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The Swinney slump doesn’t look like stopping – politicalbetting.com

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  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,295
    edited May 2024

    Who is Baxter?

    @BatteryCorrectHorse , Martin Baxter is the person who founded https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/

    To "Baxterise" (or "Baxterize") a poll is to feed it into Electoral Calculus https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/userpoll.html and get a seat prediction
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,780
    DM_Andy said:

    The Welsh should take it back and then everyone can call it Amwythig.
    Wolves fans when we played Shrewsbury Town in the cup three or so years back:

    "You're Welsh, and you know you are" (repeat)

    Both major parties knew lots and shame on them. Only one party has a party leader who was PO minister for two years and has weaselled his way out of scrutiny. I suspect he probably coached Vennells.
    No, there is a timeline here and it dates from 2009 when Computer Weekly first exposed that the cases were linked. After that ministers can be expected to have known more and more as time went on, and the internal Post Office line became discredited.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    Ghedebrav said:

    My kids’ school, which is Jewish, has a visible police presence posted at pickup and dropoff still, sadly.

    Tbh never any graffiti or anything like that; if anything the various local communities (unusually my area is about 10% Jewish and 10% Muslim, plus the usual patchwork of Christian denominations and the atheist behemoth) have always got on very well and continue to do so.

    The risk is nutters from outside.
    You are highly likely to be targeted by the nutters, because thay loathe the idea of different denominations getting on very well.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    I am generally quite relaxed about how other people speak but there are two things that infuriate me: one is the inappropriate use of "myself", "yourself" etc, and the other is references to percentages greater than 100 in phrases such "I gave 110%". People who do this should be killed in some cruel and unusual fashion.
    Again, "myself/yourself" is quite a normal idiom among many Irish. Why so much anti-Irish prejudice?

    I've found the differences in language in Ireland really fascinating. Spent an enjoyable half an hour getting to the bottom of the phrase, "on foot of," with my wife recently, and the weather forecasters manage to have very nuanced ways of getting across precisely how much rain there will be, while mostly talking about the interludes when it won't be raining.
  • JamarionJamarion Posts: 49
    Carnyx said:

    And Gaelic-influenced Scots Highlanders and Islanders.
    Words with unstressed vowels that don't appear in the spelling are two a penny even in RP: rhythm, chasm, etc.
    The coolest surnames have vowels that leave no written trace but are stressed, e.g. in McEnroe.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,250
    Taz said:

    That would humiliate her and if they put it to a vote of the CLP she would possibly win it.
    The CLP are completely out of the loop under Labour Party rules. As soon as the election was called it becomes the NEC's decision who stands in constituencies that hadn't quite picked a candidate. That's why we're expecting about five NEC members to find themselves with winnable seats.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,821
    Ghedebrav said:

    Is that not the right way to say it? I’d learnt that ‘Shrowsbury’ was a bit of an affectation and not actually how locals say it.

    Btw my great-nan was a spiritualist and was a noted seance leader and whatnot, travelling up and down the country. My understanding is that she genuinely believed in it all, though tbh who knows - some recent family history undertaken by my great-uncle has uncovered that there’s a strong fantasist streak in my lineage (I prefer to think I’ve inherited my dad’s side’s downrightness).
    Similarly, Southwell in Nottinghamshire. Which is pronounced Suth'll by people from Nottinghamshire. Apart from by people from Southwell, who almost overenunciate South-well.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,852

    It's meaningless. If you gave 110% then what is the denominator in this fraction?
    You’ve never gone the extra mile?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    Carnyx said:

    Those discussions can be very revealing of how other people live/think/have learnt in life.

    I remember someone on PB getting very upset by a lady calling her little girl Elspeth on the assumption that it was some sort of pretentious neologism (a reason which, in itself, I could sometimes sympathise with if it were true).

    Which considerably surprised anyone from Scotland, N England, etc. etc. But that was a very benign example compared to many others on here.



    I think Ealasaid is my favourite girl's name. Beautiful.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,250
    Cookie said:

    Similarly, Southwell in Nottinghamshire. Which is pronounced Suth'll by people from Nottinghamshire. Apart from by people from Southwell, who almost overenunciate South-well.
    Place names are a complete minefield, like with Wymondham, Norfolk being Wind'em and Wymondham, Leicestershire being Why-mond-ham (hattip to Andrew at Britain Elects for that factoid)
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792

    Question. You say Davey has "weaselled his way out of scrutiny". The opposite is true. He has had all the scrutiny, and has accounted for his actions.

    Where is the scrutiny on Badenoch? Or on any of the previous Tory ministers? Where is their accountability? Or their apology?

    Just so we're clear, your reaction to the Post Office outrage is that you are going to vote for the party who have been solely in government covering this up for 9 years, who have issued zero apology for their personal actions, who gave Vennels a CBE, who have done everything they can not to accept there is an issue, who have delayed and delayed and delayed paying any compensation to the victims?

    You're voting Tory in outrage of the PO scandal? Just so we're clear.
    Quite frankly I couldn't give a flying fuck if you are clear or not as you are an apologist for Davy, but here goes an explanation: I will not vote LD this time because their leader should resign because he knew, and he is a party leader . Simple enough for you?

    Your attempt to create equivalence with Badenoch is ridiculous as she is not a party leader.

    I would like intense scrutiny of all of them. I would like any that are proven to have covered things up to resign their seats or possibly go to jail. I would like them to experience some of the misery that the sub postmasters have had to endure
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,273
    DM_Andy said:

    Does Labour actually need to formally bar Diane Abbott from standing? Right now it's in the gift of the NEC, all they need to say is that Abbott is welcome to apply for the selection and then give it to Moema or Bramble. Am I being too cynical?

    What evidence is there from the last decade that she would actually make a good MP? She is not the Diane Abbott of the 1990s who might have been polarising but was much sharper at the time.

    "Fairness" to long standing MPs comes behind quality of MPs to the public for a party that is running on service and putting the country first. Well done, Keir.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644

    It isn't Tories you numpty, it is fact. He was PO minister ffs. He is now the leader of a major party and he has either lied or is incompetent (along with other PO ministers). If he (and his successors as ministers) didn't think that it was odd that PO sub postmasters had a percentage of criminality much much higher than the rest of the population then he is quite frankly a fecking idiot. Either that or a lazy incompetent, or was ok to go along with the conspiracy to protect the glorious institution that is our wonderful Post Office.

    He knew and his successors did. He did nothing about it therefore he is an absolute fucking disgrace.
    And his predecessors, but you clearly have a thing about him that is beyond reason.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,323
    Anyway, German word of week:

    Wohlstandsverwahrlosung

    In the news because of rich young people singing far right slogans on Sylt.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,273
    edited May 2024

    It's meaningless. If you gave 110% then what is the denominator in this fraction?
    If meaningless language infuriates how can you possibly maintain an interest in politics.....
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,532
    ClippP said:

    Being a Lib Dem is fun.....
    There was some sort of poll sometime ago (I'm sure it was scientifically accurate) that showed they were the most fun cheerful people. Most people here seem to be cheerful regardless of party, although I have chided squareroot2 in the past who always seems miserable. He needs a hug.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,628

    Question. You say Davey has "weaselled his way out of scrutiny". The opposite is true. He has had all the scrutiny, and has accounted for his actions.

    Lib Dem parliamentary candidate thinks Lib Dem Leader is beyond reproach.

    Well that's a shock !!!!!
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,657
    Ghedebrav said:

    Not much cycle parking at DM but I always seem to find a spot to lock up. Quarry Bank (as well as being fantastic in general) is better.

    Tbf most NT places geared to family visits will tend to have to also be geared to motorists. There’s no way I’d get my two to Dunham on two wheels from where I am.
    It's part of a series of agendas - Manc is one place where they are developing proper networks.

    If you to the new RHS at Bridgewater they have about 200 cycle stands all the way down one side of the car park, and a network of walking / cycling greenways to help get there safely.

    There's still stuff for them to work on, for example the surfaces are horrible, gritty and skiddy - which is tough for cycles and wheel chairs, and some gradients are wrong. When I was exploring it there's one hill on a main approach a couple of miles away with a 1:12 gradient which is unusable for many.

    For NT, I think they miss how many people are often local. At Hardwick hall there are half a million within easy cycling distance - say 15km. With an aging population they also need to consider scooter and wheelchair users, for whom 5-8km is quite normal. As a very commercial organisation they will do it partly for the potential 1-10% extra visitors they might gain.

    But footpath networks need to be decent and publicised, and barriers cleared out.

    To give them their due - they are starting.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,628
    DM_Andy said:

    Place names are a complete minefield, like with Wymondham, Norfolk being Wind'em and Wymondham, Leicestershire being Why-mond-ham (hattip to Andrew at Britain Elects for that factoid)
    Rugeley in Staffs is pronounced Rudge-lee for some reason, Houghton-Le-Spring is pronounced Horton-Le-Spring by locals of my acquantance. Bizarre.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849

    Quite frankly I couldn't give a flying fuck if you are clear or not as you are an apologist for Davy, but here goes an explanation: I will not vote LD this time because their leader should resign because he knew, and he is a party leader . Simple enough for you?

    Your attempt to create equivalence with Badenoch is ridiculous as she is not a party leader.

    I would like intense scrutiny of all of them. I would like any that are proven to have covered things up to resign their seats or possibly go to jail. I would like them to experience some of the misery that the sub postmasters have had to endure
    I didn't ask whether you would vote LibDem. You are clear on that topic.

    I asked if you are going to vote Tory. You - like so many of us - are very upset by the PO scandal. You have identified it as a key driver for how you will vote. So are you - as a result of your anger - going to vote Tory?
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849
    Taz said:

    Lib Dem parliamentary candidate thinks Lib Dem Leader is beyond reproach.

    Well that's a shock !!!!!
    "Beyond reproach" is something of a stretch vs what I wrote...
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,657
    Cookie said:

    It looks very low down?

    There is a lovely 35 mile loop I do from my house which passes by this way - Bridgewater Canal, Transpennine Trail, some quiet lanes, Arley Hall, some more quiet lanes, Tatton Park, some more quiet lanes, Swan with Two Nicks, Dunham Massey, more quiet lanes, Bridgewater Canal. I did it last weekend and can't have passed more than 10 cars until I got to Dunham Massey. The road past the NT site at Dunham Massey was actually the busiest bit - I've never been entirely clear whether you can cycle through the NT land, so have never attempted to do so. Would certainly cut out that last bit of traffic.
    You should be safe on estate roads, even opposite to the one way circuit. That's what my local place says - there are 15mph speed limits.

    Ask at the kiosk. If you are a member, every time you visit and check in the local property gets £3-£4 from central funds.

    But they do tend to have full size cattle grids with no bypasses.

    The Dunham Massey sign is somewhere around here:
    https://what3words.com/eyeliner.trial.twigs
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718
    “SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn has insisted his party can retain all of its Scottish seats at Westminster – and even win more.”

    Ha ha ha ha ha
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,159
    DM_Andy said:

    Place names are a complete minefield, like with Wymondham, Norfolk being Wind'em and Wymondham, Leicestershire being Why-mond-ham (hattip to Andrew at Britain Elects for that factoid)
    Kirkcaldy. Milngavie.

    Part of the confusion stems from recording error from institutions like Ordnance Survey. This is particularly the case with Scottish hills, to the extent that some non-local Gaelic speakers use the OS name, even if it makes no sense in context.

    https://x.com/theiaincameron/status/1791843173389467794?t=Uf0jCN3X3MBxcbQVmC65LQ&s=19
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,657
    Ghedebrav said:

    Not much cycle parking at DM but I always seem to find a spot to lock up. Quarry Bank (as well as being fantastic in general) is better.

    Tbf most NT places geared to family visits will tend to have to also be geared to motorists. There’s no way I’d get my two to Dunham on two wheels from where I am.
    Do you have a Google location or a photo of the cycle parking there I could add to my twitter thread about it, and to the WalkRideGM discord forum?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,507

    “SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn has insisted his party can retain all of its Scottish seats at Westminster – and even win more.”

    Ha ha ha ha ha

    One should not underestimate the value of optimism.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    edited May 2024
    Taz said:

    Rugeley in Staffs is pronounced Rudge-lee for some reason, Houghton-Le-Spring is pronounced Horton-Le-Spring by locals of my acquantance. Bizarre.
    Any idea how the good people of Essex pronounce Ugley?

    There are lots of oddities like that. I don't understand why Evesham is pronounced as three syllables, but that's not as odd as Stiffkey, a delightful North Norfolk village, which for some reason the locals pronounce as Stookey.

    Foreigners are worse though. Why do the Germans call Cologne, Koeln? It isn't remotely similar. And as for the Italians, when are they going to stop being silly and give Florence its proper name instead of 'Firenze'?
  • JamarionJamarion Posts: 49
    If MPs can be judged by how well they represent their constituents, Diane Abbott is probably the best MP in the House. See her "How I can help you" page:

    https://www.dianeabbott.org.uk/contact/help.aspx

    She is very popular locally and rightly so. See her increases in voteshare:

    2010: +6.0%
    2015: +7.9%
    2017: +12.2%
    2019: -4.8%

    Labour nationally:
    2010: -6.2%
    2015: +1.5%
    2017: +9.6%
    2019: -7.9%

    She has outperformed Labour by 12.2pp, 6.4pp, 2.6pp, and 3.1pp.

    Enjoy your retirement, Diane. You've earned it.


  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,657
    ClippP said:

    Being a Lib Dem is fun.....
    He's had a least 30 years of the Glee Club.

  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884

    I am generally quite relaxed about how other people speak but there are two things that infuriate me: one is the inappropriate use of "myself", "yourself" etc, and the other is references to percentages greater than 100 in phrases such "I gave 110%". People who do this should be killed in some cruel and unusual fashion.
    Typical Scots usage for the reflexive pronoun "myself" etc to be the subject or object of a sentence. eg "Myself went" or "I saw yourself"
  • DayTripperDayTripper Posts: 138
    Cookie said:

    Similarly, Southwell in Nottinghamshire. Which is pronounced Suth'll by people from Nottinghamshire. Apart from by people from Southwell, who almost overenunciate South-well.
    Only by incomers. I was born and brought up there (50s/60s) and everybody I knew said Suth'll.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,628

    Any idea how the good people of Essex pronounce Ugley?
    Ooglay ?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    edited May 2024

    My pet linguistic peeve is introducing management speak into everyday conversation…..to my horror I once found myself saying “Mother, that’s not actionable….”

    I went through a very annoying phase of always asking somebody to quantify their opinion on whether (or not) something would happen, ie give it a probability.

    My mum: "I think Aunt Edith is coming for Christmas."
    Me: "You think?"
    My mum: "Well I'm not sure but she should be."
    Me: "More likely than not then, is what you actually mean."
    My mum: "I suppose so, yes."
    Me: "How likely though? 75% 90% Can we put a number on it?"
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    edited May 2024

    I didn't ask whether you would vote LibDem. You are clear on that topic.

    I asked if you are going to vote Tory. You - like so many of us - are very upset by the PO scandal. You have identified it as a key driver for how you will vote. So are you - as a result of your anger - going to vote Tory?
    Ms Cyclefree is PB's lead authority on this and she has provided the following helpful list:

    'What of politicians? How did they exercise oversight? Did they exercise any? Since 1998 the Business Ministers were:-

    Peter Mandelson
    Patricia Hewitt
    Alan Johnson (ex-postman)
    Peter Mandelson (again)

    followed by 9 Business Ministers since 2010:-

    Vince Cable
    Sajid Javid
    Greg Clark
    Andrea Leadsom
    Alok Sharma
    Kwasi Kwarteng
    Nadine Dorries
    Michelle Donelan
    Kemi Badenoch.

    Also since 2010 there have been Ministers with specific responsibility for postal affairs:-

    Ed Davey
    Norman Lamb
    Jo Swinson
    Jenny Willott
    Jo Swinson (again)
    Margot James (the only Minister so far to express any regret about their role in this affair)
    Andrew Griffiths
    Kelly Tolhurst
    Paul Scully
    Kevin Hollinrake. '

    I would add the caveat that according to Alan Bates, Norman Lamb distinguished himself by at least trying to get to grips with the scandal, but was moved on before he could achieve anything. Davy did at least meet Bates, although to little purpose.

    Cable, Davy and Swinson are all due to appear before the Inquiry, though not before the election.

    Edit: Kelly Tolhurst too, I think.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    .

    Any idea how the good people of Essex pronounce Ugley?

    A bit like how Trump pronounces 'hugely' ?
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    Nigelb said:

    .

    A bit like how Trump pronounces 'hugely' ?
    I think it goes something like Yew-Glee, but it's Essex, so you never know.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    GIN1138 said:

    Might be convenient for the Tories to get rid of Truss now, while they have the chance...
    Truss is giving Sunak plenty of cause to sack her, but he won't obviously.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,628
    Evening Standard, a paper Londoners read, to go to weekly print edition.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cyrr0yex40yo
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,532
    edited May 2024

    I didn't ask whether you would vote LibDem. You are clear on that topic.

    I asked if you are going to vote Tory. You - like so many of us - are very upset by the PO scandal. You have identified it as a key driver for how you will vote. So are you - as a result of your anger - going to vote Tory?
    As you know I am supporting one of the many groups impacted by these types of scandals. I did a FOI of our entire scandal. All ministers (from all 3 parties) act consistently. All letters go to the civil servants. The civil servants draft a reply together with supporting notes for the minister. In 100% of cases the letter that goes out is 100% the same as the draft. Some of these replies are totally barking mad. Often it appears that the original letter has not been read. It is normal to get a question you didn't ask answered. I have not seen any notes in the FOI of any minister asking questions of the civil servants. This covered a 12 year period.

    This is appalling. This is why this stuff happens. The civil servants are being defensive and the ministers do not ask enough questions. They often don't know their brief well and change jobs too frequently. I discussed this with an ex-minister who was unusually an expert in their field and their comments were even more damning.

    Now this doesn't excuse Davey, but it is the system and frankly the first minister in the chain is the one with least blame. By the time you are several ministers along and a scandal is brewing then responsibility and turning a blind eye becomes more obvious.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    Taz said:

    Ooglay ?
    I think they put a Y in front of it, but I don't go to Essex much these days.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,250
    Fun* fact about Jo Swinson, the length of time for the vacancy in the Lib Dem leadership following her departure was longer than the time she was leader.

    Leader for 144 days
    Leadership vacancy until Ed Davey was elected leader - 258 days

    * okay, it might okay be fun for some very nerdy PBers but I have to provide for my tribe.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718
    .
    Taz said:

    Evening Standard, a paper Londoners read, to go to weekly print edition.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cyrr0yex40yo

    Phew. It takes me that long to do their sudoku.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Finding out that not only are mispronouncers irritating but I am perpetuating linguistic prejudice against them has given me a raging boner.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited May 2024
    kinabalu said:

    I went through a very annoying phase of always asking somebody to quantify their opinion on whether (or not) something would happen, ie give it a probability.

    My mum: "I think Aunt Edith is coming for Christmas."
    Me: "You think?"
    My mum: "Well I'm not sure but she should be."
    Me: "More likely than not then, is what you actually mean."
    My mum: "I suppose so, yes."
    Me: "How likely though? 75% 90% Can we put a number on it?"
    It's a great get out when reporting to directors though:

    "How certain are you, you can land this project on time?"
    "We're in good shape - 95% we'll land on time."
    Later...
    "You missed the target date - you misled us."
    "Well... 5% is not zero."
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786
    kinabalu said:

    I went through a very annoying phase of always asking somebody to quantify their opinion on whether (or not) something would happen, ie give it a probability.

    My mum: "I think Aunt Edith is coming for Christmas."
    Me: "You think?"
    My mum: "Well I'm not sure but she should be."
    Me: "More likely than not then, is what you actually mean."
    My mum: "I suppose so, yes."
    Me: "How likely though? 75% 90% Can we put a number on it?"
    All very interesting, but did Aunt Edith come for Christmas or didn't she?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,594

    It's a great get out when reporting to directors though:

    "How certain are you, you can land this project on time?"
    "We're in good shape - 95% we'll land on time."
    Later...
    "You missed the target date - you misled us."
    "Well... 5% is not zero."
    Not very good directors if they fell for that dodge. Or else they pulled the same verbal tricks in their day and understand pretending surprise is part of the game.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,401
    Taz said:

    Rugeley in Staffs is pronounced Rudge-lee for some reason, Houghton-Le-Spring is pronounced Horton-Le-Spring by locals of my acquantance. Bizarre.
    Mildenhall, Suffolk is pronounced Mill-Den-Hall, Mildenhall, Wilts is Pronounced Mine-ul,

    As noted elsewhere, many Scottish pronunciations are also a long way from their spellings: Garioch, as Gear-ee for example.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Although the polls look terrible, Rishi has five weeks and seems to be doing his own version of Major’s soapbox.

    Starmer has said nothing of note or interest so far.
    Rachel Reeves has been more active.

    All to play for.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849
    kjh said:

    As you know I am supporting one of the many groups impacted by these types of scandals. I did a FOI of our entire scandal. All ministers (from all 3 parties) act consistently. All letters go to the civil servants. The civil servants draft a reply together with supporting notes for the minister. In 100% of cases the letter that goes out is 100% the same as the draft. Some of these replies are totally barking mad. Often it appears that the original letter has not been read. It is normal to get a question you didn't ask answered. I have not seen any notes in the FOI of any minister asking questions of the civil servants. This covered a 12 year period.

    This is appalling. This is why this stuff happens. The civil servants are being defensive and the ministers do not ask enough questions. They often don't know their brief well and change jobs too frequently. I discussed this with an ex-minister who was unusually an expert in their field and their comments were even more damning.

    Now this doesn't excuse Davey, but it is the system and frankly the first minister in the chain is the one with least blame. By the time you are several ministers along and a scandal is brewing then responsibility and turning a blind eye becomes more obvious.
    Rory Stewart speaks a lot of sense on this subject - the need for an induction period for new ministers, and a minimum service time of 2 years. Because the simple reality in any new role / job is that you do not hit the ground running from day 1 knowing both all the facts and how to navigate the internal barriers and political roadblocks.

    Davey didn't ask enough questions - having been in office for a couple of days a letter arrives from Alan Bates. Knowing little about the issue Davey asks his officials for how to answer.

    Remember that things we Don't Know that we Don't Know are the hardest to grasp. You can't ask the right question without knowing there is a question that needs to be asked.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    DM_Andy said:

    Place names are a complete minefield, like with Wymondham, Norfolk being Wind'em and Wymondham, Leicestershire being Why-mond-ham (hattip to Andrew at Britain Elects for that factoid)
    Cherwell - Char-well. Locals say Cherwell, snobs say Charwell.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,738

    Although the polls look terrible, Rishi has five weeks and seems to be doing his own version of Major’s soapbox.

    Starmer has said nothing of note or interest so far.
    Rachel Reeves has been more active.

    All to play for.

    Not really - I think most people have made their decision and want a change of Government...
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    Although the polls look terrible, Rishi has five weeks and seems to be doing his own version of Major’s soapbox.

    Starmer has said nothing of note or interest so far.
    Rachel Reeves has been more active.

    All to play for.

    Are you here or in the States?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    WillG said:

    Every Jewish school has a highly sophisticated system of security. But the debate is pointless. It doesn't matter whether blacks or Jews face more racism. They both have done and dismissing either is ugly. Diane Abbott has not only done this, but also said multiple racist things over the years. She is an appalling bigot and has rightly been rejected by Starmer. It took Labour way too long to do that.
    Disentangling what Abbott meant from what she said is hard.

    Interpretation of *some* of her remarks is a belief that Jews/Travellers/Irish have it easier, since they can “pass” for white.

    Part of the issue is that members of various ethnic communities don’t think they can be racist, since racism has been applied to them. Having lived and mixed in central London, the statements that get made by some people in some groups about others would have Yaxley-Lennon climbing the curtains. Think 1950s salon bar talk.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849

    Although the polls look terrible, Rishi has five weeks and seems to be doing his own version of Major’s soapbox.

    Starmer has said nothing of note or interest so far.
    Rachel Reeves has been more active.

    All to play for.

    Isn't the Tories problem that Sunak keeps standing up and making mad announcement after mad announcement?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    Starmer needs to take the “loss” and let Abbott stand (even if she then goes on to retire not long after the election).
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,594

    Isn't the Tories problem that Sunak keeps standing up and making mad announcement after mad announcement?
    If we're to list all their problems we will be here all day.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Cicero said:

    Mildenhall, Suffolk is pronounced Mill-Den-Hall, Mildenhall, Wilts is Pronounced Mine-ul,

    As noted elsewhere, many Scottish pronunciations are also a long way from their spellings: Garioch, as Gear-ee for example.
    Norfolk has all the correct words within the dialect and pronunciations of everything. Everywhere else is stupid, ignorant and inferior
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    Isn't the Tories problem that Sunak keeps standing up and making mad announcement after mad announcement?
    I’m not convinced by this received wisdom.
    The announcements may be cynical, I’m not sure they are “mad”. And he’s making all the running.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,867
    Taz said:

    The favourite MP of @Anabobazina Bill CASH has announced he is standing down.

    Will he be replaced by Bill ChipnPin ?

    Gosh, Bill Cash leaving Parliament? He's as familiar as the green leather benches.

    This really is turning out to be an epoch defining election isn't it?

    I Suspect in the end, the Tories will be stronger for this era defining clear out but it may take them 25 years to realize this lol!
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203
    edited May 2024
    dixiedean said:

    Are you here or in the States?
    The US.
    I may be back in London for the election, though, as my wife has to renew her US visa.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    MattW said:

    Do you have a Google location or a photo of the cycle parking there I could add to my twitter thread about it, and to the WalkRideGM discord forum?
    No, but is as good a reason as any for getting off my arse later.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    GIN1138 said:

    Gosh, Bill Cash leaving Parliament? He's as familiar as the green leather benches.

    This really is turning out to be an epoch defining election isn't it?

    I Suspect in the end, the Tories will be stronger for this era defining clear out but it may take them 25 years to realize this lol!
    He's 84 so probably time to toddle
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    All very interesting, but did Aunt Edith come for Christmas or didn't she?
    She did - and brought the usual bottle of Baileys.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,849

    I’m not convinced by this received wisdom.
    The announcements may be cynical, I’m not sure they are “mad”. And he’s making all the running.
    Time will tell. The reportage seems to show that the policy announcements horrify more people than they attract - they even get slagged off on ConHome and Mail Online. And the polls are moving away from them...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,594
    I've started to qualify predictions even of casual plans with 'as far as reasonably practicable'.

    You cannot really get away with saying something is aspirational thesedays when describing a target, people know that means 'not going to happen'.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited May 2024
    kle4 said:

    Not very good directors if they fell for that dodge. Or else they pulled the same verbal tricks in their day and understand pretending surprise is part of the game.
    True dat - it was the not very good ones who wanted a reassuring likelihood. The good ones wanted to understand the risks and how to mitigate them.

    For the former the golden rule is never say anything less than 80% (unless you think the project needs to be pulled).
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,594

    Time will tell. The reportage seems to show that the policy announcements horrify more people than they attract - they even get slagged off on ConHome and Mail Online. And the polls are moving away from them...
    I think the theory is people are crying out for policy ideas and will punish you for not having a plan, when actually you can get away with a lot of vagueness if people have a general sense you will get a grip on things.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,594

    Starmer needs to take the “loss” and let Abbott stand (even if she then goes on to retire not long after the election).

    She won't have much influence and in or out of parliament could rabble rouse, there's not much harm she could cause him.
  • megasaurmegasaur Posts: 586

    Cherwell - Char-well. Locals say Cherwell, snobs say Charwell.
    Launceston is an oddity. People think they are getting it right saying lawnston but locals call it lanson or larnson. I understand Launceston in Tasmania is pronounced as written.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    Jamarion said:

    If MPs can be judged by how well they represent their constituents, Diane Abbott is probably the best MP in the House. See her "How I can help you" page:

    https://www.dianeabbott.org.uk/contact/help.aspx

    She is very popular locally and rightly so. See her increases in voteshare:

    2010: +6.0%
    2015: +7.9%
    2017: +12.2%
    2019: -4.8%

    Labour nationally:
    2010: -6.2%
    2015: +1.5%
    2017: +9.6%
    2019: -7.9%

    She has outperformed Labour by 12.2pp, 6.4pp, 2.6pp, and 3.1pp.

    Enjoy your retirement, Diane. You've earned it.


    Spent a year in Stokey back in the 2000s and she was my local MP - I didn’t see or speak to her, but she did have a good rep as a constituency MP (and no doubt kept busy with how spectacularly inept Hackney Council were at getting council tax right; if they’d had their way I’d probably still be in prison now for non-payment by tenants a decade previous).
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    edited May 2024
    kjh said:

    As you know I am supporting one of the many groups impacted by these types of scandals. I did a FOI of our entire scandal. All ministers (from all 3 parties) act consistently. All letters go to the civil servants. The civil servants draft a reply together with supporting notes for the minister. In 100% of cases the letter that goes out is 100% the same as the draft. Some of these replies are totally barking mad. Often it appears that the original letter has not been read. It is normal to get a question you didn't ask answered. I have not seen any notes in the FOI of any minister asking questions of the civil servants. This covered a 12 year period.

    This is appalling. This is why this stuff happens. The civil servants are being defensive and the ministers do not ask enough questions. They often don't know their brief well and change jobs too frequently. I discussed this with an ex-minister who was unusually an expert in their field and their comments were even more damning.

    Now this doesn't excuse Davey, but it is the system and frankly the first minister in the chain is the one with least blame. By the time you are several ministers along and a scandal is brewing then responsibility and turning a blind eye becomes more obvious.
    That's right, KJ. There are systemic issues, and bad actors. The PO Inquiry is trying its best to identify both.

    One of the clearest systemic flaws is the relationship between Government and the PO (and other organisations which are wholly owned by the Government). There is no shortage of bad actors. Jarnail Singh, the PO's comedy lawyer, would be one of the more blatant examples but the list is long. Davy? Probably a fair way down it, but we'll know more after he has testified.

    As a general rule of thumb, the later culprits are the worst because over the years it became increasingly difficult to deny that something awful had happened. The PO has been in denial throughout, and as far asI can tell is still not cooperating fully with the Inquiry. Ministers didn't stir until after the TV series aired. (Some exceptions, maybe....notably one Boris Johnson?) Don't recall hearing much from Badenoch, even since the programme.

    That's a depressingly long list of ministerial suspects, but I cannot for the life of me imagine why you would look at it and immediately say to yourself 'That's it. Not voting for his/her Party.'

    They all have dirty hands.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,821

    Only by incomers. I was born and brought up there (50s/60s) and everybody I knew said Suth'll.
    Really? I'll bow to your superior wisdom then. My understanding comes from playing for a rugby team from Nottingham against Southwell, and after the three cheers at the end our opponents politely explaining that people from Southwell actually call it Southwell, it was only the rest of the county who called it Suth'll. But possibly that was just a one-off and your experience more representative.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,482
    The YouGov England sub sample has Labour on 49%, Conservatives 21%, Reform 15% and LDs 9%.

    In December 2019, the Conservatives got 47% in England, Labour were on 34% and the LDs on 12%.

    That's therefore a 20.5% swing from Conservative to Labour and an 11.5% swing from Conservative to Liberal Democrat. The 81st safest Conservative seat is Devon South West which requires a 20.58% swing from Conservative to Labour to fall.

    Stretch that out (with tactical voting) to 25% swings and a seat like Wiltshire East, the 13th safest seat, comes into view. Labour are only 11/2 to win the seat - could the Conservatives at 1/10 be the value here?

    Who plays at 1/10 - plenty on here I imagine.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718

    Although the polls look terrible, Rishi has five weeks and seems to be doing his own version of Major’s soapbox.

    Starmer has said nothing of note or interest so far.
    Rachel Reeves has been more active.

    All to play for.

    Starmer gave a keynote speech on Monday. He has been up and down the country campaigning.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,550

    Bill Contactless, although he’d probably end up in a groping scandal.
    He is actually being replaced by Gavin Williamson.

    So that's somebody we'd all like to be contactless with.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    Although the polls look terrible, Rishi has five weeks and seems to be doing his own version of Major’s soapbox.

    Starmer has said nothing of note or interest so far.
    Rachel Reeves has been more active.

    All to play for.

    If Sunak was facing the public and prepared to absorb some of the public anger, then that would be the case, but he's only been facing audiences where the audience isn't free to express themselves - such as in workplaces.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810

    It's a great get out when reporting to directors though:

    "How certain are you, you can land this project on time?"
    "We're in good shape - 95% we'll land on time."
    Later...
    "You missed the target date - you misled us."
    "Well... 5% is not zero."
    Exactly! Although in my case it came from too much immersion in probability theory. It describes reality (and all else is sloppy) but I was becoming a pain in the neck to friends and family. I keep it for here now.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219

    Bill Contactless, although he’d probably end up in a groping scandal.
    What is your boggle, Citizen?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,718

    I’m not convinced by this received wisdom.
    The announcements may be cynical, I’m not sure they are “mad”. And he’s making all the running.
    And the polls haven't shifted.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    kinabalu said:

    Exactly! Although in my case it came from too much immersion in probability theory. It describes reality (and all else is sloppy) but I was becoming a pain in the neck to friends and family. I keep it for here now.
    So just a pain in the neck to fellow PBers then? ;-)
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    @stodge

    'Who plays at 1/10 ?'

    Why, the needy and greedy! You know that, young Stodge.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited May 2024
    megasaur said:

    Launceston is an oddity. People think they are getting it right saying lawnston but locals call it lanson or larnson. I understand Launceston in Tasmania is pronounced as written.
    We used to live near Bi-ces-ter, just saying.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    If Sunak was facing the public and prepared to absorb some of the public anger, then that would be the case, but he's only been facing audiences where the audience isn't free to express themselves - such as in workplaces.
    It’s easy to be rose-tinted, but you got the sense that Major really had both aptitude and appetite for taking his pitch to the people, with the thick skin of a working class Brixton kid who’d put the graft in to make it all the way up (still the best political ad ever made imvho). I recall Alan Clark’s diaries mentioning his smile and very engaging nature in person (interestingly a space where his and Chris Mullin’s diaries cross over).

  • No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 4,985
    edited May 2024
    Cicero said:

    Mildenhall, Suffolk is pronounced Mill-Den-Hall, Mildenhall, Wilts is Pronounced Mine-ul,

    As noted elsewhere, many Scottish pronunciations are also a long way from their spellings: Garioch, as Gear-ee for example.
    My sister's satnav pronounces Keighley as "Kee-ley", which is not how Eddie Waring pronounced it for the Rugby League.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,628
    kinabalu said:

    She did - and brought the usual bottle of Baileys.
    My Mom's Auntie Edith used to visit us for Xmas, Warninks Advocaat was a tipple of hers.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Survation will be running 4 phone polls in the 3 week run in with an eve of poll phone poll as they are 'cognisant of concerns over online panels' so there's a comparison
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    DM_Andy said:

    Place names are a complete minefield, like with Wymondham, Norfolk being Wind'em and Wymondham, Leicestershire being Why-mond-ham (hattip to Andrew at Britain Elects for that factoid)
    Wymondham (Leics) is of course very near to the vale of Belvoir.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,338
    Carnyx said:

    He? Or you?

    BTW I see KCIII is to plant a replacement.
    Pretty much his raison d’être to plant a replacement (and a spare).
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296

    If Sunak was facing the public and prepared to absorb some of the public anger, then that would be the case, but he's only been facing audiences where the audience isn't free to express themselves - such as in workplaces.
    Indeed, I'd like to see him walk down a busy high street.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,792
    edited May 2024

    I didn't ask whether you would vote LibDem. You are clear on that topic.

    I asked if you are going to vote Tory. You - like so many of us - are very upset by the PO scandal. You have identified it as a key driver for how you will vote. So are you - as a result of your anger - going to vote Tory?
    I have reluctantly come to the conclusion that I will vote Conservative for the first time in three GEs, and this is largely driven not out of any love for what the Tories have become, but by the damage that I think will be done by a highly amateurish Labour Party that does not understand business. This is in spite of their better-late-than-never attempts to appeal to that constituency which have been completely underwhelming. I suspect there will be a huge majority for Labour at the GE but hope a few more people will think like I do to mitigate it.

    If Johnson was still PM it would be a far more difficult choice. Over the years I have generally vacillated between LD/SDP and Conservative. While I would never vote Tory when their leader was a clown out of principle, I would also not vote LD when their leader is either a total fool or a liar - essentially the two main faults of Johnson.

    But hey, I am only one vote!
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,250

    And the polls haven't shifted.
    The average voter doesn't analyse every tweet, speech and Lib Dem photo opportunity stunt as closely as we do. I would want to wait a week or two before even trying to divine a polling movement from the national service announcement.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,810
    Taz said:

    My Mom's Auntie Edith used to visit us for Xmas, Warninks Advocaat was a tipple of hers.
    Oh yes. Alcoholic custard. An acquired taste which I did for a time acquire.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,821
    kinabalu said:

    Exactly! Although in my case it came from too much immersion in probability theory. It describes reality (and all else is sloppy) but I was becoming a pain in the neck to friends and family. I keep it for here now.
    Was the arrival of Aunt Edith a thing to be celebrated, or dreaded? I could read either into that conversation.
    But not a pain in the neck at all. If only more people thought like this.
    Oddly, some of my daughters - even at least one of the non-mathematical ones - instinctively think like this. Not just 'will such a thing happen?' but 'How likely?' - and want a likelihood expressed in percentages, not just a 'very'. I may have influenced them more than I give myself credit for.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,203

    And the polls haven't shifted.
    I wouldn’t expect them to do so until the end of this week.

    Let’s be clear, the snap election announcement was an unholy disaster.

    But since then, I think the Tories are doing better than the Twitter / bien pensant / PB consensus.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    TOPPING said:

    Wymondham (Leics) is of course very near to the vale of Belvoir.
    There's a Belvoir Hunt of course.

    (Always found it a bit disappointing that there isn't a hunt named the Vale of York tbh).
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219

    That's right, KJ. There are systemic issues, and bad actors. The PO Inquiry is trying its best to identify both.

    One of the clearest systemic flaws is the relationship between Government and the PO (and other organisations which are wholly owned by the Government). There is no shortage of bad actors. Jarnail Singh, the PO's comedy lawyer, would be one of the more blatant examples but the list is long. Davy? Probably a fair way down it, but we'll know more after he has testified.

    As a general rule of thumb, the later culprits are the worst because over the years it became increasingly difficult to deny that something awful had happened. The PO has been in denial throughout, and as far asI can tell is still not cooperating fully with the Inquiry. Ministers didn't stir until after the TV series aired. (Some exceptions, maybe....notably one Boris Johnson?) Don't recall hearing much from Badenoch, even since the programme.

    That's a depressingly long list of ministerial suspects, but I cannot for the life of me imagine why you would look at it and immediately say to yourself 'That's it. Not voting for his/her Party.'

    They all have dirty hands.
    There is also the problem that some in the Civil Service do not like Ministers questioning their version of things. The default is for ministers to accept what they are told as The Truth. Not accepting is seen as Hostile Behaviour.
This discussion has been closed.