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The Purge: Election Year – politicalbetting.com

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  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,298
    rcs1000 said:

    The standing charge covers A LOT of things, not just net zero.

    Indeed, a large chunk of your current standing charge is paying back the bailouts of energy companies that went bust during the peak.

    Another chunk is paid directly to fossil fuel power stations, in the form of capacity payments.

    Another chunk is because there was (as has happened with Thames Water) serious underinvestment in the grid, and now they're playing catchup as they replace a whole bunch of transformers.

    And yes, some is Net Zero related. But a lot less than you'd expect.
    I'll give you some of that, but capacity payments to fossil fuel providers are definitely part of the net zero costs - we wouldn't need to pay for a load of power stations to stand idle if we weren't giving renewables preferential grid access, and also having to hang on to enough dispatchable power to keep the lights on when the wind drops.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393
    edited May 2024

    The idea that we would miraculously add 4% to our GDP every year by rejoining is dodgier than the £350m a week claim on the infamous bus.
    I was trying to find out what our GDP growth rate was in recent years, but I suspect it was fairly low. But given global trends wouldn't adding 4% on to that put us up among the higher echelons of economies in the world?

    Which would be nice, but given the Eurozone has had its own issues, seems unrealistic.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,210
    ToryJim said:

    It’s not that great, however politicians don’t have the capacity to vet everyone they meet on the campaign trail. This is something that could happen to anyone in any party it just tends to cause more problems for parties that are waning.
    That poor dealer, outed as a pal of Gullis.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695
    Is Starmer also going to deselect Zarah Sultana?
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,129

    Question for the PB brains trust (TM):

    I'm doing a little 'guess the seat totals' for some work colleagues and providing a spreadsheet for them to fill in.
    I've had to explain to most that Northern Ireland exists.
    I've had to explain to a few that Scotland and Wales also exist.

    Do we expect Alba to win any seats at all? I can't see it, but can't be sure?

    My form has Con, Lab, LD, Green (all three UK parties as one), Reform, SNP, Plaid, DUP, UUP, SDLP, Sinn Fein and Alliance (and speaker autocompleted). Could any other party realistically get a seat?

    Can't see Hanvey winning in Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy or MacAskill in Lothian East, they are both on very slim SNP majorities against Labour so any split in the pro-Indy vote will lead to Labour gain. On paper their best chance maybe Dundee Central, the notionals have SNP 55%, Lab 24%, Con 12%, LD 6% and Alba is pro-Indy without SNP baggage so maybe? It's a new constituency so that the SNP candidate is only the incumbent for 60% of the seat, that's all the positives.

    Offsetting that was the fact the Alba candidate was an SNP councillor from 2007 to 2022 and then failed badly as an Alba candidate. First preferences 184 votes out of 5,843 and 2nd to be excluded. If you can only get 3.2% of the first preference in a ward you've served for 15 years it's not a good sign.

    So on balance - yeah, no chance.

  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898
    edited May 2024

    The idea that we would miraculously add 4% to our GDP every year by rejoining is dodgier than the £350m a week claim on the infamous bus.
    Bullshit that's been proven vs. Bullshit that's yet to be proven.
    Two can play at that game.
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,298

    Because the network is straining in its capacity to the limit, which is why capacity charges have gone up. When things are running at capacity they get more expensive.

    The grid needs major investment at boosting capacity. Unfortunately I'm not sure how much your capacity charges are going on actually boosting capacity rather than just milking the existing network for what its worth.

    EDIT: And yes what others have said about the costs going to bailout those who went bust due to gas prices going up. Which again is an issue you can blame on the fact we were burning gas rather than net zero, those costs wouldn't have been an issue had we already decarbonised when this happened.
    The transmittion network isn't anywhere near being strained to the limit. UK electric demand has fallen pretty much every year since 2005. The only areas where the grid is under strain are related to the decision to stop generating electricity in power stations fairly near where it's used, and instead import it long distances from offshore windfarms - i.e. net zero costs.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393

    Is Starmer also going to deselect Zarah Sultana?

    Why not just have MI5 proscribe the Socialist Campaign Group when he takes over and be done with it?

    Speaking of, John McDonnell is very quiet thesedays.
  • theProle said:

    I'll give you some of that, but capacity payments to fossil fuel providers are definitely part of the net zero costs - we wouldn't need to pay for a load of power stations to stand idle if we weren't giving renewables preferential grid access, and also having to hang on to enough dispatchable power to keep the lights on when the wind drops.
    Yes we would, we need demand to be able to surge at moments of peak demand and always have done. Demand isn't even across the day, the stereotype used to be that the end of Eastenders would see a massive surge in demand as people across the country put the kettle on.

    We need capacity to meet surges in demand, or we'd have blackouts and failures during those surges instead. Nothing to do with Net Zero.

    As we transition to having more batteries and energy storage, an alternative method of smoothing out such peaks and troughs may be available, but until then capacity needs to meet the peak but only for a few moments a day.
  • kle4 said:

    Why not just have MI5 proscribe the Socialist Campaign Group when he takes over and be done with it?

    Speaking of, John McDonnell is very quiet thesedays.
    McDonnell is the only sensible member. He understood how to win, Jezza ignored his advice.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,898
    It's been super tedious waiting for this election to be called.
    Now it's proving super tedious waiting for the inevitable.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695
    kle4 said:

    Why not just have MI5 proscribe the Socialist Campaign Group when he takes over and be done with it?

    Speaking of, John McDonnell is very quiet thesedays.
    Win a big majority and then immediately expel the surplus MPs?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116
    kle4 said:

    Why not just have MI5 proscribe the Socialist Campaign Group when he takes over and be done with it?

    Speaking of, John McDonnell is very quiet thesedays.
    My head canon says that if he had stood instead of Corbyn, he would have won (see also Bernie Sanders)
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393
    It only takes one.

    New in PN: What you need to know about Trump's trial before the verdict

    "Trump is asking jurors to believe multiple contradictory theories of the case. But Trumpland is reportedly pinning its hopes on one juror who appears sympathetic to the defense.

    https://nitter.poast.org/atrupar/status/1795807522336448735#m

    At the end of the day the obvious impartials were excluded from the jury, they all sat through it for 5 weeks apparently paying close attention, the case is a bit complicated, and it is what it is. Trump having successfully derailed all his other more serious cases makes this one depressingly significant, but if they hang, such is life.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393

    McDonnell is the only sensible member. He understood how to win, Jezza ignored his advice.
    He was a 1997 entrant, not someone left over from the 1980s, that might have been significant in terms of some pragmatism.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,129
    edited May 2024
    kle4 said:

    Looks like Jas has had the last laugh in the end, though he's lost out on 5 years of parliamentary experience.
    https://labourlist.org/2022/10/athwal-selected-as-labour-candidate-in-ilford-south-beating-incumbent-tarry/
    What factionalism gives you, factionalism takes away, but I don't think that Corbyn had anything to do with derailing Athwal. I think you need to look closer to home for the movers.
  • theProle said:

    The transmittion network isn't anywhere near being strained to the limit. UK electric demand has fallen pretty much every year since 2005. The only areas where the grid is under strain are related to the decision to stop generating electricity in power stations fairly near where it's used, and instead import it long distances from offshore windfarms - i.e. net zero costs.
    That could be a fair comment, though considering my car used to be regularly covered in soot from driving past Fiddlers Ferry coal power station and now Fiddlers Ferry is decommissioned the soot is gone, then I'm not regretting the lack of coal power plants near us. We need to improve the grids capacity where it is needed.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,393
    DM_Andy said:

    What factionalism gives you, factionalism takes away, but I don't think that Corbyn had anything to do with derailing Athwal. I think you need to look closer to home for the movers.
    It does look like more of a local squabble to be fair, one which got a bit dirty.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    kle4 said:

    He was a 1997 entrant, not someone left over from the 1980s, that might have been significant in terms of some pragmatism.
    In Parliamentary terms that’s true but he was one of Livingstone’s praetorians in the GLC takeover. So McDonnell has deeper roots than his time in the Commons suggests.
  • ToryJim said:

    In Parliamentary terms that’s true but he was one of Livingstone’s praetorians in the GLC takeover. So McDonnell has deeper roots than his time in the Commons suggests.
    Of course we forget that Livingstone did actually win an election.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,129
    viewcode said:

    My head canon says that if he had stood instead of Corbyn, he would have won (see also Bernie Sanders)
    That's why he had no chance of getting the nominations. MPs lent their nominations to ensure a token left-winger was on the ballot (David Miliband nominated Diane Abbott in 2010, Margaret Beckett and Sadiq Khan nominated Corbyn in 2015). McDonnell was too dangerous to get allowed near the ballot.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,210
    DM_Andy said:

    Can't see Hanvey winning in Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy or MacAskill in Lothian East, they are both on very slim SNP majorities against Labour so any split in the pro-Indy vote will lead to Labour gain. On paper their best chance maybe Dundee Central, the notionals have SNP 55%, Lab 24%, Con 12%, LD 6% and Alba is pro-Indy without SNP baggage so maybe? It's a new constituency so that the SNP candidate is only the incumbent for 60% of the seat, that's all the positives.

    Offsetting that was the fact the Alba candidate was an SNP councillor from 2007 to 2022 and then failed badly as an Alba candidate. First preferences 184 votes out of 5,843 and 2nd to be excluded. If you can only get 3.2% of the first preference in a ward you've served for 15 years it's not a good sign.

    So on balance - yeah, no chance.

    You don’t even have to worry about balance, Alba will be down to one elected* member on 5th July.

    *not elected under the Alba banner of course.
  • DM_Andy said:

    That's why he had no chance of getting the nominations. MPs lent their nominations to ensure a token left-winger was on the ballot (David Miliband nominated Diane Abbott in 2010, Margaret Beckett and Sadiq Khan nominated Corbyn in 2015). McDonnell was too dangerous to get allowed near the ballot.
    So was Corbyn.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,744
    edited May 2024
    McDonnell might have been more dangerous than Corbyn but he was a hell of a lot more pragmatic and decent at leadership. I am under no doubt he'd have won in 2017.

    It was him that tried to stop Labour from splitting in 2019 and despite what the liars on the left say, he was the one that pushed Labour to Remain.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,129

    Of course we forget that Livingstone did actually win an election.
    As Mayor of London certainly, but he never won a GLC election. Andrew McIntosh did that only to be deposed the day after the election - McDonnell knows what he's doing, it's not nice work but he is good at it.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116
    DM_Andy said:

    That's why he had no chance of getting the nominations. MPs lent their nominations to ensure a token left-winger was on the ballot (David Miliband nominated Diane Abbott in 2010, Margaret Beckett and Sadiq Khan nominated Corbyn in 2015). McDonnell was too dangerous to get allowed near the ballot.
    They will never ever provide anything other than cargo-cult Conservatism, will they... :(
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,298

    Yes we would, we need demand to be able to surge at moments of peak demand and always have done. Demand isn't even across the day, the stereotype used to be that the end of Eastenders would see a massive surge in demand as people across the country put the kettle on.

    We need capacity to meet surges in demand, or we'd have blackouts and failures during those surges instead. Nothing to do with Net Zero.

    As we transition to having more batteries and energy storage, an alternative method of smoothing out such peaks and troughs may be available, but until then capacity needs to meet the peak but only for a few moments a day.
    We used to have a little bit of fast reacting peak lopping infrastructure - mostly open cycle gas turbines (and Dinorwic/Ffestiniog). We didn't need all that much as the system sat on a baseload of coal/nuclear and you could spool the CCGT plants up and down a bit to fill in some of the more predictable gaps, before using the peak loppers to fill in the rest.

    Thanks to net zero, we now have to have enough infrastructure available at short notice to cover all the old coal baseload as well as the other stuff, and we've got to be able to maintain it for days on end (Dinorwic is good, but once the water is in the bottom lake, it's game over until you've some spare electric to pump it back up again). This has largely been done, mainly by installing warehouses full of gas piston engine gensets all over the place. I know quite a lot about this, having been involved with the installation of them on a few sites (I can also spot one of these sites by walking past - it's supprising how many there are. To most people they just look like industrial buildings, but once you know what the external cooler groups and exhaust stacks look like they are easy enough to spot). This has not been a cheap exercise, and it's all in my electricity bill standing charge somewhere.
  • DM_Andy said:



    As Mayor of London certainly, but he never won a GLC election. Andrew McIntosh did that only to be deposed the day after the election - McDonnell knows what he's doing, it's not nice work but he is good at it.
    Reading Left Out, he was ruthless.

    But he got Salisbury absolutely spot on and said that Labour lost the election as soon as Corbyn's idiotic statement came out.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    viewcode said:

    My head canon says that if he had stood instead of Corbyn, he would have won (see also Bernie Sanders)
    Sanders did stand!
    eristdoof said:

    Then you have no idea what you are talking about. There are many areas where Bayesian theory/statistics/modelling/machine Learing/call it what you will has had a huge inpact on our lives. If you have a problem about people using the word Bayesian when it is inappropriate, then good for you, but don't criticise hammers because idiots want to drill a hole with a hammer.
    I'm happy to say Bayesian reasoning plays a small role in a lot of fields. But in machine learning, for instance, one cannot say it is a big one.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695
    DM_Andy said:

    That's why he had no chance of getting the nominations. MPs lent their nominations to ensure a token left-winger was on the ballot (David Miliband nominated Diane Abbott in 2010, Margaret Beckett and Sadiq Khan nominated Corbyn in 2015). McDonnell was too dangerous to get allowed near the ballot.
    I wonder what would have happened if McDonnell had secured enough nominations when he ran against Gordon Brown.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,116
    EPG said:

    Sanders did stand!
    I meant if he was the Democrat nominee in 2016 instead of HRC
  • Reading Left Out, he was ruthless.

    But he got Salisbury absolutely spot on and said that Labour lost the election as soon as Corbyn's idiotic statement came out.
    Corbyn was always a dangerous fool, Salisbury simply showed his true colours in a way that couldn't be plausibly denied.

    Part of the problem in 2017 was boy who cried wolf syndrome. The Tories castigate every Labour leader as dangerous, so when a real dangerous leader was there in Corbyn, those threats were ignored. Then Salisbury happened and thank goodness that Corbyn was Opposition Leader and not Prime Minister.

    The hypothetical parallel universe that makes me think that we dodged a bullet is what would have happened had the 2017 election been just one week later. Had the election been just one week later it would have been while Grenfell was ablaze - and I think then between May's campaign and having Grenfell as well, we might have ended up with PM Corbyn in that scenario.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,129

    I wonder what would have happened if McDonnell had secured enough nominations when he ran against Gordon Brown.
    I would have most likely been part of the McDonnell campaign so probably terribly. Realistically it would have been something like 10% of the affiliate vote, 4% of the PLP and 8% of the membership so about as well as Bryan Gould's result against John Smith in 1992.

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,262
    edited May 2024
    Terry Dicks vs John McDonnell in 1992 in Hayes and Harlington was a bit of a stark choice for voters.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hayes_and_Harlington_(UK_Parliament_constituency)#Elections_in_the_1990s
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322

    Corbyn was always a dangerous fool, Salisbury simply showed his true colours in a way that couldn't be plausibly denied.

    Part of the problem in 2017 was boy who cried wolf syndrome. The Tories castigate every Labour leader as dangerous, so when a real dangerous leader was there in Corbyn, those threats were ignored. Then Salisbury happened and thank goodness that Corbyn was Opposition Leader and not Prime Minister.

    The hypothetical parallel universe that makes me think that we dodged a bullet is what would have happened had the 2017 election been just one week later. Had the election been just one week later it would have been while Grenfell was ablaze - and I think then between May's campaign and having Grenfell as well, we might have ended up with PM Corbyn in that scenario.
    The other problem was May's campaign was there is nothing wrong, keep calm and carry on. When huge portions of the country are no, we need change. Hence why Boris campaign was much more proactive, Get Brexit Done, Level Up the Country etc.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695

    The other problem was May's campaign was there is nothing wrong, keep calm and carry on. When huge portions of the country are no, we need change. Hence why Boris campaign was much more proactive, Get Brexit Done, Level Up the Country etc.
    That's a good point. If May had called the snap election sooner and campaigned in the style of her first Downing Street speech, she might have won the massive majority she wanted.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024
    Widespread NHS computer issues linked to patient harm
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4nn0vl2e78o

    I presume this is due to sticking plaster on top of sticking plaster on top of sticking plaster from the original shit show of the infamous NHS IT scheme started 20 years ago. And again the its all about the culture of cover-up.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024
    Labour and the Conservatives have both ruled out raising value added tax (VAT) if they win the general election.
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cv22pe8x89no

    We are rapidly losing options for tax rises (if we believe their promises). IFS says without tax rises there are already big cuts programmed in. I can't see Labour going all austerity. From Labour I presume messing with IHT threshold and total size of pension pots.

    Of course the Tories are being equally dishonest. Aspiration to scrap NI, which is super expensive thing to do, with no plan on how to fund that.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    Labour and the Conservatives have both ruled out raising value added tax (VAT) if they win the general election.
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cv22pe8x89no

    IFS says without tax rises there are already big cuts programmed in. I can't see Labour going all austerity.

    We are rapidly losing options for tax rises (if we believe their promises). From Labour I presume messing with IHT threshold and total size of pension pots.

    Some taxes will have to go up to eliminate the deficit and to pay down the huge debt. Paying £110bn a year on interest is not sustainable.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024
    RobD said:

    Some taxes will have to go up to eliminate the deficit and to pay down the huge debt. Paying £110bn a year on interest is not sustainable.
    I just can't see the debt getting paid down. Servicing the debt is bad enough and debt levels are still rising.

    I suspect we need to find huge gains in productivity and growth. And neither party is really addressing how they might achieve this. We have an unproductive economy and increasing numbers of (particularly young people) on the sick.

  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    Even then, I suspect we need to find huge gains in productivity and growth. And neither party is really addressing how they might achieve this. We have an unproductive economy and increasing numbers of (particularly young people) on the sick.
    Agreed, and I think we’ll never hear the word productivity once during the campaign.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024

    So the Mail are running with a Lord Lucan story.

    https://www.tomorrowspapers.co.uk/

    Even they may struggle to pin that one on Starmer.

    It seems odd to use the front page just to plug its own podcast about the Lucan case. I wonder if it is using its first edition to hide a scoop from the other papers.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,695

    High taxes, high immigration, high debt, low growth, low productivity, that is death spiral stuff. Needs the pilot to PULL UP, PULL UP...

    The problem is we have had crazy Grandpa promises to sort this out by just nationalise everything and on the other side Truss proposing if we only just slash taxes across the board tomorrow that will fix it. Now, Labour are promising Tory-continued (to not rock the boat) and Tories are promising batshit irrelevant policies.

    Don’t blame the pilots for 'a rapid change in gravitational force'.

    https://news.sky.com/story/turbulence-hit-singapore-airlines-flight-experienced-rapid-change-in-gravitational-force-13144819
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322

    It seems odd to use the front page just to plug its own podcast about the Lucan case. I wonder if it is using its first edition to hide a scoop from the other papers.
    Or the Mail have just given up on fighting the resistance and now its distraction time from the GE.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024

    Stolen phones will be rendered useless under Labour blitz on mobile snatchers.

    Party will demand tech giants install a feature blocking thieves re-registering nicked devices - with threat to force them by law if they fail to act.

    https://x.com/jackelsom/status/1795943050700591471

    Aren't most phones sent abroad anyway? Or is that just cars?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024

    Aren't most phones sent abroad anyway? Or is that just cars?
    This is another classic politicians have no idea about technology....Yes many go to places likes China.

    'I had my phone stolen in London, and I tracked it to China'
    https://www.itv.com/news/2023-09-01/i-got-my-phone-stolen-in-london-and-it-ended-up-in-china

    Also, there are also already protections in place, but they can be bypassed. The problem is if you go too far, no legitimate phone can ever be resold / traded-in.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024
    Another evolution of the nicked phone crime isn't even primarily about the phone itself, rather it is access to things like email, online banking apps. If people haven't been careful about how they setup their banking apps it is very easy for the accounts to get drained.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,332

    Another evolution of the nicked phone crime isn't even primarily about the phone itself, rather it is access to things like email, online banking apps. If people haven't been careful about how they setup their banking apps it is very easy for the accounts to get drained.

    The trick is to have no money in your accounts. ;)
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,009
    DM_Andy said:



    I would have most likely been part of the McDonnell campaign so probably terribly. Realistically it would have been something like 10% of the affiliate vote, 4% of the PLP and 8% of the membership so about as well as Bryan Gould's result against John Smith in 1992.

    Basic problem McDonnell had - beyond nominations - is the same one that made him a much more formidable figure. The fact he's competent, has a reasonable intellect and comes to conclusions means he upsets fellow comrades in a way that a deliberately vague empty vessel like Jezza doesn't.

    One reason Corbyn succeeded where other, far cleverer and more competent, far left figures failed is that it's precisely his Chauncey Gardiner dumbness that brought different groups - usually at odds - together.

    His basic platform was 'socialism is good and cures all ills, let's have lots of it' without getting into the nitty-gritty of how and why that would work. A vagueness that came unstuck towards the end - as had to make decisions and some of the odder views were highlighted - but served him well for most of his leadership.

    Which you could read anything into - from the radical anti-imperialist (or rather west) Marxism that was his lodestar pre-leadership, to being 'social democracy turned up to 11' that many supporters saw him as. Look at the vague fuzziness of 'supporting peace' while praising or excusing those who want the opposite, as long as they're anti-west.

    Hence why lots of people who really should've known better supported him until it was too late did so and realised post-Salisbury, antisemitism scandal, and amid Brexit wars, they'd picked a dud.

    McDonnell could not have done the same though as the mere act of intellectual honesty of what he wanted would've broken up or scared off that coalition that came together under Corbyn far earlier, if it would have coalesced at all. He wouldn't have been able to do the 'I'm just a humble man of peace' act when challenged on views on NATO for example, nor promised entirely contradictory economic paths.

    There's a reason Corbyn was, for a time, successful. The same vacuousness while espousing vague 'socialism' that brought him down when people dug into past statements and interpreted what that might mean for themselves.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    https://www.itv.com/news/granada/2024-05-29/man-opens-up-on-nine-months-of-abuse-after-partner-handed-suspended-sentence

    "Gareth now hopes his case can act as a catalyst to change the way people think about domestic abuse, when men are the victims.

    "Hopefully, we can change the way the judicial system looks upon these kinds of cases as has shown with the verdict that has come out. I think that's vitally important on how we can try and move things forward as a society.

    "I think it shows that it doesn't send a strong enough message. It shows that if you're a female abuser and you did commit such atrocities, you can still get away with things. It is vital that that is addressed within society, the more men that come forward and speak up about these things, that's the way we can have a true impact."
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129

    Labour and the Conservatives have both ruled out raising value added tax (VAT) if they win the general election.
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cv22pe8x89no

    We are rapidly losing options for tax rises (if we believe their promises). IFS says without tax rises there are already big cuts programmed in. I can't see Labour going all austerity. From Labour I presume messing with IHT threshold and total size of pension pots.

    Of course the Tories are being equally dishonest. Aspiration to scrap NI, which is super expensive thing to do, with no plan on how to fund that.

    They will come for your pension pot.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024

    They will come for your pension pot.
    That seems the likely conclusion. Also tax the rich olds more.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024
    edited May 2024
    Diane Abbott. Is it just me who is not following this. Starmer says she is not barred. She says she is. The NEC has yet to make (or announce) a decision. Sue Gray is said to be concerned about the optics. Is the allegation that they are running down the clock?

    Here is a younger, sharper Diane Abbott's award-winning speech in defence of civil liberties in the debate on the Counter-Terrorism Bill, 11th June, 2008:-
    https://parliamentlive.tv/event/index/17ea58b3-bd74-4052-bef8-43cd06c8886a?in=16:35:57
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129
    biggles said:

    Small sole traders worrying about VAT? Ouch.
    Bet those small businessmen will be delighted to sign a letter supporting Labour next time.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024

    That seems the likely conclusion. Also tax the rich olds more.
    I'm thinking of transferring my meagre pension pot to a SIPP. Heaven knows what I'll do with it there, but the current fund managers vary between losing money slowly and losing money quickly: £9,000 in the last year; £900 in the last seven days. I might also take the 25 per cent tax free and put it in the Chancellor's finest British bonds, or whatever they are called.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129

    I'm thinking of transferring my meagre pension pot to a SIPP. Heaven knows what I'll do with it there, but the current fund managers vary between losing money slowly and losing money quickly: £9,000 in the last year; £900 in the last seven days. I might also take the 25 per cent tax free and put it in the Chancellor's finest British bonds, or whatever they are called.
    Stick in a mixed tracker fund with a very low management charge, like in Vanguard.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    That seems the likely conclusion. Also tax the rich olds more.
    I suggested a policy a while back - increase the state pension, but also increase tax on significant pension based wealth as it is being withdrawn. This way the 'pensioner lobby' which has such an impact on UK politics is split up as different parts of it have competing interests. No longer can the wealthy hide behind arguments that the preservation of the triple lock/state pension is essential to address poverty etc. The way in which private pension wealth is so untouched by tax is mystifying.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    Good morning.

    A brief message to say that I have no interest in Diane Abbot.

    I know very little about her and what I do know I don’t care.

    I’m politically interested so I suspect over 90%+ of the nation couldn’t care a less about this supposed News story of a fringe politician who represents an east London seat that 99%+ of the country have never visited. Maybe the “News” should be more focused on the gangland shooting in her seat last night.

    The election campaign is as dull as I expected it to be, bar some tory mishaps and one mental policy.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Sorry to see Faiza Shaheen dropped as a Labour candidate .

    Twitter seems to be the cause of many a downfall . And this of course means IDS could hang onto the seat ! So another reason to bemoan what’s happened !

    As for Diane Abbott this seems a stupid self inflicted wound by Labour . What harm could she do if re-elected.

    If there’s more to the story than what’s come out already then Labour should explain this .

    As for her comments that landed her in trouble . It’s not exactly controversial to say that black people are more likely to suffer long term racism . You can’t hide your skin colour .

  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    edited May 2024

    Diane Abbott. Is it just me who is not following this. Starmer says she is not barred. She says she is. The NEC has yet to make (or announce) a decision. Sue Gray is said to be concerned about the optics. Is the allegation that they are running down the clock?

    Here is a younger, sharper Diane Abbott's award-winning speech in defence of civil liberties in the debate on the Counter-Terrorism Bill, 11th June, 2008:-
    https://parliamentlive.tv/event/index/17ea58b3-bd74-4052-bef8-43cd06c8886a?in=16:35:57

    The Lloyd Russel-Moyle case is kafkaesque to the point where it appears deliberately absurd. A 'serious allegation', unspecified, from 10 years ago, being made exactly now.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024
    darkage said:

    I suggested a policy a while back - increase the state pension, but also increase tax on significant pension based wealth as it is being withdrawn. This way the 'pensioner lobby' which has such an impact on UK politics is split up as different parts of it have competing interests. No longer can the wealthy hide behind arguments that the preservation of the triple lock/state pension is essential to address poverty etc. The way in which private pension wealth is so untouched by tax is mystifying.
    Maybe. But remember the government has traditionally wanted to encourage saving, which presumably is why it invented ISAs and pensions in the first place. I'd prefer abolition of higher-rate tax relief on contributions, which favours the highly-paid. (Note, my own pension pot is not large.)

    But I think what is more likely than any change to pension taxes is development of this government's ideas around encouraging pension funds to invest in Britain.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322

    Stick in a mixed tracker fund with a very low management charge, like in Vanguard.
    Not stick in Crypto ;-)
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,383

    Maybe. But remember the government has traditionally wanted to encourage saving, which presumably is why it invented ISAs and pensions in the first place. I'd prefer abolition of higher-rate tax relief on contributions, which favours the highly-paid. (Note, my own pension pot is not large.)

    But I think what is more likely than any change to pension taxes is development of this government's ideas around encouraging pension funds to invest in Britain.
    However there should surely be a tighter cap on total ISAs, since it is only the richest who have been able to maximise their tax planning in this way.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,073

    Evening folks. An observation on social media campaigning in this election. Over that last couple of days I have had lots of FB posts from the Tory candidate in my reboundaried constituency in Lincolnshire. Judging by the spread of comments these are clearly going out to the general public like me rather than targetting supposed Tory faithful.

    What has been amusing this evening is travelling by train from Newark to Aberdeen. All the way up there have been local FB messages from Tory candidates. Clearly CCHQ are putting a lot of effort into locally targeted social media campaigning. This culminated a few minutes ago with a FB message as I arrived in Aberdeen from the Aberdeen South Tory candidate with a classic 'only we can bestcthe SNP' bar chart.

    I have to say I am surprised at the sophistication of the Tory social media campaign if not with their actual message.

    Looks like they could use a spillchocker, too
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,073
    Andy_JS said:

    I was under the impression that Bayesian analysis is very important in a lot of fields, although I'm not an expert.
    Applications for it crop up randomly all over the place.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410

    They will come for your pension pot.
    If that remotely becomes a narrative, sell Labour seats. It will be worse than Theresa May's campaign woes in 2017. And it is very easy for Rishi to say he won't come for your pension pot. How about you, Labour?

    There is a big problem at the heart of Labour's campaign. They are going to be delivering better services than the Tories - but by spending no more money than the Tories. Something there doesn't connect. The vox pops I heard yesterday on improving the NHS were skeptical at best. Tens of thousands of extra appointments a week provided by coming down hard on non-doms? By having more efficient tax enforcement? Give me a break. Labour hammering the internationally mobile rich is going 100% in the wrong direction. If you want the world's best health service, attract billionaires here. Have them pay property taxes, have them pay VAT on each new Ferrari. Money fleeing will be the first obvious sign of a Labour government.

    Which means Labour will be either delivering no better services - or their words on not raising taxes will ring very hollow within the year. This being Labour, I kinda expect both to be true.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024

    If that remotely becomes a narrative, sell Labour seats. It will be worse than Theresa May's campaign woes in 2017. And it is very easy for Rishi to say he won't come for your pension pot. How about you, Labour?

    There is a big problem at the heart of Labour's campaign. They are going to be delivering better services than the Tories - but by spending no more money than the Tories. Something there doesn't connect. The vox pops I heard yesterday on improving the NHS were skeptical at best. Tens of thousands of extra appointments a week provided by coming down hard on non-doms? By having more efficient tax enforcement? Give me a break. Labour hammering the internationally mobile rich is going 100% in the wrong direction. If you want the world's best health service, attract billionaires here. Have them pay property taxes, have them pay VAT on each new Ferrari. Money fleeing will be the first obvious sign of a Labour government.

    Which means Labour will be either delivering no better services - or their words on not raising taxes will ring very hollow within the year. This being Labour, I kinda expect both to be true.
    Luckily for Labour, the Tories will be prattling on about bringing back the cane and old style light bulbs with their core squeeze the Reform vote strategy, and Ed Davey will trying to juggle flaming torches just to try and get noticed.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129




    Labour’s campaign is spooking some Tory switchers

    Voters may be furious with the Tories but glimpses of Starmer’s team and its policies are making some think again

    "What feels so different from
    1997 is that the chief emotion of those switching their votes isn’t hope. But that doesn’t mean they’re apathetic. On the contrary, this is an election fuelled by anger and anxiety. Many people are furious about what’s been done to them. They have been scalded by the broken promises and failures of the past 14 years. They want something better, but they know how stretched public spending will be, and that the competition over who pays and who benefits will be intense. They are fearful about what’s to come.

    But that fear also means the switch against the Conservatives may not be as solid as it looks. A handful of the previously lost Tories I talked to have been unexpectedly spooked by what they have seen of Labour in the past week. Disillusioned as they are, they’re wary of making a further mistake.

    A landowner was totally taken aback by what he felt was Starmer’s relish about introducing VAT on school fees immediately and in full. This seemed ill-planned as a sudden change, possibly plunging both private and state schools into chaos, and wrecking the hopes not of the rich but of striving parents. Why didn’t he implement it over three or four years? “It’s made me wonder, is this man a class warrior in disguise? For a year I’ve been certain I’d vote Labour. Now I’m thinking again.”


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/labours-campaign-is-spooking-some-switchers-2wbsbq8sx

  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 597

    If that remotely becomes a narrative, sell Labour seats. It will be worse than Theresa May's campaign woes in 2017. And it is very easy for Rishi to say he won't come for your pension pot. How about you, Labour?

    There is a big problem at the heart of Labour's campaign. They are going to be delivering better services than the Tories - but by spending no more money than the Tories. Something there doesn't connect. The vox pops I heard yesterday on improving the NHS were skeptical at best. Tens of thousands of extra appointments a week provided by coming down hard on non-doms? By having more efficient tax enforcement? Give me a break. Labour hammering the internationally mobile rich is going 100% in the wrong direction. If you want the world's best health service, attract billionaires here. Have them pay property taxes, have them pay VAT on each new Ferrari. Money fleeing will be the first obvious sign of a Labour government.

    Which means Labour will be either delivering no better services - or their words on not raising taxes will ring very hollow within the year. This being Labour, I kinda expect both to be true.
    What does connect, though, is the notion that the tories are the epitome of bad governance. Proper leadership, change management, coordination, implementation, planning and stability are absolutely key for organizational performance and the tories have provided the absolute opposite of that. If you want to see how the tories have run the country look no further than to how disorganised and amateurish their GE campaign has been, because it is the same thing. Money is not the be all and end all of market performance... look at Elon musk's takeover of Twitter... his abysmal leadership destroyed the company. In contrast, Steve Jobs approach saved Apple.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410

    Luckily for Labour, the Tories will be prattling on about bringing back the cane and old style light bulb with their core squeeze the Reform vote strategy, and Ed Davey will trying to juggle flaming torches just to try and get noticed.
    Perhaps.

    Or perhaps we are going to see Rishi as a canny political operator. At last.

    (To be fair, it would be easier for him to show that to the British voters than to the bunch of idiot Tory MPs he inherited....)
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410

    What does connect, though, is the notion that the tories are the epitome of bad governance. Proper leadership, change management, coordination, implementation, planning and stability are absolutely key for organizational performance and the tories have provided the absolute opposite of that. If you want to see how the tories have run the country look no further than to how disorganised and amateurish their GE campaign has been, because it is the same thing. Money is not the be all and end all of market performance... look at Elon musk's takeover of Twitter... his abysmal leadership destroyed the company. In contrast, Steve Jobs approach saved Apple.
    When has Labour ever delivered great governance?

    Exhibit A: every Labour government has left office with more unemployed than it inherited.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    Desperate talk from our last remaining resident tories on here this morning.

    There’s no cut through and no interest. Even less so once the Euros start. Apart from some crass photo ops there has only been one news item (natty service) and that was negative for the tories.

    The election was over before it began. There has been no movement in the polls. Labour landslide.

    As I told you all would be the case two years ago, to much derision at the time.

    Have a nice day and do something other than stare at echo chamber politics …

    xxx
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024
    Cicero said:

    However there should surely be a tighter cap on total ISAs, since it is only the richest who have been able to maximise their tax planning in this way.
    There are occasional reports on ISA millionaires who got lucky picking shares but I'd not want to base a policy around just a handful of cases. The ISA maximum is £20,000 a year which should be affordable by middle-aged professionals who have cleared their mortgages. I guess the government's position is to encourage them to save rather than spend the money on an exotic holiday or new car. So the question is, will the next government wish to encourage savings in this way or would they rather it was spent. Again, as with pensions, one could imagine steps to direct investment to Britain rather than Tesla shares.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    Didn’t Dianne Abbott send her kids to a posh private school? Maybe it’s the VAT issue behind it all.
  • rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 8,627
    Starmer playing a risky game here. Many of those who are being replaced are popular in their constituencies, will the activists come out and campaign for their replacements as much?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,418
    IanB2 said:

    Applications for it crop up randomly all over the place.
    That’s not really true.
    When one crops up, it increases the likelihood of someone thinking of another.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277





    Labour’s campaign is spooking some Tory switchers

    Voters may be furious with the Tories but glimpses of Starmer’s team and its policies are making some think again

    "What feels so different from
    1997 is that the chief emotion of those switching their votes isn’t hope. But that doesn’t mean they’re apathetic. On the contrary, this is an election fuelled by anger and anxiety. Many people are furious about what’s been done to them. They have been scalded by the broken promises and failures of the past 14 years. They want something better, but they know how stretched public spending will be, and that the competition over who pays and who benefits will be intense. They are fearful about what’s to come.

    But that fear also means the switch against the Conservatives may not be as solid as it looks. A handful of the previously lost Tories I talked to have been unexpectedly spooked by what they have seen of Labour in the past week. Disillusioned as they are, they’re wary of making a further mistake.

    A landowner was totally taken aback by what he felt was Starmer’s relish about introducing VAT on school fees immediately and in full. This seemed ill-planned as a sudden change, possibly plunging both private and state schools into chaos, and wrecking the hopes not of the rich but of striving parents. Why didn’t he implement it over three or four years? “It’s made me wonder, is this man a class warrior in disguise? For a year I’ve been certain I’d vote Labour. Now I’m thinking again.”


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/labours-campaign-is-spooking-some-switchers-2wbsbq8sx

    Land owners aren’t exactly Labours target audience .

    I accept though that quite a few of those who were sitting on the fence will find reasons to move back to the Tories . Sunak certainly needs a good debate performance next week . Starmer just needs to hammer the Tories on the NHS .
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024

    Luckily for Labour, the Tories will be prattling on about bringing back the cane and old style light bulbs with their core squeeze the Reform vote strategy, and Ed Davey will trying to juggle flaming torches just to try and get noticed.
    It is a funny old election campaign. For a start, the government has announced more new policies than the opposition, raising the questions why the government has not already done them and what is the point of an opposition that will not do anything different?

    Then there is what is not mentioned. Has Rishi highlighted the government's greatest achievement, on which referendums and elections were fought? No, he has not. And Starmer has two reasons not to mention 2019: Corbyn and Brexit.

    So the election is being fought in a strange vacuum where recent history never happened.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024

    I don't think it will make much difference but it is the first election where I have noticed such organised targeted social media activity on constituency basis. I suspect it will become the norm for all parties going forward.
    Rory on Trip on C4 last night said the Conservatives have already spent £800,000 on social media advertising (iirc).
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410

    So the Mail are running with a Lord Lucan story.

    https://www.tomorrowspapers.co.uk/

    Even they may struggle to pin that one on Starmer.

    I know rather a lot about the Lucan story. My wife applied for the job as the nanny, but got another appointment. Or she could have been the one blugeoned to death.

    Lucan himself almost certainly didn't do the deed, but rather employed someone to steal the family silver for the insurance, not knowing he had taken on a complete psychopath for the task.

    One thing those who claim he did it never explain is how a man with a pathological fear of blood could have inflicted such terrible injuries.
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 597

    When has Labour ever delivered great governance?

    Exhibit A: every Labour government has left office with more unemployed than it inherited.
    Starmer has run a large organisation with success. And when I look at how efficiently their campaign is being rolled out I am actually hopeful. And if you want to look at good governance then look at the Blair years. You may not have liked his foreign policy, but domestically labour were very strong: longest unbroken period of growth in british history. NHS performance was second to none etc. People look back on those years with nostalgia now. I am just not buying your chicken little approach to labour... 1) the party you are scared of disappeared in the 70s and 80s, 2) the far left agitators and momentum types largely became popcons, erg and reform voters after 2010. Those idealistic radical voters are largely the torie's problem. Sure there is an old guard left, like abbott and corbyn) but they are marginalized, kicked out or simply at the end of the line due to old age. Just a few years ago 30p Lee was campaigning for eu hating corbyn you know.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,410
    Best newspaper headline for ages is the Star's take on North Korea flying sacks of shit into South Korea under balloons:

    TURD WORLD WAR
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 597

    Rory on Trip on C4 last night said the Conservatives have already spent £800,000 on social media advertising (iirc).
    Tell you what, labour's social media team is on fire. I really recommend following them. 🤣🤣🤣
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,408

    Didn’t the “anti-Semitic” tweet simply reference the fact that Israel seeks to weaponise the charge of anti-Semitism itself?

    If so, this is surely just common knowledge.

    I’d have thought and hoped that her suspension was founded on her seeming support for the Greens.
    That’s what Michael Crick is reporting

    https://x.com/tomorrowsmps/status/1795914498047447386?s=61
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,408
    darkage said:

    The Lloyd Russel-Moyle case is kafkaesque to the point where it appears deliberately absurd. A 'serious allegation', unspecified, from 10 years ago, being made exactly now.
    Yes, it is very convenient

    One does not have to like him to realise this stinks.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192





    Labour’s campaign is spooking some Tory switchers

    Voters may be furious with the Tories but glimpses of Starmer’s team and its policies are making some think again

    "What feels so different from
    1997 is that the chief emotion of those switching their votes isn’t hope. But that doesn’t mean they’re apathetic. On the contrary, this is an election fuelled by anger and anxiety. Many people are furious about what’s been done to them. They have been scalded by the broken promises and failures of the past 14 years. They want something better, but they know how stretched public spending will be, and that the competition over who pays and who benefits will be intense. They are fearful about what’s to come.

    But that fear also means the switch against the Conservatives may not be as solid as it looks. A handful of the previously lost Tories I talked to have been unexpectedly spooked by what they have seen of Labour in the past week. Disillusioned as they are, they’re wary of making a further mistake.

    A landowner was totally taken aback by what he felt was Starmer’s relish about introducing VAT on school fees immediately and in full. This seemed ill-planned as a sudden change, possibly plunging both private and state schools into chaos, and wrecking the hopes not of the rich but of striving parents. Why didn’t he implement it over three or four years? “It’s made me wonder, is this man a class warrior in disguise? For a year I’ve been certain I’d vote Labour. Now I’m thinking again.”


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/labours-campaign-is-spooking-some-switchers-2wbsbq8sx

    There doesn’t appear to be much polling evidence of this phenomenon. I suppose you could see a scenario where there’s a sudden change in the poll numbers as doubts mount and hit a critical mass. Im not sure that concerns about Labour would push people back to the Tories, far more likely they’d find another repository for a non-Tory vote. No evidence of that yet but I could definitely see a situation where the polls move towards a more uncertain outcome. At the moment this just looks like a newspaper contriving a story to make things look more interesting.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129
    nico679 said:

    Land owners aren’t exactly Labours target audience .

    I accept though that quite a few of those who were sitting on the fence will find reasons to move back to the Tories . Sunak certainly needs a good debate performance next week . Starmer just needs to hammer the Tories on the NHS .
    The economy is an interesting one, because here the gap is quite a bit narrower than I expected. Lots of undecided voters will note that SKS appears to want to glide into No.10 without telling anyone what he wants to do when he gets there. They will note that in the past he's said what he's needed to do to get elected, and then changed his tune after. They will be asking themselves the question:

    Can I really trust him?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,125
    edited May 2024

    If that remotely becomes a narrative, sell Labour seats. It will be worse than Theresa May's campaign woes in 2017. And it is very easy for Rishi to say he won't come for your pension pot. How about you, Labour?

    There is a big problem at the heart of Labour's campaign. They are going to be delivering better services than the Tories - but by spending no more money than the Tories. Something there doesn't connect. The vox pops I heard yesterday on improving the NHS were skeptical at best. Tens of thousands of extra appointments a week provided by coming down hard on non-doms? By having more efficient tax enforcement? Give me a break. Labour hammering the internationally mobile rich is going 100% in the wrong direction. If you want the world's best health service, attract billionaires here. Have them pay property taxes, have them pay VAT on each new Ferrari. Money fleeing will be the first obvious sign of a Labour government.

    Which means Labour will be either delivering no better services - or their words on not raising taxes will ring very hollow within the year. This being Labour, I kinda expect both to be true.
    Best to stick with the Conservatives who are going to cut taxes without reducing current service levels.

    They are both full of s***!

    On the other hand if the odious Abbott can deliver one more Conservative Government, what can one do but laugh at the irony.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024
    Taz said:

    Yes, it is very convenient

    One does not have to like him to realise this stinks.
    Just as well, really.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,129
    ToryJim said:

    There doesn’t appear to be much polling evidence of this phenomenon. I suppose you could see a scenario where there’s a sudden change in the poll numbers as doubts mount and hit a critical mass. Im not sure that concerns about Labour would push people back to the Tories, far more likely they’d find another repository for a non-Tory vote. No evidence of that yet but I could definitely see a situation where the polls move towards a more uncertain outcome. At the moment this just looks like a newspaper contriving a story to make things look more interesting.
    Be patient.

    Lots of people are still undecided and many haven't tuned into the election yet, or made their minds up - which happens in the very final 1-3 weeks, and sometimes the last 48-72 hours.

    This isn't over.
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 597
    The tories in this thread are flying on wishful thinking. Wow. That is not what I expected from a betting site 🤯🤯🤯🤯 you guys are moving imaginary armies around on a map.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,652

    I think that's right. See the Labour Party after 2019 - they didn't exactly double down on Corbynism. Same after 1987. The Tories will have a year or two soul-searching, though.
    Many PBers must be quite terrified of popular representation of right wing views and policies judging by the constant wishcasting about the forthcoming revival of Sunak-Huntism after a mere 1 to 2 years of 'soul searching'.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,024
    edited May 2024

    I know rather a lot about the Lucan story. My wife applied for the job as the nanny, but got another appointment. Or she could have been the one blugeoned to death.

    Lucan himself almost certainly didn't do the deed, but rather employed someone to steal the family silver for the insurance, not knowing he had taken on a complete psychopath for the task.

    One thing those who claim he did it never explain is how a man with a pathological fear of blood could have inflicted such terrible injuries.
    The late crime author and broadcaster Martin Fido favoured the hitman theory as well, iirc. In practice, I'm not sure what difference it made. Either way, Lucan was guilty, and the more interesting story is how his posh chums got away with not cooperating with the police without falling down the steps to the cells, and how Lucan fled (and possibly committed suicide).

    ETA on the question of Lucan's fear of blood, the use of a pipe as a weapon to bludgeon the victim to death, rather than a knife, does suggest the murderer planned to avoid causing bleeding, so this points towards Lucan's guilt rather than away. It would also be an odd choice of weapon for a professional assassin.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    kle4 said:

    She's not really very popular, she's a holdover politician from a different age, and the public probably don't care about internal party ructions until it causes them problems. So really right or wrong a big shrug always seemed like the most likely reaction.

    She is also doolally and totally useless.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,652
    timple said:

    Except Brexit is still is a concern as it continues to slowly drag our economy down, we could certainly do with that 4% GDP every year to solve the myriad problems voters say they are concerned about.
    Utter tripe.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,571

    Question for the PB brains trust (TM):

    I'm doing a little 'guess the seat totals' for some work colleagues and providing a spreadsheet for them to fill in.
    I've had to explain to most that Northern Ireland exists.
    I've had to explain to a few that Scotland and Wales also exist.

    Do we expect Alba to win any seats at all? I can't see it, but can't be sure?

    My form has Con, Lab, LD, Green (all three UK parties as one), Reform, SNP, Plaid, DUP, UUP, SDLP, Sinn Fein and Alliance (and speaker autocompleted). Could any other party realistically get a seat?

    The TUV might win a seat in Northern Ireland. The Workers Party of Britain could hold on to Galloway’s by-election win or maybe win a seat elsewhere. Some independent candidates could win, like Corbyn.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,322
    edited May 2024
    Munira Wilson also commits the Lib Dems to not raising VAT after the election, in line with a pledge made by Labour and the Conservatives earlier. She says the party would not hike the sales tax - or income tax and National Insurance.

    Fag paper between them all.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,779

    The TUV might win a seat in Northern Ireland. The Workers Party of Britain could hold on to Galloway’s by-election win or maybe win a seat elsewhere. Some independent candidates could win, like Corbyn.
    The head of the RCN could win a seat for Sinn Fein
This discussion has been closed.