Howdy, Stranger!

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

A tale of two seats: Maidstone and Macclesfield – politicalbetting.com

1246711

Comments

  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,274
    edited June 2024
    ToryJim said:

    Yes, and he will do the media rounds pretending that he’s answering an overwhelming number of calls to stand and playing the patriotic duty card. The MSM will swallow the bullshit wholesale and the GB News anchors will line up to metaphorically fellate him. Depressing and nauseating in equal measure.
    Oh stop whining: Farage is playing politics. Its what politicians do. He’s just better at it than most
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,939
    edited June 2024
    a
    ToryJim said:

    Yes, and he will do the media rounds pretending that he’s answering an overwhelming number of calls to stand and playing the patriotic duty card. The MSM will swallow the bullshit wholesale and the GB News anchors will line up to metaphorically fellate him. Depressing and nauseating in equal measure.
    I think the timing is to do with Reform's omittance from the various debates. Make a massive fuss in the media. Deep state etc etc
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,261
    I love grapefruit juice. Can confirm the difficulty in obtaining it, though.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,106

    I love grapefruit juice. Can confirm the difficulty in obtaining it, though.

    I hadn't noticed. I like drinking it but not that often.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 53,377
    Leon said:

    Oh stop whining: Farage is playing politics. Its what politicians do. He’s just better at it than most
    LOL Is that why he failed SEVEN times to get elected to Westminster?
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,060
    edited June 2024
    It's not normally the case in General Elections that Farage/Brexit/UKIP or whoever has a sniff of a seat BUT I think Farage could have better than half a chance in Clacton so abysmal is the Conservative position. The circus that surrounds him would effectively turn it into a by-election and the demographics are nigh on perfect for Reform.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,752
    Leon said:

    Oh stop whining: Farage is playing politics. Its what politicians do. He’s just better at it than most
    He is so good at it that he has never been elected as an MP
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Both Starmer and Sunak have been to Bury North, why even bother??
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,106
    Just seen a rumour that the Tory MP for Ipswich may be attempting a chicken-run to Central Suffolk.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,752

    Both Starmer and Sunak have been to Bury North, why even bother??

    Best thing to do with it if you ask me.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,060

    Both Starmer and Sunak have been to Bury North, why even bother??

    It's a nonsense, but isn't the thinking that it'd look complacent/triumphant from Starmer if he went to the ACTUAL likely seats and defeatist/panic stricken from Rishi ?

    So we'll probably get plenty of visits to stone cold Labour gains.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    edited June 2024
    In terms of the UKs nuclear deterrent .

    Many who may have been on the fence are now supporting it due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine .

  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Andy_JS said:

    Just seen a rumour that the Tory MP for Ipswich may be attempting a chicken-run to Central Suffolk.

    He isn’t Crick retracted the suggestion.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Andy_JS said:

    Just seen a rumour that the Tory MP for Ipswich may be attempting a chicken-run to Central Suffolk.

    Ipswich is a definite goner, they'd be on over 300 holding everything from Ippy down
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,188
    Eabhal said:

    I will be making an Emergency General Election announcement at 4pm today.

    The US presidential election is technically a general election. Would be even worse than the poll rampers.

    "My good friend Donald has unfortunately had to stand down due to legal persecution and has nominated me to run in his place. Also, the United States will be annexing the UK with immediate effect to enable me to stand as a natural born US citizen."
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    Technically easier, because it could be done online - no reduction in the legal requirements, which is what ScotGov proposed, ignoring all the issues that could create.

    Not quite the gotcha, is it?

    Just to be clear: if you’re on the left & you’re dismissing an Equality Act amendment to protect women’s rights you don’t understand as hateful on the basis of who’s proposing it you’re as guilty as anyone of culture wars rhetoric in a sensitive debate about a conflict of rights.

    Another dreadful Tory no doubt. #checks notes# leader writer for the Observer

    https://x.com/soniasodha/status/1797549966338244659
    Making it practically easier to get a GRC seems to go against the whole "we know what a woman is and she can't have a penis", when the point of a GRC is that some people with a penis can get legal recognition as being a woman.

    And I'm not dismissing the changes to the EA based on whose proposing them - I'm dismissing them because it's a bad idea. Because there is no "biological" definition of sex that will protect all cis men and women and only exclude trans people because there are lots of variations of sex characteristics within individuals. I know that those who are anti trans now like to fall back to "a woman is someone who produces large gametes" but if, in law, that were to be the definition of woman that would mean any time a woman wants to enforce her rights under those laws she would need to prove she does produce large gametes, with the testing that is required to back that up. Whereas under the social understanding of sex and gender it is much easier for any woman, trans or cis, to assert their rights when discriminated against.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,752
    nico679 said:

    In terms of the UKs nuclear deterrent .

    Many who may have been on the fence are now supporting it due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine .

    And some who may have been on the fence are now supporting it because it is a cynical exercise to get elected?
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,116

    I think after today's polling rush they are going to realise just how buggered they are
    Their private polling must be telling them that.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    ToryJim said:

    Suggestions he will replace their candidate in Clacton who is in trouble for letting the mask slip and posting things that were anti-Semitic. Of course Nige isn’t immune to the odd tiny bit of racism adjacent rabble rousing.
    Well Clacton is the only contituency to ever elect a UKIP MP at a general election, Douglas Carswell in 2015.

    If Nigel wants to break his Parliamentary duck, it’s as good a place as any to try.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    And some who may have been on the fence are now supporting it because it is a cynical exercise to get elected?
    Starmer had always backed it . Some other cabinet members didn’t . Personally I was on the fence but after recent events now fully support it .
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,394
    @christopherhope
    NEW
    A Farage sized stone has just dropped into the becalmed election pond on Monday morning.
    Very senior figures in Reform UK have been blindsided by Nigel Farage's statement at 4pm.
    One friend of Farage tells me it will either be an electoral pact with the Tories (unlikely) or an about-turn on standing at the electionn (more likely).
    The deadline for nominations is imminent.
    Farage himself is not answering his phone. Watch the drama play out at 4pm on
    @GBNEWS
    .
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155
    nico679 said:

    In terms of the UKs nuclear deterrent .

    Many who may have been on the fence are now supporting it due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine .

    Whilst I think there is a reasonable argument to be made that Russia would have been less likely to invade Ukraine if Ukraine had nukes - I still don't see why the UK needs nukes when we clearly fall under Nato and are protected by enough nukes to destroy the entire planet multiple times over with the US. If the US left Nato and the UK didn't believe the US hegemon continued to include using their nuclear deterrent if we were threatened, having nukes of are own is not the number one problem...
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616

    Nigel Farage and Boris Johnson - the two men that enabled the wipe-out of the sensible centre-right as a political force in the UK.
    They did no such thing. You and I and the entire electorate did.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,939

    LOL Is that why he failed SEVEN times to get elected to Westminster?
    Farage would have waltzed into Parliament if it wasn't for FPTP. So would a significant number of crazed Greens.

    Once upon a time, you might have suggested that FPTP protected us from the loonies, but...
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Taz said:

    Their private polling must be telling them that.
    Yes but it was probably telling them that in 1997 but the exit poll and results still surprised them.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Taz said:

    Their private polling must be telling them that.
    Their private polling is just a turd with a laughing clown head stuck in it I think
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,188
    kjh said:

    I love grapefruit juice and marmalade, but I do love bitter and sour tastes.

    I make my own marmalade and make it as bitter as possible. I try and get some caramelisation when cooking it by burning the bottom of the pan. Mine is pretty dark compared to the norm.

    No shop marmalade is as good as homemade. same goes for pickled onions. I fill the vinegar with chills, peppercorns and coriander seeds and get a real punch.

    The other thing homemade that beats shop bought is bread. I make most of my own bread. Love it. I could live on bread.
    Yes, home made bread... We more or less stopped shop buying after we got a bread maker (maybe that's cheating, but hey, we're busy and lazy). Have never made marmalade, though we've made a number of jams. Will have to add it to the list. I remember by gran making marmalade in a big old copper pan on an old range... and the results😋
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,600
    EPG said:

    Grapefruit has been tarnished by the medical evidence about enzymes, even among the unmedicated because why take a risk about vitamin absorption? But I also think decades of bad breakfast buffet juices took their toll: not fresh, reused.

    Reused?

    "All of out grapefruit juice has been passed by the management"
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,651
    148grss said:

    Whilst I think there is a reasonable argument to be made that Russia would have been less likely to invade Ukraine if Ukraine had nukes - I still don't see why the UK needs nukes when we clearly fall under Nato and are protected by enough nukes to destroy the entire planet multiple times over with the US. If the US left Nato and the UK didn't believe the US hegemon continued to include using their nuclear deterrent if we were threatened, having nukes of are own is not the number one problem...
    You're going to have to clarify that last sentence because it makes no sense.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,394
    Selebian said:

    "My good friend Donald has unfortunately had to stand down due to legal persecution and has nominated me to run in his place. Also, the United States will be annexing the UK with immediate effect to enable me to stand as a natural born US citizen."
    Nigel Fucking Farage previously said he would not stand in the UK Genny Lec as the US election was more important

    Now that Donny Boy has been convicted, I guess his outlook has changed...
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    Daft question perhaps, but nowadays is there any local effect from visiting a parliamentary constituency if you are the leader of a big party? I can see the case for the smaller parties: reminding people that you are a viable choice in somewhere like Westmorland.
  • Nigel_ForemainNigel_Foremain Posts: 14,752
    TOPPING said:

    They did no such thing. You and I and the entire electorate did.
    Not guilty on any of the charges
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,060
    Sandpit said:

    Well Clacton is the only contituency to ever elect a UKIP MP at a general election, Douglas Carswell in 2015.

    If Nigel wants to break his Parliamentary duck, it’s as good a place as any to try.
    Currently forecast to go Labour (51% vs 48% Conservatives). Probably Farage vs Labour if he gets the bandwagon rolling there.
    Mind you he might not go for it, he's got a history of marching to the top of the hill...
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,600

    Both Starmer and Sunak have been to Bury North, why even bother??

    https://www.eastlancsrailway.org.uk/
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Scott_xP said:

    Nigel Fucking Farage previously said he would not stand in the UK Genny Lec as the US election was more important

    Now that Donny Boy has been convicted, I guess his outlook has changed...
    I doubt it, he’s a grifter and he’s just spotted a lucrative means of expanding the grift.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,261
    edited June 2024
    Scott_xP said:

    @christopherhope
    NEW
    A Farage sized stone has just dropped into the becalmed election pond on Monday morning.
    Very senior figures in Reform UK have been blindsided by Nigel Farage's statement at 4pm.
    One friend of Farage tells me it will either be an electoral pact with the Tories (unlikely) or an about-turn on standing at the electionn (more likely).
    The deadline for nominations is imminent.
    Farage himself is not answering his phone. Watch the drama play out at 4pm on
    @GBNEWS
    .

    He isn’t going to save* the Tories, surely? That would leave him with significant egg on his face.

    *in his mind, anyway
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,093
    148grss said:

    Whilst I think there is a reasonable argument to be made that Russia would have been less likely to invade Ukraine if Ukraine had nukes - I still don't see why the UK needs nukes when we clearly fall under Nato and are protected by enough nukes to destroy the entire planet multiple times over with the US. If the US left Nato and the UK didn't believe the US hegemon continued to include using their nuclear deterrent if we were threatened, having nukes of are own is not the number one problem...
    Don't you also support Houthis killing innocent seamen?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Bones partner selected to lose again in Wellingborough
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,221
    Sandpit said:

    Well Clacton is the only contituency to ever elect a UKIP MP at a general election, Douglas Carswell in 2015.

    If Nigel wants to break his Parliamentary duck, it’s as good a place as any to try.
    The Fukkers don't have a candidate in Hartlegrad...

    He'll up against Fash Slag but UKIP probably only have 20 quid in campaign funds.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Scott_xP said:

    @KevinASchofield

    According to Politico this morning, Kemi Badenoch "will play a more active role in the Conservative campaign" from now on.

    But a senior Tory source tells HuffPost UK: "She needs to be locked in a fridge away from normal people."

    The appeal of Bad Enoch is lost on me and, it seems, most of the public. She is a wooden, uninspiring performer and was entirely mute as Biz Sec for months/years. Can someone explain what she has that some see in her?
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    He isn’t going to save* the Tories, surely? That would leave him with significant egg on his face.

    *in his mind, anyway
    This is probably the best chance in the eyes of Reform to do serious damage to the Tories . I can’t see Farage agreeing a pact with them.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,188
    edited June 2024
    Nigelb said:

    A slightly odd combination.
    How do you serve it ?
    Grapefruit marmalade is also a thing of wonder 😋
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,378
    edited June 2024
    Selebian said:

    Yes, home made bread... We more or less stopped shop buying after we got a bread maker (maybe that's cheating, but hey, we're busy and lazy). Have never made marmalade, though we've made a number of jams. Will have to add it to the list. I remember by gran making marmalade in a big old copper pan on an old range... and the results😋
    Nothing wrong with a bread maker. I use it just to make bread completely if I can't be bothered, but even if I am making the loaf I use a breadmaker for the first proof. I make a wide range of stuff. Granary and a white with cumin seeds often, but also pizza base, french loaf, ciabatta, malt loaf, panettone, etc.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Barnesian said:

    I'm following the US elections state by state, though only a few matter.
    The key states are:
    Pennsylvania (20 Electoral College Votes) Trump leads by average of 1.9%
    Michigan (16 ECV) Trump leads by 0.8%
    Wisconsin (10 ECV) Trump leads by 1.3%

    There is a difference between Trump lead for AV surveys (i.e. All Voters), RV surveys (Registered Voters) and LV surveys (Likely Voters).
    Trumps lead reduces by 2-3% suggesting that Trump supporters are less likely to turn out to vote.

    Allowing for that differential in turnout gives Biden the above three states and 273 ECV, to Trump's 265 ECV. A very narrow win for Biden.

    So currently I put it at 50/50.
    However I think the trend is with Biden from recent surveys and the economy. But the June debate will be the deciding event and I think Biden will win it.
    Trump looks increasingly deranged and unsteady, even ill, at times.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,049

    Reused?

    "All of out grapefruit juice has been passed by the management"
    Are you suggesting the owners were taking the piss out of the management?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,188

    Bones partner selected to lose again in Wellingborough

    David Boreanaz?
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,060
    nico679 said:

    This is probably the best chance in the eyes of Reform to do serious damage to the Tories . I can’t see Farage agreeing a pact with them.
    Farage running would probably up the Reform vote a bit from what it would be with non entity Tice, & it'd make the Tories seat count worse than the counterfactual. I know Cameron won a majority in 2015 but he'd probably have got a bigger one without UKIP.
  • Andy_JS said:

    I hadn't noticed. I like drinking it but not that often.
    I learned only today that grapefruit juice doubles the effects of Viagra.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,482
    One other thing that I forgot to look at is average age:

    Maidstone and Malling: 40.1 years
    Macclesfield: 45.3 years

    Obviously there will be cases where older seats are less favourable to the Conservatives, but it is interesting to note that this is another metric that would appear to make Maidstone less favourable to the Conservatives (or Macclesfield more favourable to them).
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,049

    Trump looks increasingly deranged and unsteady, even ill, at times.
    He looked ghastly at that post-trial press conference. Like a more emaciated version of Alec Douglas-Home.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    SPECULATION
    Reform can't get 630 candidates properly vetted so Farage at four is a bullshit 'we must focus our resources on these 500 seats' yadda yadda yadda
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,049

    I learned only today that grapefruit juice doubles the effects of Viagra.
    I'm sorry to hear of your problems but glad to hear that you have found such an effective remedy :smile:
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    148grss said:

    Making it practically easier to get a GRC seems to go against the whole "we know what a woman is and she can't have a penis", when the point of a GRC is that some people with a penis can get legal recognition as being a woman.

    And I'm not dismissing the changes to the EA based on whose proposing them - I'm dismissing them because it's a bad idea. Because there is no "biological" definition of sex that will protect all cis men and women and only exclude trans people because there are lots of variations of sex characteristics within individuals. I know that those who are anti trans now like to fall back to "a woman is someone who produces large gametes" but if, in law, that were to be the definition of woman that would mean any time a woman wants to enforce her rights under those laws she would need to prove she does produce large gametes, with the testing that is required to back that up. Whereas under the social understanding of sex and gender it is much easier for any woman, trans or cis, to assert their rights when discriminated against.
    148grss said:

    Making it practically easier to get a GRC seems to go against the whole "we know what a woman is and she can't have a penis", when the point of a GRC is that some people with a penis can get legal recognition as being a woman.

    And I'm not dismissing the changes to the EA based on whose proposing them - I'm dismissing them because it's a bad idea. Because there is no "biological" definition of sex that will protect all cis men and women and only exclude trans people because there are lots of variations of sex characteristics within individuals. I know that those who are anti trans now like to fall back to "a woman is someone who produces large gametes" but if, in law, that were to be the definition of woman that would mean any time a woman wants to enforce her rights under those laws she would need to prove she does produce large gametes, with the testing that is required to back that up. Whereas under the social understanding of sex and gender it is much easier for any woman, trans or cis, to assert their rights when discriminated against.
    Worth a read:

    An overview of the proposal to clarify the meaning of sex in the Equality Act.

    https://x.com/michaelpforan/status/1797558913698582579

    I think one of the traps people are falling into is substituting “theory” for Common Law case law - of which there is plenty. All the proposal does is clarify what applies where - and clarity extends protections to both women and trans people.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Apparently the emergency announcement is a joint one with Tice who before Farage surfaced from his ‘retirement’ was beginning to carve out a slight independent profile. However it’s now clear he’s only Nigel’s ventriloquist dummy.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,475
    tlg86 said:

    One other thing that I forgot to look at is average age:

    Maidstone and Malling: 40.1 years
    Macclesfield: 45.3 years

    Obviously there will be cases where older seats are less favourable to the Conservatives, but it is interesting to note that this is another metric that would appear to make Maidstone less favourable to the Conservatives (or Macclesfield more favourable to them).

    Not much difference, more significant is Maidstone was almost 60% Leave and Macclesfield was Remain (plus a few villages in the Mallings will offset Tory losses in Maidstone)
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Selebian said:

    David Boreanaz?
    That's her, yes
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,475
    ABC news Biden and Trump favourability poll

    Biden Favourable 32% Unfavourable 54%

    Trump Favourable 31% Unfavourable 56%

    Biden must have said some extra prayers in the GOP primary as if Haley had been his opponent not Trump he would likely be toast!

    https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    ToryJim said:

    Apparently the emergency announcement is a joint one with Tice who before Farage surfaced from his ‘retirement’ was beginning to carve out a slight independent profile. However it’s now clear he’s only Nigel’s ventriloquist dummy.

    They can't find 630 vetted candidates. They are 'targeting'. (In other words, a deal has been done.)
    Is my guess.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,060
    ToryJim said:

    Apparently the emergency announcement is a joint one with Tice who before Farage surfaced from his ‘retirement’ was beginning to carve out a slight independent profile. However it’s now clear he’s only Nigel’s ventriloquist dummy.

    Astounding if true.
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,085
    tlg86 said:

    The west is richer than the east. Imagine a line running down the middle of England through the Pennines then following the West Coast Mainline down to London, continuing through the middle of it and on to the south coast.

    We talk about the north south divide a lot - and it does exist, but there’s an east west divide too.
    Didn't C Northcote Parkinson light-heartedly suggest a dividing line from Chester to London? ISTR that with increasing prosperity one moved east and south to the metropolis acquiring wealth, power and influence, and later dissipated these throught drink, depravity and other excesses, returning west and north to your starting point where the cycle could begin again. Is the reverse now true?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,110
    edited June 2024

    I learned only today that grapefruit juice doubles the effects of Viagra.
    In inches?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,820
    Selebian said:

    Grapefruit marmalade is also a thing of wonder 😋
    To serve such a thing would be the gravest inSeville-ity.
  • novanova Posts: 745
    nico679 said:

    This is probably the best chance in the eyes of Reform to do serious damage to the Tories . I can’t see Farage agreeing a pact with them.
    In 2019, Brexit party voters were pretty well aligned with what the Tories wanted, and were big fans of Johnson.

    Now, they're apparently much less keen on them, which is probably why Farage has been reluctant to do a deal, as he doesn't have anything like as much clout. The election doesn't look to be anything like as close either, so there's a strong chance they'd be standing down/doing a deal with a party that still loses, and that's not a good look.

    Probably better to pretend you could have been the kingmaker, but retained the "moral" high ground of refusing to do so.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,600
    Selebian said:

    Yes, home made bread... We more or less stopped shop buying after we got a bread maker (maybe that's cheating, but hey, we're busy and lazy). Have never made marmalade, though we've made a number of jams. Will have to add it to the list. I remember by gran making marmalade in a big old copper pan on an old range... and the results😋
    Using a bread maker does not equate with making your own bread.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,600
    Lib Dems talking shit again today.

    Cooper highlighting their "blue flag" proposal.
  • Big_IanBig_Ian Posts: 67
    ydoethur said:

    I'm sorry to hear of your problems but glad to hear that you have found such an effective remedy :smile:
    Well, he does call himself The Woodpecker..
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,085
    Leon said:

    On topic, here’s your Moldovan Picture Quiz

    Why is this peculiar bottle of wine so special?



    Nulu googliniu!!

    Probably too late, but wasn't Stalin a fan of Moldavan wine? Im guessing there is a personal connection here - first harvest presentation?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,011

    They can't find 630 vetted candidates. They are 'targeting'. (In other words, a deal has been done.)
    Is my guess.
    Wonder what awful grubby deal has been done?

    Peerage for Farage in resignation honours?
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,424

    Using a bread maker does not equate with making your own bread.
    An odd prejudice. Does it only count if you kneed the bread yourself? What about if you use a magimix or such like? Does that not count?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,921
    Scott_xP said:

    @christopherhope
    NEW
    A Farage sized stone has just dropped into the becalmed election pond on Monday morning.
    Very senior figures in Reform UK have been blindsided by Nigel Farage's statement at 4pm.
    One friend of Farage tells me it will either be an electoral pact with the Tories (unlikely) or an about-turn on standing at the electionn (more likely).
    The deadline for nominations is imminent.
    Farage himself is not answering his phone. Watch the drama play out at 4pm on
    @GBNEWS
    .

    I know Christopher Hope and Christopher Chope are different people, but the similarity messes me up every time
  • nova said:

    In 2019, Brexit party voters were pretty well aligned with what the Tories wanted, and were big fans of Johnson.

    Now, they're apparently much less keen on them, which is probably why Farage has been reluctant to do a deal, as he doesn't have anything like as much clout. The election doesn't look to be anything like as close either, so there's a strong chance they'd be standing down/doing a deal with a party that still loses, and that's not a good look.

    Probably better to pretend you could have been the kingmaker, but retained the "moral" high ground of refusing to do so.
    In one day Farage claimed to have offered a deal to the Cons while admitting that he couldn't actually deliver most of his voters. Unusually honest of him!

    The Cons responded by ruling out any such deal. Instead of just ignoring the nonsense and denying Reform the publicity.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    Nigelb said:

    To serve such a thing would be the gravest inSeville-ity.
    I find the idea quite appeeling
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,188

    Using a bread maker does not equate with making your own bread.
    Hey, I never claimed we make our own bread - merely that it's made in our home, which it is! :tongue:
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,060

    Wonder what awful grubby deal has been done?

    Peerage for Farage in resignation honours?
    Can't see it - It's way more in the Conservatives interests to do a deal than Farage's. Farage's best bet is for the MRP to come true, a sub 100 parliamentary rump would be far easier to takeover than a 97 type "triumph" (well it would be at this point :D ) for the Tories.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616
    nico679 said:

    This is probably the best chance in the eyes of Reform to do serious damage to the Tories . I can’t see Farage agreeing a pact with them.
    I mean have you taken a look at the polls recently. Doing "serious damage to the Tories" - what would that mean? Lab with a 340 majority rather than the 336 maj that the EC MRP poll predicts?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Wonder what awful grubby deal has been done?

    Peerage for Farage in resignation honours?
    Peerage for the Nige, some sort of merger in the new world order, who knows?
    Maybe Tice will be offered up to do balloon animals at Tory MPs kids parties
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,011
    ydoethur said:

    He looked ghastly at that post-trial press conference. Like a more emaciated version of Alec Douglas-Home.
    There was piece in NY Times other day saying Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin were key.

    Biden absolutely has to take Penn in order to get across the threshold.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,126
    edited June 2024
    Ghedebrav said:

    Was this the Arbitor Ian one? If so I thought that was a genuinely excellent distillation of the broader culture war/identitarianism in the specific context of a single interest area.
    Yup. That's the one.

    https://youtu.be/x4oW6CzIsIE
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,261
    Of course, if Farage gets himself into the Commons, it makes it a lot easier for him to cross the floor to the Tories to run as their leader, though I am not sure if the party constitution requires them to have been a member for a period of time before running?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,921

    Worth a read:

    An overview of the proposal to clarify the meaning of sex in the Equality Act.

    https://x.com/michaelpforan/status/1797558913698582579

    I think one of the traps people are falling into is substituting “theory” for Common Law case law - of which there is plenty. All the proposal does is clarify what applies where - and clarity extends protections to both women and trans people.
    The protection it extends to trans people is to protect them from being treated as the opposite sex. A minor point admittedly, but it bears mentioning, 😀
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616
    edited June 2024
    In their current mood I wouldn't rule out the Cons making a pact with Reform. It will (continue to) horrify many erstwhile Cons voters but who's to say that it wouldn't redefine UK politics with a centre right party (Lab) and a properly right party (Cons/Reform).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,820

    I learned only today that grapefruit juice doubles the effects of Viagra.
    It interferes with drug metabolising enzymes in the intestine and liver (and the effects can last for 24hrs or so), which means much higher bioavailability for a given drug dosage.
    So it can seriously change the effective dosage of a large number of different drugs (occasionally fatally).

    (It can also reduce bioavailability for 'pro-drugs' which only become effective via metabolism.)
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,866
    Scott_xP said:

    @christopherhope
    NEW
    A Farage sized stone has just dropped into the becalmed election pond on Monday morning.
    Very senior figures in Reform UK have been blindsided by Nigel Farage's statement at 4pm.
    One friend of Farage tells me it will either be an electoral pact with the Tories (unlikely) or an about-turn on standing at the electionn (more likely).
    The deadline for nominations is imminent.
    Farage himself is not answering his phone. Watch the drama play out at 4pm on
    @GBNEWS
    .

    If it's the latter, I almost feel sorry for Sunak.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,203

    Peerage for the Nige, some sort of merger in the new world order, who knows?
    Maybe Tice will be offered up to do balloon animals at Tory MPs kids parties
    Maybe he's been offered Trumps Veep slot....
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616
    edited June 2024
    If the answer to the question Cui Bono has to be Nigel Farage then I would imagine nothing short of a senior position in the Cons party with a safe (!) seat to boot would be acceptable.

    Nige must look back on the last two decades of his unprecedented electoral success and wonder what he could do to top it. Standing for election in Fuckborough can surely not come close to defining the political destiny of a country to the extent that he was able to in 2016.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,274

    LOL Is that why he failed SEVEN times to get elected to Westminster?
    We Brexited because of Farage. He’s probably the most consequential British politician since thatcher. You may despise him and abhor his views - fair enough - but these claims he is some kind of failure are absurd. Its like the twattish claim upthread that Trump is a bad businessman and bad politician

    That’s Trump, the billionaire businessman who became the most powerful politician in the world
  • Haven't we form with Reform 'emergency announcements' turning out to be solely aimed at getting a bit of publicity while announcing nothing of interest? I'd guess an immigration spiel as an uninformed guess.

    Also - as with 2019 - any decision to pull out would not be followed by many of their candidates. These folk are true believers and were mostly self-funding their campaigns anyway. To pull out now would be the end of Reform UK
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,921
    ydoethur said:

    He looked ghastly at that post-trial press conference. Like a more emaciated version of Alec Douglas-Home.
    @Leon probably knows more goss on this than me, but I think he's on Ozempic. And rapid weight loss doesn't suit him.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,939
    edited June 2024
    Chris said:

    If it's the latter, I almost feel sorry for Sunak.
    I think the former is worse. The mighty Conservatives, the natural party of government, forced into a pact with Nigel Farage and a party with zero seats.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,000
    HYUFD said:

    ABC news Biden and Trump favourability poll

    Biden Favourable 32% Unfavourable 54%

    Trump Favourable 31% Unfavourable 56%

    Biden must have said some extra prayers in the GOP primary as if Haley had been his opponent not Trump he would likely be toast!

    https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/

    As a patriot I suspect Biden would much prefer having a 20% chance to win against Haley than a 50% chance to win against Trump.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,939
    edited June 2024
    Lord Farage as Home Secretary. I was joking about it last time...
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,616
    TOPPING said:

    If the answer to the question Cui Bono has to be Nigel Farage then I would imagine nothing short of a senior position in the Cons party with a safe (!) seat to boot would be acceptable.

    Nige must look back on the last two decades of his unprecedented electoral success and wonder what he could do to top it. Standing for election in Fuckborough can surely not come close to defining the political destiny of a country to the extent that he was able to in 2016.

    I see that Leon and I are of rare accord on this one. Anyone who thinks Farage is not one of the most successful or effective politicians of our age has no right to be commenting on PB.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,155
    Eabhal said:

    I think the former is worse. The mighty Conservatives, the natural party of government, forced into a pact with Nigel Farage and a party with zero seats.
    They have form - see 2019.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,651
    148grss said:

    Making it practically easier to get a GRC seems to go against the whole "we know what a woman is and she can't have a penis", when the point of a GRC is that some people with a penis can get legal recognition as being a woman.

    And I'm not dismissing the changes to the EA based on whose proposing them - I'm dismissing them because it's a bad idea. Because there is no "biological" definition of sex that will protect all cis men and women and only exclude trans people because there are lots of variations of sex characteristics within individuals. I know that those who are anti trans now like to fall back to "a woman is someone who produces large gametes" but if, in law, that were to be the definition of woman that would mean any time a woman wants to enforce her rights under those laws she would need to prove she does produce large gametes, with the testing that is required to back that up. Whereas under the social understanding of sex and gender it is much easier for any woman, trans or cis, to assert their rights when discriminated against.
    Law is not a perfect thing. There is no legal definition that meets every single case that it is meant to encompass. However, there are plenty of definitions of biological sex that will protect the fast majority of women. Case law can iron out any small exceptions.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,126
    edited June 2024
    EPG said:

    Albeit, social majorities acting in the name of unity and homogeneity have done the same, and worse. The twentieth century was riddled with atrocities done by those with that mindset. Treating people well seems like a better guideline than trying to live without any social identity, and a lot more strategically sustainable in case the bad guys really are trying to destroy your group.
    Yeah. Clearly I can't get a perfect account of my nuanced position across in this format, and a balance between the two extremes is warranted. There have definitely been some genuinely marginalised minority groups that have benefited a lot from the internet's ability to allow people with niche interests and minority identities to find each other.

    But if everyone's identity reduces down only to which minority identity groups they are a member of (me = cyclist, aspie, knitter, mathmo, wargamer, geek, ecosocialist, hiker), and no shared identity on a larger scale (me = English, British, Democrat, European, Human) then I think we have a serious problem.

    In particular, if a lot of those minority identity groups have no history of meaningful victimisation, but create a feeling of victimisation through the online expression of that identity group, which is particularly the case with geek fandom, and, say, drivers.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,011
    Chris said:

    If it's the latter, I almost feel sorry for Sunak.
    Only a few days ago:


    Isabel Oakeshott
    @IsabelOakeshott
    ·
    May 29
    Richard Tice is Leader of @reformparty_uk and there won’t be any deals with the Tory party. End of.

    https://x.com/IsabelOakeshott
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,049

    They have form - see 2019.
    Not as much as Trump (34 counts).
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,939

    They have form - see 2019.
    That was unilateral, no?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,274
    sarissa said:

    Probably too late, but wasn't Stalin a fan of Moldavan wine? Im guessing there is a personal connection here - first harvest presentation?
    Ooh. Well done for having a guess! And not bad!

    It is indeed associated with a significant political
    figure. Remember it was found on a train….
This discussion has been closed.