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I think the Tories would be happy with these MRPs all things considered – politicalbetting.com

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  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    geoffw said:

    The Lost Generation is 1883 to 1900. I think you mean my Silent Generation, no?

    Thank you, yes I did.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,955

    Betting post

    Well I've bet on Con seats to be between 150-250 at 4/1 which doesn't feel too bad to me.

    (Sensible) comments welcome.

    What was the logic behind that decision please?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Betting post

    Well I've bet on Con seats to be between 150-250 at 4/1 which doesn't feel too bad to me.

    (Sensible) comments welcome.

    Good value. Slightly overperforming YG has to be more likely than 4s
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127
    geoffw said:

    The Lost Generation is 1883 to 1900. I think you mean my Silent Generation, no?

    Angela Rayner is the very back end of Gen X according to that chart.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003
    Carnyx said:

    TBF to the gent, wasn't he a commodities trader for some years?
    He can certainly outshine the chuckle brothers by a mile
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    johnt said:

    I have to wonder how much longer Sunak will carry on going on TV and parroting the line ‘anything but a vote for me is a vote for Starmer’. It is pretty clear that not many people consider he has a hope of winning so it sounds desperate and hollow.

    Most people on here know that because of polls etc . You will be surprised at the level of ignorance there is in the general public about politics .
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,691
    Roger said:

    Interesting you should talk about a Micky Mouse degree. They interviewed someone from Bristol about their BA course in Circus Arts.

    I loved the idea!

    We can't all be ballroom dancers
    They take this stuff more seriously in France. My neighbour over there had a clowning degree having studied under the great someone or other at some elite clowning academy.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131

    Most people on here know that because of polls etc . You will be surprised at the level of ignorance there is in the general public about politics .
    Most of the public struggle to name ministers / shadow ministers.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,691
    IanB2 said:

    I see one of their candidates contested the same seat for UKIP a few elections back, which is an interesting journey.
    Not much of a journey at all, judging by Galloway’s policy positions on 99% of topics.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003

    Shogun is the best tv series I have seen this year.

    Just a good story, and there is actual unpredictable danger of leading characters. Nobody is safe.

    And if "woke" stuff in modern tv / film (looks at Leon) something that really grinds your gears, there is none. No needless race or gender swapping characters, no Mary Sue girl bossing, no box ticking the character list to ensure it fits the awarding bodies criteria.

    Where as Assassin Creed video game seems to have walked straight into this minefield with their future game set in a similar time period.

    what channel /site is it on
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192

    Talk
    @TalkTV
    ·
    47m
    Talk’s international editor Isabel Oakeshott says Richard Tice “wanted” to be replaced by Nigel Farage as leader of Reform UK.

    I don’t believe that for one second
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    edited June 2024
    I missed the film of the Leeanderthal Man and Nigel Farage in the charabanc at (I think) the Rifle Volunteer in Ashfield.

    Interesting pub to choose - chemical beer only if my info is still accurate, and noisy, middle-aged, bald customer base.

    In Ashfield Labour still on at 8-13 ->2-5, Reform have come in slightly to 3-1 ish. Ashfield Independents at about the same on 9-2. Tories out at 20-1 in a range of 10-1 to 33-1.

    Where's the value - not sure but perhaps on the lay side?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited June 2024
    malcolmg said:

    what channel /site is it on
    Disney+ (but it was made by FX who obviously made great shows like Justified, Sons of Anarchy, The Shield). Its not like most of the Disney+ shitfest.
  • DoubleCarpetDoubleCarpet Posts: 930
    viewcode said:

    What was the logic behind that decision please?
    Ok so can't see them getting >250, seat bands were in 50s on BF and I think historically (2017 aside) polls have understated Con.

    Obv today's Farage news may have blown a hole in the thinking but hey ho.

    Apart from UK 2017, there are very few elecs I can think of anywhere with the centre-right coming in below opinion polls, unlike say the Greens.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,836

    Multilateral disarmament was never a serious idea.

    Its game theory.

    If everyone else disarms and you don't, then you can defeat everyone else.
    If you disarm and others don't, then you can be defeated.

    So there is no rational reason to disarm. Especially for rogue states that don't give a shit about what you think about that. And we need to be ready to defend ourselves from those rogue states.
    Multilateral, verified, disarmed worked. For nuclear weapons. As Herman Kahn predicted*.

    When it became clear that the USSR had ignored the Biological Weapons treaty, nothing was done. If the Americans had said “OK, we are going to put a full load of MIRVs back on the missiles, and double conventional forces in Europe”, then disarmament would have survived.

    But US Presidents were too busy trying to “build a relationship with Russia”. And then found there were no votes in the Senate for further treaties.

    *American nuclear strategy from the late 60s to the end of the Cold War was cribbed directly from Kahn. Given that “On Thermonuclear War” is simply a copy of the lecturers and briefings he gave at the Pentagon…
  • Older liberals equating opposition to immigration with racism is quite self-serving because their financial interests are served by importing workers, but the financial interests of the young are different.

    I don't think you're right on the history either. There was post-war immigration to France, Germany, the Netherlands, etc, as well. What was unique about the UK was the fairly long period from the late 1960s to the late 1990s when net migration was around zero and it became a fringe issue.
    As much as you try to blame the younger generations problems on migration, that is bullshit. Our population is growing at a very slow rate compared to historical norms.

    The problem is the lack of construction, not migration.

    Especially since even without migration we'd still need construction that we aren't getting anyway.

    A family of 4 moving into the country only need one house between them. 6 grandchildren growing up and becoming adults require 6 houses between them.

    In the past decade our over 50s population has grown (net) by more than net migration. That's the real main reason why we need so many more houses
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,973
    DM_Andy said:


    Angela Rayner is the very back end of Gen X according to that chart.
    Do you imply she's already a great grandmother?

  • novanova Posts: 748

    None of the indies or workers are being properly taken into account despite the Locals and mayoralties. Adjust expectations according to your own research
    Curiously you can bet on the constituency on Betfair, but no sign of Galloway there either.

    https://www.betfair.com/exchange/plus/politics/market/1.229310778
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,003

    Disney+ (but it was made by FX who obviously made great shows like Justified, Sons of Anarchy, The Shield). Its not like most of the Disney+ shitfest.
    Cheers
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195

    EATF funding rounds encouraged councils to go big, quickly. It's a similar story in Oxford - it would have caused much less heartache to put in LTNs one-by-one, as they historically have been, rather than slapping them all down in a couple of tranches.

    There was a food festival on Magdalen Road, the achingly trendy East Oxford street with an LTN, last weekend. The anti-LTN party had a stall. At a festival that was only made possible by an LTN.
    My favourite LTN story from Oxford was the prominent anti-LTN campaigner who whines about not being able to get anywhere, and had a sidestreet next to his restaurant closed off so that people can sit outside.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Worth noting the MRPs VI from YG and MiC are much more in line with the adjuster averages than the nowcaster averages. As were previous YG MRPs..... let's see what the likes of Survation etc find in MRPs.
    I think focaldata have an MRP tomorrow, a normal poll if not
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,955

    Ok so can't see them getting >250, seat bands were in 50s on BF and I think historically (2017 aside) polls have understated Con.

    Obv today's Farage news may have blown a hole in the thinking but hey ho.

    Apart from UK 2017, there are very few elecs I can think of anywhere with the centre-right coming in below opinion polls, unlike say the Greens.
    So you took the poll range 50-150, added a 100 to allow for underestimation, so 150-250.

    Hmm

    Yeah, that's plausible. Good luck
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008

    CON 180 LAB 379 on a 33-39 split is quite plausible cos we know the swing will be greater in the marginals.

    In 1997 it was CON 165 LAB 419 on a 11% LAB lead for this reason.
    But if the Reform unwind and Con Swingback up to 33 doesn’t happen, and Labour do poll as high as 43% - they DEFINITELY won’t poll higher than that - 25-43 with the surgical tactical voting could take it way below 180 for Conservatives. 🫣

    They should have dumped Rishi. He shouldn’t even be in politics. He wasn’t even any good at Chancellor. He’s the psychology of someone no one has ever said “no you Can’t have that” to his entire life. It’s his decision making, and the decision making of those he has surrounded himself with, that can needlessly cost Conservatives 100 or More seats!
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,846
    Conservative PEB has an upside down Union Flag at 2'20" and more CGI face removal than last week's Doctor Who
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zynd7r8Owpc&t=140s
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    Scott_xP said:

    Instead of watching the news this evening, i watch the TTOI episode when they called the Snappy Lec.

    Much more entertaining, with similar results

    Snappy Lec now? FFS.

    Where has this horrible construction come from? It’s bloody awful.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    malcolmg said:

    Cheers
    It based on a book that is a fictionalised set of stories of a real guy. The actual real story is crazier than the fiction.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Adams_(pilot)
  • FeersumEnjineeyaFeersumEnjineeya Posts: 4,728
    edited June 2024
    sarissa said:

    The Expanse is a favourite of mine if you want hard sci-fi. I’m also enjoying Dark Matter.
    Dark Matter is a great sci-fi read, albeit with a misleading title. I've not seen the TV series yet but looking forward to doing so.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    ToryJim said:

    I don’t believe that for one second
    If it's Isabel Oakeshott the punctilious journalist (cough, choke, splutter) then that's a fair assumption.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331
    nova said:

    Curiously you can bet on the constituency on Betfair, but no sign of Galloway there either.

    https://www.betfair.com/exchange/plus/politics/market/1.229310778
    I expect it to go back to Labour. Suspect GG won't bother campaigning - he only sees it as worth it if the TV cameras are on him.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008

    Snappy Lec now? FFS.

    Where has this horrible construction come from? It’s bloody awful.
    You. When you started answering to Anabobs.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    nova said:

    Curiously you can bet on the constituency on Betfair, but no sign of Galloway there either.

    https://www.betfair.com/exchange/plus/politics/market/1.229310778
    Sitting MP not on the betting. Tsk
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,226
    edited June 2024
    Off topic: Those interested in Boeing's failures may want to read a long article in yesterday's Seattle Times, by Dominic Gates, who has been covering Boeing approximately forever. (And well, as far as I can tell.) Gates has much from a senior quality control engineer, Martin Bickeboller, who is quitting (and suing Boeing). In his first 27 years with the company, the engineer's lawyer says his devotion to safety never conflicted with his loyalty to Boeing, but then things changed, gradually.

    (No link, since I have the dead tree version.)
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited June 2024

    Snappy Lec now? FFS.

    Where has this horrible construction come from? It’s bloody awful.
    You are obviously not down with the kids. Everything has to be shortened in this way. You can't just say full words anymore.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,744

    Snappy Lec now? FFS.

    Where has this horrible construction come from? It’s bloody awful.
    Chill. Time to go on your holibobs.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited June 2024
    viewcode said:

    So you took the poll range 50-150, added a 100 to allow for underestimation, so 150-250.

    Hmm

    Yeah, that's plausible. Good luck
    The MRP poll range is 66 to 180, today's average 160. On that basis 4/1 is cracking value
  • Multilateral, verified, disarmed worked. For nuclear weapons. As Herman Kahn predicted*.

    When it became clear that the USSR had ignored the Biological Weapons treaty, nothing was done. If the Americans had said “OK, we are going to put a full load of MIRVs back on the missiles, and double conventional forces in Europe”, then disarmament would have survived.

    But US Presidents were too busy trying to “build a relationship with Russia”. And then found there were no votes in the Senate for further treaties.

    *American nuclear strategy from the late 60s to the end of the Cold War was cribbed directly from Kahn. Given that “On Thermonuclear War” is simply a copy of the lecturers and briefings he gave at the Pentagon…
    I see no evidence any form of multilateral disarmament worked. The USSR and USA both remained armed to the back teeth with enough nukes to annihilate the world regardless of any form of disarmament.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,973

    Conservative PEB has an upside down Union Flag at 2'20" and more CGI face removal than last week's Doctor Who
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zynd7r8Owpc&t=140s

    Oh dear, it's a signal of distress isn't it?

  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127
    geoffw said:

    Do you imply she's already a great grandmother?

    Nope, I was pointing out that there are lots of Boomers with great grandkids now as some of even the youngest Gen X have grandkids.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    You are obviously not down with the kids. Everything has to be shortened in this way. You can't just say full words anymore.
    As an idiom 'down with' is about as likely to be used by today's young as 'forsooth'.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Good value. Slightly overperforming YG has to be more likely than 4s
    Agreed. Decent bet IMO. Might snaffle some.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    I expect it to go back to Labour. Suspect GG won't bother campaigning - he only sees it as worth it if the TV cameras are on him.
    He launched his campaign there Saturday evening.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Chill. Time to go on your holibobs.
    AAAAAARGH.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131

    As an idiom 'down with' is about as likely to be used by today's young as 'forsooth'.
    And why I said it.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,331

    He launched his campaign there Saturday evening.
    Remains to be seen how much effort he puts in.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    How low the Tories have sunk..... shitting themselves about a man who has failed to be elected 7 times and is not popular in polling with voters to any eye catching extent. Utter Clowns.

    He's about 25 points more popular with their own voters than Sunak!
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008
    malcolmg said:

    what channel /site is it on
    Instead of being told from the Western perspective, it’s updated to be told from the Japanese perspective, and full of top Japanese acting talent. This puts the emphasis on the political manoeuvres rather than “Englishman abroad” hokum.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Conservative PEB has an upside down Union Flag at 2'20" and more CGI face removal than last week's Doctor Who
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zynd7r8Owpc&t=140s

    Today we have had:

    • Sunny’s Henley launch being disrupted by the Liberals on a mucky boat

    • An upside down union flag

    • Michael Green calling and then hanging up live on Sophy Ridge

    What will tomorrow bring?!?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Remains to be seen how much effort he puts in.
    He's aiming for at minimum 200,000 votes across the UK to get State support levels for the WPB, the WPB crowdfunder is running at about 34% of the 100 grand target and he's standing about 350 candidates.
    He will make the effort.
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    MattW said:

    I missed the film of the Leeanderthal Man and Nigel Farage in the charabanc at (I think) the Rifle Volunteer in Ashfield.

    Interesting pub to choose - chemical beer only if my info is still accurate, and noisy, middle-aged, bald customer base.

    In Ashfield Labour still on at 8-13 ->2-5, Reform have come in slightly to 3-1 ish. Ashfield Independents at about the same on 9-2. Tories out at 20-1 in a range of 10-1 to 33-1.

    Where's the value - not sure but perhaps on the lay side?

    I think Reform might win that - The local indie has a good base but he is controversial in some eyes and also boundary changes never are good for indies who need to build some new wards up from scratch .Indie vote to swing to reform which might let reform win
  • @RestisPolitics / JLP poll, 31st May-2nd June

    *Labour lead up to 17 points*

    Change on last week in brackets

    LAB: 43% (+3)
    CON: 26% (-2)
    REF: 12% (-)
    LDEM: 11% (+1)
    GRN: 3% (-2)

    Shocking that last week’s poll was an outlier.

    “Two main reasons:

    1. More voters are naming Rishi Sunak as a reason they have changed their mind, and he is coming more to the surface as a hesitation amongst voters for voting Tory. In the words of one voter, they changed their mind because of “what people have been saying about rishi all over social media”

    2. National Service: it led to a more negative perception of the Conservatives with all voters, with 32% saying it had a more negative impact on their view than a positive one (23%). It was only *net neutral* for those Tories who now say they don’t know, pushed switchers further to Labour, and only marginally helped with Con-to-Reform switchers”

    The Tories are doomed. And PB was right about National Service.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,531

    Today we have had:

    • Sunny’s Henley launch being disrupted by the Liberals on a mucky boat

    • An upside down union flag

    • Michael Green calling and then hanging up live on Sophy Ridge

    What will tomorrow bring?!?
    Labour should take the day off tomorrow

    Netflix and chill...
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited June 2024

    Instead of being told from the Western perspective, it’s updated to be told from the Japanese perspective, and full of top Japanese acting talent. This puts the emphasis on the political manoeuvres rather than “Englishman abroad” hokum.
    I thought it was great that 90% of it is in Japanese. It would have been so much easier for American market just to do the classic everybody speaks English (even when they know they are conversing in another language) most of the time.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,973
    edited June 2024
    DM_Andy said:


    Nope, I was pointing out that there are lots of Boomers with great grandkids now as some of even the youngest Gen X have grandkids.
    But she's not a Boomer, she's Generation X (just! almost Generation Y)

    Edit - ah, ok, I now see what you're saying
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,778

    The MRP poll range is 66 to 180, today's average 160. On that basis 4/1 is cracking value
    151-200 Con seat losses covers 166 to 215 at 6.4 on Betfair. Worth a punt. 29 on 101-150 losses too.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,660
    Farage standing is Good News for the Liberal Democrats
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,564

    Instead of being told from the Western perspective, it’s updated to be told from the Japanese perspective, and full of top Japanese acting talent. This puts the emphasis on the political manoeuvres rather than “Englishman abroad” hokum.
    Adds you to the post-election 'Farage special list'. As if other countries have agency without a stout yeoman quaffing a pint and gurning for a camera.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    Well that was a boring half of football.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,898
    How to stop Farage in full flow.
    https://x.com/DUPleader/status/1797662088627994889/

    UK broadcasters should take note.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Goodwins loser polling says
    Exclusive polling from People Polling for GB News:
    Labour - 46 per cent
    Conservatives - 22 per cent
    Reform - 10 per cent
    Liberal Democrats - 8 per cent
    Green - 8 per cent
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,813
    spudgfsh said:

    looking into the detail there's a lot of seats which they refer to as 'tossup':(less than 5%)

    Safe Likely Lean Tossup
    Labour 215 113 44 50
    Conservatives 0 38 40 62
    Lib Dems 12 14 10 12
    Green 0 2 0 0
    Plaid 1 1 0 0
    SNP 0 6 4 7

    if they lost most of the tossup seats they could be in a similar position to the other one.
    That table accords with my assessment: Conservatives should probably win 40 seats or more, except in the direst circumstances. Maybe 120 further seats are statistical toss ups on current polling.

    In summary, the Conservatives could easily get 40 seats if the polling goes further against them even slightly. The trend is still negative. Note they will lose their previously safest seats to the Lib Dems as well as to Labour in that situation.

    I would also say 160 seats is toppy on current polling. On a win some, lose some basis I would expect a lower number than that
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,431

    Well that was a boring half of football.

    What did you expect? Pre tournament football is ALWAYS pointless. Players trying to avoid injury for the most part. Manager has picked the team for the first game already.
  • DoubleCarpetDoubleCarpet Posts: 930
    edited June 2024
    India results - tomorrow

    Ok so in among the UK campaign and a busy run of int'l elecs (SA & Mex done, Belgium & Euros on Sun), tomorrow sees the vote count in India, likely to be very fast if 2014/19 are anything to go by, with electronic counting.

    Looks like counting starts 8am local time (3.30 UK) so I will be attempting to get up early, watch the first few hours then go into work :smiley:

    Obv almost certainly a 3rd Modi term, barring an epic polling failure.

    Links:

    https://www.ndtv.com/livetv-ndtv24x7

    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6RJ7-PaXg6TIH2BzZfTV7w

    https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/elections/results

    Thanks,

    DC
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited June 2024
    Seems the grown ups are having an evening off editing the BBC News front page. Major stories on meme stocks, Sidemen reality tv shows and a raisin found up a toddlers nose. Its like reading the Sun.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,564

    Dark Matter is a great sci-fi read, albeit with a misleading title. I've not seen the TV series yet but looking forward to doing so.
    I've not read the Dark Matter book, but am enjoying the series and - rather in reverse - now looking forward to the book.

    (There is also an older Canadian sci-fi series called 'Dark Matter' which is well worth a go if you're after a bit more light-hearted character-driven scifi. Takes a couple of episodes to find it's feet - but then it's really quite enjoyable)
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,195
    edited June 2024
    TimS said:

    They take this stuff more seriously in France. My neighbour over there had a clowning degree having studied under the great someone or other at some elite clowning academy.
    Not sure on that about Circus Skills being Mickey Mouse - we have a big arts spectaculars scene here which that feeds into, a lot of films made etc.

    Even the stuff we were talking about the other day on eg wake boarding are adjacent physical skills.

    When I lived in Chiswick I knew someone who had married a reasonably famous ballerina by dint of being on the stage staff at the Royal Ballet; I watched her sance Swan Lake at the Royal Albert Hall as a guest. The sort of thing that generally does not happen in Ashfield or Bolsover !
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,612

    India results - tomorrow

    Ok so in among the UK campaign and a busy run of int'l elecs (SA & Mex done, Belgium & Euros on Sun), tomorrow sees the vote count in India, likely to be very fast if 2014/19 are anything to go by, with electronic counting.

    Looks like counting starts 8am local time (3.30 UK) so I will be attempting to get up early, watch the first few hours then go into work :smiley:

    Obv almost certainly a 3rd Modi term, barring an epic polling failure.

    Links:

    https://www.ndtv.com/livetv-ndtv24x7

    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6RJ7-PaXg6TIH2BzZfTV7w

    https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/elections/results

    Thanks,

    DC

    It would need to be an epic vote harvesting failure, as well as polling failure.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,531
    @robfordmancs

    The definition of madness is doing the same thing over and over expecting different results.

    “Go hard right and squeeze Reform” failed before the campaign, it failed at the start of the campaign, so what’s the next move…?

    “Go hard right and squeeze Reform”. 🙄

    @alexwickham

    Exclusive: Rishi Sunak’s aides are considering hardening the Tory party’s position on the ECHR, as Nigel Farage plunged their campaign into crisis

    — senior party aides have sounded out moderate ministers on whether they could back a tougher stance
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Chameleon said:

    He's about 25 points more popular with their own voters than Sunak!
    Nah, not amongst current VI
    He's more popular with 2019 Tories as a whole though
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,481

    As much as you try to blame the younger generations problems on migration, that is bullshit. Our population is growing at a very slow rate compared to historical norms.

    The problem is the lack of construction, not migration.

    Especially since even without migration we'd still need construction that we aren't getting anyway.

    A family of 4 moving into the country only need one house between them. 6 grandchildren growing up and becoming adults require 6 houses between them.

    In the past decade our over 50s population has grown (net) by more than net migration. That's the real main reason why we need so many more houses
    Are you arguing that with a stable national population, we would still need to increase the number of houses exponentially because if you look at an individual nuclear family, there are more grandkids than kids?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008

    It based on a book that is a fictionalised set of stories of a real guy. The actual real story is crazier than the fiction.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Adams_(pilot)
    I recently watched a 2012 Russian adaptation of Bulgakov White Guard, on Prime, it managed the complexities of the civil war politics very well.

    In the first episode the Hetmen in Kiev lose the support of the Germans, so call up the Ukrainian Nationalist for support because the Ukrainian Socialists are closing in. After that it gets messy.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,170

    Today we have had:

    • Sunny’s Henley launch being disrupted by the Liberals on a mucky boat

    • An upside down union flag

    • Michael Green calling and then hanging up live on Sophy Ridge

    What will tomorrow bring?!?
    The debate.

    Which will probably be a nothingburger, but just might see a Prime Minister falling apart live on national TV.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,131
    edited June 2024
    When they hired the presenters for football, i don't think they thought about the height differences..
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited June 2024
    The pollsters seem to be converging either side of 20, people polling at 24 point lead is slightly better than before the election for Sunak/Con and the Tories 'highest' (22, lol) with them since December
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,778

    I recently watched a 2012 Russian adaptation of Bulgakov White Guard, on Prime, it managed the complexities of the civil war politics very well.

    In the first episode the Hetmen in Kiev lose the support of the Germans, so call up the Ukrainian Nationalist for support because the Ukrainian Socialists are closing in. After that it gets messy.
    That sounds interesting. What is it called?
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,564
    Nigelb said:

    How to stop Farage in full flow.
    https://x.com/DUPleader/status/1797662088627994889/

    UK broadcasters should take note.

    I wish our local media had even half her balls.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,778

    Are you arguing that with a stable national population, we would still need to increase the number of houses exponentially because if you look at an individual nuclear family, there are more grandkids than kids?
    Not at current fertility rates.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,370

    (((Dan Hodges)))
    @DPJHodges
    ·
    23m
    Tory campaign is on the brink of complete collapse tonight.

    I wonder whether the Tory panic will do them more damage than Farage returning will!
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,744
    edited June 2024
    I'm not so sure that, even after today's frenetic headlines, Reform will have much of an impact come polling day. They're essentially a one-man band supplemented by Lee Anderson. Tice has made no headway, personally, at all. What else have they got? Ann Widdecombe? Which also leads me to suggest that Reform is very much a 'laddish' party that is likely to have limited appeal to women voters (though I confess I haven't seen any male/female breakdown of support for Reform - it's just a gut feeling).
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,836

    I thought it was great that 90% of it is in Japanese. It would have been so much easier for American market just to do the classic everybody speaks English (even when they know they are conversing in another language) most of the time.
    The original series practically taught the viewers Japanese - they made a big deal out of his slow learning of the language and culture.

    They used the top Japanese talent of the day as well.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    I wonder whether the Tory panic will do them more damage than Farage returning will!
    It's quite pathetic. They deserve to get hammered. Grow a spine lads
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,232
    Foxy said:

    That sounds interesting. What is it called?
    White Guard. Banned in Ukraine as M. A. Bulgakov was notoriously Ukro-skeptical.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,612

    I'm not so sure that, even after today's frenetic headlines, Reform will have much of an impact come polling day. They're essentially a one-man band supplemented by Lee Anderson. Tice has made no headway, personally, at all. What else have they got? Ann Widdecombe? Which also leads me to suggest that Reform is very much a 'laddish' party that is likely to have limited appeal to women voters (though I confess I haven't seen any male/female breakdown of support for Reform - it's just a gut feeling).

    Is the Moggster's sister standing for the ReFukkers? Against her bro would be entertaining.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,236

    Are you arguing that with a stable national population, we would still need to increase the number of houses exponentially because if you look at an individual nuclear family, there are more grandkids than kids?
    A lot of the increase in housing demand post WW2 has been driven by changes in lifestyle separate to any immigration issues. People mrrying later, divorce, kids wanting independence and the growth in second home ownership have all had a substantial impact on housing demand.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    Nah, not amongst current VI
    He's more popular with 2019 Tories as a whole though
    It's among current voters afaik: https://x.com/BritainElects/status/1797649013371793481
  • Are you arguing that with a stable national population, we would still need to increase the number of houses exponentially because if you look at an individual nuclear family, there are more grandkids than kids?
    I am arguing that with a stable national population we would still need to increase the number of houses dramatically because if you look at national demographics our demographics are changing, yes.

    Children typically live with their parents. Parents typically live with their children. (Great-) Grandparents typically don't live with either.

    Even if our population numbers are stable, our demographics are not. People are living longer, we have more alive grandparents and great grandparents than ever before who are living in a house without any young people with them.

    We need massive construction because of demographics alone.
  • MRP pollsters must be mildly annoyed to have dropped their polls on a day when there is some news that has genuine potential to shift the dynamic (not the phony so-called "gamechangers" we've had to date).

    I'd had a strong assumption RefUK would fall away, but this makes it interesting and has potential to split the right wing vote in a catastrophic way for Sunak.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    Goodwins loser polling says
    Exclusive polling from People Polling for GB News:
    Labour - 46 per cent
    Conservatives - 22 per cent
    Reform - 10 per cent
    Liberal Democrats - 8 per cent
    Green - 8 per cent

    Looks pretty much like the other polls despite the fact it’s from Loser Goodwin.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,271
    Chameleon said:

    He's about 25 points more popular with their own voters than Sunak!
    Is that true?
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127
    edited June 2024

    Is the Moggster's sister standing for the ReFukkers? Against her bro would be entertaining.
    Annie's back in the Tory fold now, part of Truss's PopCon faction.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,744

    Is the Moggster's sister standing for the ReFukkers? Against her bro would be entertaining.
    No. Apparently, Annunziata is the Communications Chief for the PopCons, the weirdo bunch including her brother and other right-wing luminaries like David Frost.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,778

    I am arguing that with a stable national population we would still need to increase the number of houses dramatically because if you look at national demographics our demographics are changing, yes.

    Children typically live with their parents. Parents typically live with their children. (Great-) Grandparents typically don't live with either.

    Even if our population numbers are stable, our demographics are not. People are living longer, we have more alive grandparents and great grandparents than ever before who are living in a house without any young people with them.

    We need massive construction because of demographics alone.
    Plus increasing fragmentation of households.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    DM_Andy said:

    Dan Hodges just goes for the laziest take possible. I think I trust the political judgement of everyone on PB over Hodges' latest bandwagon tweets.

    He’s overly dramatic . We’ve still got the manifestos to come and there’s a month to go . A lot can happen.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,612

    I am arguing that with a stable national population we would still need to increase the number of houses dramatically because if you look at national demographics our demographics are changing, yes.

    Children typically live with their parents. Parents typically live with their children. (Great-) Grandparents typically don't live with either.

    Even if our population numbers are stable, our demographics are not. People are living longer, we have more alive grandparents and great grandparents than ever before who are living in a house without any young people with them.

    We need massive construction because of demographics alone.
    Sounds like what we need is sheltered accommodation and care homes.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,429

    Farage standing is Good News for the Liberal Democrats

    I assume so
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,531
    nico679 said:

    He’s overly dramatic . We’ve still got the manifestos to come and there’s a month to go . A lot can happen.
    All of it bad for the Tories...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,778

    I'm not so sure that, even after today's frenetic headlines, Reform will have much of an impact come polling day. They're essentially a one-man band supplemented by Lee Anderson. Tice has made no headway, personally, at all. What else have they got? Ann Widdecombe? Which also leads me to suggest that Reform is very much a 'laddish' party that is likely to have limited appeal to women voters (though I confess I haven't seen any male/female breakdown of support for Reform - it's just a gut feeling).

    You are correct. The party cross tabs are definitely older males obsessed with immigrants and genitals. Think @Leon.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,836

    I am arguing that with a stable national population we would still need to increase the number of houses dramatically because if you look at national demographics our demographics are changing, yes.

    Children typically live with their parents. Parents typically live with their children. (Great-) Grandparents typically don't live with either.

    Even if our population numbers are stable, our demographics are not. People are living longer, we have more alive grandparents and great grandparents than ever before who are living in a house without any young people with them.

    We need massive construction because of demographics alone.
    It’s also stupid to talk of “blaming” immigrants for needing housing.

    If you want net immigration, you need somewhere for them to sleep. Somewhere to eat. Something to eat. Hospitals, schools…

    To take the line that it’s about blame is to deny rational planning. Life is like that - if you want X, then you need to do Y.
  • et tu JL Partners
  • A lot of the increase in housing demand post WW2 has been driven by changes in lifestyle separate to any immigration issues. People mrrying later, divorce, kids wanting independence and the growth in second home ownership have all had a substantial impact on housing demand.
    They all play a role but people living longer than they did in the past absolutely dwarfs all of that.

    Either way though, we need massively more houses which can only be done with a huge increase in construction. Even if there's no migration.
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