radio 4 quietly nearby and hope that Jim Naughtie is on the team; you reach a certain age when the all nighter has no charms at all.
    I found 1997 fairly boring because the result was so obvious. I expect the same will apply.
    No, it was locals. The interest was in the fact that it would be close(ish) to the next election.

    The gibberish childishness of it reminded me of 4am programming on some cable channels - random weird shite made up by the Z team.
  • Options
    CatManCatMan Posts: 2,819

    CatMan said:

    I think that's all the London Mayor Results, which would make the provisional results

    Khan 1,088,225 43.8%
    Hall 811,518 32.7%

    I'd like to see the full figures and a breakdown by borough. What of the remaining 24%.
    There are some borough results here but it's not updated all of them yet

    https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/london-mayoral-election-assembly-results-winners-sadiq-khan-susan-hall-b1155577.html

    The headline results I got from the BBC site

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election/2024/england/mayors/E12000007
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,137

    kle4 said:

    Man, that Soros is a busy guy, is there anything he doesn't fund?

    Your occasional reminder that Soros is 93!

    Enrico Dandalo the Doge of Venice travelled with the army when it went on the Fourth Crusade when he was 95, anything is possible.
  • Options
    SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 6,382

    kle4 said:

    Man, that Soros is a busy guy, is there anything he doesn't fund?

    Your occasional reminder that Soros is 93!

    You poor, deluded fool. He's occupied the current Soros host body for 93 years, but the Deep State won't tell you how long these shapeshifting lizards have been on our planet in total.
  • Options
    AramintaMoonbeamQCAramintaMoonbeamQC Posts: 3,646

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
    Not so fast, the vote is Close.
    I think they've exhausted every Avenue.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 92,137

    HYUFD said:

    Susan Hall gets 32.6% of the vote on current votes in. So that beats the 27% Steve Norris got in 2000 on first preferences and the 29% he got in 2004. So she avoids the worst performance by a Conservative candidate in a London Mayoral election albeit still a clear Khan win

    There's very little justice in politics.
    In a fair system it's like umpiring in cricket - you get unlucky, but overall it evens out to most people getting justice.
  • Options
    OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 15,236

    algarkirk said:

    BBC, as usual, have far too many talking heads, politicians speeches and politicians spinning.

    Not enough analysis or emerging trends from the count.

    I am trying to remember the local elections years back, where in the early hours of the morning they had one of the presenters (Jeremy Vine??) doing weird thing dressed in a toy shop cowboy costume (no really) - something about a shoot out. They managed to not announce the actual results when they came in….
    Jeremy Vine it was, and,IIRC, a General Election. Was it the same year as they kept going to a bunch of drunk partying people in a boat on the Thames. I think Andrew Neil was part of it.

    This GE I shall go to bed at 10 pm with Radio 4 quietly nearby and hope that Jim Naughtie is on the team; you reach a certain age when the all nighter has no charms at all.
    I found 1997 fairly boring because the result was so obvious. I expect the same will apply.
    Boring? Best election night. Ever. Edgbaston. Stephen Twigg. Portillo. D:ream. A new day has dawned, has it not. What a time to be alive.
    But we knew that was going to happen as soon as the exit poll was out. One might enjoy the journey, but the destination was known.
    True, but Titanic is a great movie even if we know what happens to the ship.
  • Options
    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 726

    Andy_JS said:

    The problem for the Tories in London is that their voters are constantly moving out of the capital to places like Essex and Kent. The process has been going on for decades.

    That famous Labour mayor Boris Johnson agrees.
    I think we can all agree that Boris Johnson is sui generis.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,918
    NeilVW said:

    The drunken boat party was indeed the 2010 GE, in the midst of the Euro economic crisis. Quite surreal.

    Hacks on a boat with a bar. Who could have foretold the result?
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 40,173

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
    Not so fast, the vote is Close.
    I think they've exhausted every Avenue.
    No way ahead for the poor chap's career?
  • Options
    Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,642

    Cannot see a path to victory for Street now

    Agree; Street has reached the end of the Road.
    Not so fast, the vote is Close.
    I think they've exhausted every Avenue.
    Street's stuck in a Cul-de-Sac.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 117,307

    HYUFD said:

    Susan Hall gets 32.6% of the vote on current votes in. So that beats the 27% Steve Norris got in 2000 on first preferences and the 29% he got in 2004. So she avoids the worst performance by a Conservative candidate in a London Mayoral election albeit still a clear Khan win

    There's very little justice in politics. I know from people who worked with him that Steve Norris was a pleasant chap and very capable politician. Yet he was beaten in the mayoral race by an evil hard-Left anti-Semite and didn't do as well as a raving swivel-eyed Trumpian.
    Former Epping Forest MP before Dame Eleanor of course and Transport Minister and lover of ladies
  • Options
    RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 2,978
    Everything points to an utterly horrific wipeout for the conservatives, worse than anything they’ve previously experienced.

    And the longer he waits, the worse it gets.

  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 31,052
    A question for our polling experts. Everyone was rightly saying that if Khan lost it would be the biggest failure of polling practically ever. He won but with an 11% margin rather than the 20% margins that were being predicted.

    Is this still a big polling error? 9% out seems big to me but not sure if that is just my perception.
This discussion has been closed.