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What’s tonight’s debate going to this betting market? – politicalbetting.com

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  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647
    Eabhal said:

    Not sure. If the guy has a four grand bike he'll be onto a lawyer asap I'm afraid. Probably has it included as part of his insurance.

    FWIW, your aunt should be up front with her insurer about it. The driver who hit my partner was not prosecuted by the police due to lack of evidence, but failed to respond to their insurer when my partner's lawyer issued the claim. This has left the driver pretty much uninsurable, which the police considered a decent outcome in the circs.
    Thanks (and thanks all). My aunt is v happy to make amends, even if legally she was in the right (which it seems she wasn't by the comments here).

    My question I suppose was what was the mechanism of the legal/insurance process.

    The cyclist has written to her saying she was in the wrong, right of way, etc, and is going to get the bike assessed and expects to be made good. No one has yet mentioned insurance or police.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,927
    tlg86 said:
    "Assumptions from Special Advisers..."

    And note they cherry picked the higher cost scenario in all of them.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    Scott_xP said:

    @DPJHodges

    One other point. If the Prime Minister has deliberately misrepresented a Civil-Service document for political purposes, surely that must be a potential breach of the civil-service code. He's not just put a slant on their figures. He's wrongly assigned authorship.

    So this is the problem for Sunak. Objectively, the £2,000 is brilliant politics.

    But there is such a Sunak-is-sh*t meme, any policy or line at all, even ones that have near universal support like National Service, turn to dust the moment he touches them.

    Free owls? What about the poor mice you sadistic wee ****
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,920
    eek said:

    Welsh first minister to lose confidence vote as 2 Labour MPs are off sick

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv224x3pmv9o

    He deserves to but will see if he does
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735
    Scott_xP said:

    @DPJHodges

    One other point. If the Prime Minister has deliberately misrepresented a Civil-Service document for political purposes, surely that must be a potential breach of the civil-service code. He's not just put a slant on their figures. He's wrongly assigned authorship.

    How can he breach the civil service code? He’s not a civil servant.
  • I believe being flashed/gestured to carry on with a manoeuvre by another vehicle is a no-no (ie we’re supposed to ignore them), though of course we all do it.
    I'm currently teaching my partner's daughter to drive, and this is a timely reminder why you should never rely on indications by other drivers; always check yourself. I'll be sure to impress that on her when I take her out later today.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,503
    Nigelb said:

    "Assumptions from Special Advisers..."

    And note they cherry picked the higher cost scenario in all of them.
    I find it odd that the civil service has anything to do with sort of thing. Leave it to IFS etc.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,927

    It's also a mental issue.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OODA_loop and all that.

    Making decision and doing things quicker - both on and off the battlefield.

    Take artillery - the British military is still wedded to the idea that you line up your SPGs, set up the tea tent, have a conference, start shooting. They talk about shoot and scoot, but...

    Instead of trying to add armour to the SPG - the Americans got to the stage of speccing an SPG heavier than a tank - the world is moving to systems that can stop, shoot and be gone in seconds.

    Archer - which we are using as an interim, while a Proper System is specced to Unique British Requirements - is much much cheaper, has lower maintenance costs and manning requirements.
    Actually, quite a degree of scepticism is reported regarding "shoot and scoot" in Ukraine, particularly for tube artillery (it makes sense for longer range HIMARS).
    Stuff near the front is particularly vulnerable to FPV drones, and embedding artillery is often preferred (reportedly).
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,284
    Foxy said:

    Private care isn't about emergencies though. Emergency care is pretty much only via the NHS, which is why it matters to us all. A multimillionaire acquaintance of mine found this out when his mum fractured her hip. There is no alternative to the local Emergency Dept in that situation (Bangor in that case).

    If it was a requirement that all elected politicians could only use the NHS and State Schools then I suspect that this would concentrate their minds on improving things for the rest of us quite noticeably!
    Quite right. I was obliged to have BUPA for work but they are useless for anything really serious and for minor things it's only useful for queue jumping or having a more comfortable bed if you need an overnight stay
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    The other lesson from Boeing (and SpaceX) is having engineers at the top table matters. Being run by bean counters obsessed by costs and subsisting on Pentagon subsidies leads eventually to doors falling off.
    Good point. IIRC the SpaceX senior management is almost all engineers, including the maverick chairman.
    The Boeing senior management is almost all accountants and MBAs.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647
    Eabhal said:

    The bike will be the cheap bit, depending on injury, loss of earnings etc
    No injury, he's fine, shouted at her, then apologised for shouting. All terribly decent. Just wondered what the process was and whether the speed was a mitigating factor.

    If I was driving a car and undertook (perfectly legitimately) in stationary traffic because my lane was clear and hit another car turning across me would I say it was their or my fault.

    Thanks again all - only on PB, etc.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,503
    eek said:

    Welsh first minister to lose confidence vote as 2 Labour MPs are off sick

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv224x3pmv9o

    Toothache?
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,116

    You either misunderstood or misinterpreted the original post which was about left wing men’s reaction to women’s request to have the current ambiguity in the Equality Act clarified - dismissing it as trivial compared to other issues women face. Which was the point of the original post. I would recommend Cyclefree’s thread when you have a moment - as you point out there are few women on this group - ever wondered why?
    Yes, and there should be more women. Mrs J would be a valuable contributor - although I don't think you'd like what she has to say on trans issues. ;) I do try to convince her to post, but she values her privacy.

    And I stand by my original comment.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    edited June 2024
    TOPPING said:

    Thanks (and thanks all). My aunt is v happy to make amends, even if legally she was in the right (which it seems she wasn't by the comments here).

    My question I suppose was what was the mechanism of the legal/insurance process.

    The cyclist has written to her saying she was in the wrong, right of way, etc, and is going to get the bike assessed and expects to be made good. No one has yet mentioned insurance or police.
    I would snap that offer up!

    However, I think you have to report the collision to the police if anyone was injured - I think that must be quite likely? And the insurer will likely require that they are informed too.

    I would invoke @MattW at this point
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,858
    Sandpit said:

    Good point. IIRC the SpaceX senior management is almost all engineers, including the maverick chairman.
    The Boeing senior management is almost all accountants and MBAs.
    "When people say I changed the culture of Boeing, that was the intent, so that it’s run like a business rather than a great engineering firm. It is a great engineering firm but people invest in a company because they want to make money."

    Harry Fucking Stonecipher
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    edited June 2024
    TOPPING said:

    No injury, he's fine, shouted at her, then apologised for shouting. All terribly decent. Just wondered what the process was and whether the speed was a mitigating factor.

    If I was driving a car and undertook (perfectly legitimately) in stationary traffic because my lane was clear and hit another car turning across me would I say it was their or my fault.

    Thanks again all - only on PB, etc.
    Your aunt might be very lucky then!

    Just double check that the insurer does not require it reported to them. Better to hear it from her than from a lawyer representing the cyclist.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    🚨 NEW: Tory candidate Tom Hunt is considering defecting to Reform UK after a row with party chairman Richard Holden

    [@Steven_Swinford]

  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,584

    That was unwise in terms of the cyclist's own safety, but it's not the same as being at fault. Ultimately, the driver cut across traffic which had priority in circumstances where they saw a friendly but wrong hand gesture, but couldn't actually see whether or not there was traffic on the cycle lane they were cutting across.
    Yeah, that's my instinct too. Devil is in the detail though. Need to know how fast the bike was going and where it hit the car.

    The hand signal is irrelevant.

    My guess is that the insurance companies will call it 50/50 and do knock for knock.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,233
    Nigelb said:

    Offer them to the new European navy ? :smile:
    (For nothing.)
    The plan there, which will probably never amount to anything, is for the French to build a second PANG for EUMS with a Dutch/German/Belgian crew and a Spanish/Italian air wing.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    tlg86 said:

    I find it odd that the civil service has anything to do with sort of thing. Leave it to IFS etc.
    Yes, quite. Seems bizarre that they are allowed to be involved in any shape or form.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,116
    Sandpit said:

    Good point. IIRC the SpaceX senior management is almost all engineers, including the maverick chairman.
    The Boeing senior management is almost all accountants and MBAs.
    Is SpaceX's CEO an 'engineer' ?
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,584
    Btw, are the surgeons still working on TSE's abscess? Must be a big one.

    Hope we are going to get some pictures.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192

    Is SpaceX's CEO an 'engineer' ?
    No he’s a tool
  • novanova Posts: 748
    Heathener said:

    And a new Savanta poll has Starmer winning the debate.

    My guess is the debate makes no difference at all. People have already decided the election.

    YouGov had tons of supplementary questions where Starmer was by far the winner - on most of the issues discussed, on trust, etc. He even had something like +20% on "who did better", with Sunak on +11%. Sunak's only real win was on tax, and that may well unravel very quickly. He's certainly not going to get away with the same comments at any other debates.

    Looks like people thought Sunak did ok at the debating, they just didn't like him, believe him, or change their mind on anything.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,848
    TOPPING said:

    Thanks

    Very fast as in four grand bike and lycra caning it. Undertaking yes filtering. Which of course is legal/etc. He flew past and across a gap/junction in stationary traffic, which had waved my aunt across.

    What could be the legal position. Is there a legal position? What about insurance.
    I don't drive but as an expert viewer of dashcam channels, I've seen a few crashes following drivers being flashed or waved to move (or sometimes thinking they have, when it was aimed at someone else). Your aunt should have made her own observations, but just being waved on increases pressure on her to rush. The paradox is that drivers being nice often creates confusion and occasionally danger, as seems to have happened here.

    At a guess your aunt was stationary, perhaps daydreaming rather than watching the traffic and wondering what has happened to the cyclist who has disappeared behind the bus, when the bus driver waved her on so she felt compelled to rush rather than hold everyone up.

    We are precisely 29 weeks from Christmas Day. You should buy your aunt a dashcam. Viofo seems to be the brand of choice, with discounts via some of the channels.
  • chrisbchrisb Posts: 115

    I look at that road layout and I can't instantly see the right thing to do.

    Therefore, that is a bad layout.
    Surely the right thing to do is to follow the highway code.

    Rule 180, on turning right across traffic:

    "Wait until there is a safe gap between you and any oncoming vehicle. Watch out for cyclists, motorcyclists, pedestrians and other road users"

    Also rule 76 on cyclists going straight ahead:

    "If you are going straight ahead at a junction, you have priority over traffic waiting to turn into or out of the side road"

    Although the aunt is clearly at fault here, the cyclist does bear some responsibility. Also from rule 76:

    "Watch out for drivers intending to turn across your path. Remember the driver ahead may not be able to see you, so bear in mind your speed and position in the road."
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281

    I believe being flashed/gestured to carry on with a manoeuvre by another vehicle is a no-no (ie we’re supposed to ignore them), though of course we all do it.
    Legally all it means is “I am here” - reading any more into it than that is on the head of the one who acts on it - though as you write, we all interpret it as “go ahead” or “you first”.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,233
    Dura_Ace said:

    That's not really an option because they are both fairly shagged out. India have committed to Rafale/STOBAR. South Korea are building their own and are unlikely to be impressed by the state of the British shipbuilding art. Australia might have been a remote option if they get a sufficiently loony right wing government but AUKUS is rapidly hollowing out their naval budget,
    Brazil? Maybe? They have proven they'll buy any old clapped out tat (Ocean) and perhaps DJT could be persuaded to sell them Wheelie Bin F-35s.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647

    I don't drive but as an expert viewer of dashcam channels, I've seen a few crashes following drivers being flashed or waved to move (or sometimes thinking they have, when it was aimed at someone else). Your aunt should have made her own observations, but just being waved on increases pressure on her to rush. The paradox is that drivers being nice often creates confusion and occasionally danger, as seems to have happened here.

    At a guess your aunt was stationary, perhaps daydreaming rather than watching the traffic and wondering what has happened to the cyclist who has disappeared behind the bus, when the bus driver waved her on so she felt compelled to rush rather than hold everyone up.

    We are precisely 29 weeks from Christmas Day. You should buy your aunt a dashcam. Viofo seems to be the brand of choice, with discounts via some of the channels.
    I will suggest it. By the time I saw her last night she was several Glengoynes to the good (but was stone cold sober at the time of the incident).
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,870

    Yeah, that's my instinct too. Devil is in the detail though. Need to know how fast the bike was going and where it hit the car.

    The hand signal is irrelevant.

    My guess is that the insurance companies will call it 50/50 and do knock for knock.
    Unfortunately it often doesn't seem to occur to drivers who wave on other road users or pedestrians that theirs may not be the only vehicle on the road.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,710
    TOPPING said:

    No injury, he's fine, shouted at her, then apologised for shouting. All terribly decent. Just wondered what the process was and whether the speed was a mitigating factor.

    If I was driving a car and undertook (perfectly legitimately) in stationary traffic because my lane was clear and hit another car turning across me would I say it was their or my fault.

    Thanks again all - only on PB, etc.
    Pleased to hear it was all terribly decent, anyway. Shouting is understandable because humans are emotional creatures but good that he then backpedalled.
    I agree with the consensus that your aunt was, legally, at fault - the rules of the road are that the vehicle with priority is in the right in a collision - but more broadly we should all recognise that humans are fallible and accidents happen. Hope your aunt (and indeed the cyclist) isn't too shaken up by it all. Unfortunately I'd just put it down to 'these things happen'.
  • novanova Posts: 748

    I'm currently teaching my partner's daughter to drive, and this is a timely reminder why you should never rely on indications by other drivers; always check yourself. I'll be sure to impress that on her when I take her out later today.
    People flashing for you to cross on a two lane road are some of the most dangerous road users in my opinion.

    I will regularly refuse, as they're essentially encouraging you to drive out blind into the second lane of oncoming traffic.

    Crazy to think a professional driver did this.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,920

    I don't drive but as an expert viewer of dashcam channels, I've seen a few crashes following drivers being flashed or waved to move (or sometimes thinking they have, when it was aimed at someone else). Your aunt should have made her own observations, but just being waved on increases pressure on her to rush. The paradox is that drivers being nice often creates confusion and occasionally danger, as seems to have happened here.

    At a guess your aunt was stationary, perhaps daydreaming rather than watching the traffic and wondering what has happened to the cyclist who has disappeared behind the bus, when the bus driver waved her on so she felt compelled to rush rather than hold everyone up.

    We are precisely 29 weeks from Christmas Day. You should buy your aunt a dashcam. Viofo seems to be the brand of choice, with discounts via some of the channels.
    I have a dashcam and to be honest it makes me a more careful and aware driver as I know it records everything with time and date but also records my own actions
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647
    chrisb said:

    Surely the right thing to do is to follow the highway code.

    Rule 180, on turning right across traffic:

    "Wait until there is a safe gap between you and any oncoming vehicle. Watch out for cyclists, motorcyclists, pedestrians and other road users"

    Also rule 76 on cyclists going straight ahead:

    "If you are going straight ahead at a junction, you have priority over traffic waiting to turn into or out of the side road"

    Although the aunt is clearly at fault here, the cyclist does bear some responsibility. Also from rule 76:

    "Watch out for drivers intending to turn across your path. Remember the driver ahead may not be able to see you, so bear in mind your speed and position in the road."
    Very interesting. Thanks. Not sure it will get to the insurance/legal stage but v useful info. Which means speed is def a mitigating factor.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,735
    tlg86 said:

    I find it odd that the civil service has anything to do with sort of thing. Leave it to IFS etc.
    Once it has been done for one Government (no idea who did rid it first but it wasn’t this lot) is has to then be offered to all for fear of not being impartial if not. I mean Starmer isn’t going to say “no” in 4/5 years is he, so those who live by the sword….
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008
    fitalass said:

    The instant YouGov reaction poll didn't allow those front page headlines tonight, it was the perception of the journalists who watched Starmer and Sunak's performances during the debate that framed those headlines. And while the Labour leadership team will desperately be hoping that the reaction to it will be short lived in the GE media campaign cycle, its also clear Sunak and his team finally landed their biggest strategic attack goal when it comes to the fact that so far as we the public are concerned, we still don't have a clue what detailed policies Labour are going to introduce as a Government on a whole range of issues.

    Two weeks into this GE and we discover that the manifesto's are not going to be published until the last minute allowing the public little or no scrutiny before we vote?! Now it won't surprise anyone on here that knows me that I won't be voting Labour, but a detailed policy heads up from the party who has been in Opposition for the last 14 years, and who according to the polls are heading for a record landslide victory in the GE in four weeks time of their plans for the country over the next 4/5 years would still be useful to all of us.

    And as a footnote, the leadership debate tonight and Sunak's performance also totally knocked Farage's trip to Clacton and the milkshake incident off the front pages too. Its clear that Reform under Tice were simple not going to get the UK wide media coverage needed to paper over the gaps in their last minute on the ground individual constituency operations in many constituencies and Farage has been persuaded to stand & become party leader to try to make Reform seem more relevant in the UK political GE media cycle to compensate for that.
    There you are everybody, I told you my analysis on PB is so balanced and fair it takes all these words from Tory supporters to try and say I have it wrong. 😇

    Truth here, fitalass, is the debate wasn’t for benefit of journalists who love the Punch and Judy and headlines, it was for floating voters who are wondering, which of these two can I trust, which of these two understands the life I lead and problems in it - looking at it like that, gaps between Rishi and Starmer in the debate polling are huge and very stark.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,813
    I think the £2000 claim does work for Sunak. The number is invented but there is a grain of truth behind Labour taxing at least a bit more than the Conservatives.

    If you think tax minimisation is the be-all-and-end-all for a government Sunak is your man. Starmer needs a better answer on why it isn't the be-all-and-all. It probably isn't for most people.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,233
    Sandpit said:



    Your aunt’s insurance company is probably going to have to get the bike repaired.

    CF frames aren't repairable and Aluminum frames aren't worth repairing.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Is SpaceX's CEO an 'engineer' ?
    Her wiki page describes her as such.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwynne_Shotwell
    Gwynne Shotwell (née Rowley; born November 23, 1963[1]) is an American businesswoman and engineer. She is the president and chief operating officer of SpaceX, an American space transportation company, where she is responsible for day-to-day operations and company growth.[2]

    If you mean the other guy, he has degrees in both physics and economics.
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elon_Musk
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,060

    Yes, quite. Seems bizarre that they are allowed to be involved in any shape or form.
    Alistair Campbell was saying earlier that it’s a thing they used to do when in govt - they would go to the Treasury geeks and ask them to cost and test a plan without telling them it was the Tories’ plan and then if the plan was bad they would go on the airwaves savaging the plan showing the treasury had done the workings.
  • LennonLennon Posts: 1,794
    TOPPING said:

    Excellent thanks - and the speed was not a factor?
    Unless his speed was so excessive as to be dangerous in its own right (ie doing 40mph in a domestic 30mph zone for example) I don't see how it is from any legal / right of way perspective. It might well be ill-advised (increased chance of such an event happening, and perhaps you should travel more slowly given that you know that other drivers often don't do what they should do - but that's not the same at all in terms of assigning blame / being at fault)
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,920
    The debate will not have changed any minds of those who are supporting labour but where it may have an effect is on the 2019 conservative voting cohort and on those conservatives thinking of voting Reform

    I do not expect any poll movement yet though the conservative v reform percentages will be the ones to watch over the next four weeks
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,406
    Few comments, having finally organised myself this morning. As a result of another small step in recovery I don’t have access to a communication device on which I can write until 9.30 or so.
    First, on the clash with the bike, never rely on anyone else’s waves on and the like. Make sure yourself that it’s safe to proceed. That said, case as stated, it doesn’t sound as though the cyclist was blame-free; ‘riding furiously’ comes to mind.
    Secondly, on the debate last night, I thought Sunak went in harder and louder than Starmer was expecting. Starmer should have jumped on the £2000 tax harder and sooner. However, I came away thinking ‘Shouty Sunak’. I think we’ll hear a lot more about the £2000.
    Incidentally, as an OAP with an occupational pension I’m paying more tax this year than last, as is my wife.
    She didn’t take to Sunak at all.
    Thirdly, I hope TSE is progressing well. Look forward to him getting back.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,233
    Has Farage been hit with any liquids yet today? Hopefully pregnant horse piss or Domestos.

    I do hope this becomes a 'thing'. Mrs DA archly observed that he should always wear a raincoat.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,224
    TOPPING said:

    Thanks

    Very fast as in four grand bike and lycra caning it. Undertaking yes filtering. Which of course is legal/etc. He flew past and across a gap/junction in stationary traffic, which had waved my aunt across.

    What could be the legal position. Is there a legal position? What about insurance.
    Agree with Eabhal. Your aunt, making the turn, has to ensure the road is clear. The cyclist has priority if going straight on.

    Now, I'd be (and have been) cautious in such a situation, would wonder why the bus wasn't moving, would look for the reason and would also have yielded to let your aunt across if the bus driver was waiting. But, legally, has to be her fault. The turning driver has to ease across until they can see that there's nothing coming down the inside too - particularly given the cycle lane.

    Imagine the cycle lane was a full lane - you'd not suggest for a moment that the bus in right hand lane (from bus POV) yielding means you don't have to check for anyone coming up the left hand lane. If there as no marked cycle lane it becomes a bit more ambiguous morally, but I think the legal answer would still be the same (cycle allowed to come up the inside and has right of way).
  • TabbyTabby Posts: 3
    edited June 2024
    The Sun seems to be backing the Conservatives right now. They've backed the winner in every general election since 1974.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/politics/28309634/moments-tough-talking-rishi-won-key-voters/

    I'm not convinced Reform won't take most of their votes from Labour.

    But whatever happens, I can't see the Sun backing the Tories right up until the morning of election day and then Labour winning a landslide.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    edited June 2024
    Lennon said:

    Unless his speed was so excessive as to be dangerous in its own right (ie doing 40mph in a domestic 30mph zone for example) I don't see how it is from any legal / right of way perspective. It might well be ill-advised (increased chance of such an event happening, and perhaps you should travel more slowly given that you know that other drivers often don't do what they should do - but that's not the same at all in terms of assigning blame / being at fault)
    Yes, I think trying to mitigate based on speed is risky because the cyclist will have it all recorded on a bike computer. IF he wasn't actually caning it then you start to look dishonest. You'd have to be 100% sure he was doing something over 30mph, which is actually quite hard work on a bike (for most).
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,116

    I don't drive but as an expert viewer of dashcam channels, I've seen a few crashes following drivers being flashed or waved to move (or sometimes thinking they have, when it was aimed at someone else). Your aunt should have made her own observations, but just being waved on increases pressure on her to rush. The paradox is that drivers being nice often creates confusion and occasionally danger, as seems to have happened here.

    At a guess your aunt was stationary, perhaps daydreaming rather than watching the traffic and wondering what has happened to the cyclist who has disappeared behind the bus, when the bus driver waved her on so she felt compelled to rush rather than hold everyone up.

    We are precisely 29 weeks from Christmas Day. You should buy your aunt a dashcam. Viofo seems to be the brand of choice, with discounts via some of the channels.
    As I mentioned a while back, I had a near-incident on my bike in the village. I was turning out of a junction, where a car was waiting to turn right onto my road. He waved me on, and he (and I) missed the fact that another car was going in the other lane, legally undertaking the car turning right. I got halfway across the road when the other driver saw me (his vision blocked by the other car), and we both stopped a few feet away from a collision. Fortunately it was a 20MPH zone...

    It's not a totally analogous situation, but I put 100% of the blame on me in that case. The first driver should not have waved me on (or at least, that's how I took the motion...), and the second car driver did have right-of-way. All three of us could have acted differently, but I put myself into a potentially dangerous situation.

    Hopefully I've learnt from it.

    I don't like this "The rules say I'm right!" mindset. We all need to be a little more defensive in our driving and riding; a little more courteous of other road users.

    ""Here lies the body of Johnny O'Day
    Who died Preserving His Right of Way.

    He was Right, Dead Right, as he sailed along
    But he's just as dead as if he'd been wrong""
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,022
    Tabby said:

    The Sun seems to be backing the Conservatives right now. They've backed the winner in every general election since 1974.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/politics/28309634/moments-tough-talking-rishi-won-key-voters/

    I'm not convinced Reform won't take most of their votes from Labour.

    But whatever happens, I can't see the Sun backing the Tories and then Labour winning a landslide.

    Welcome. That's a bold claim to begin with.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192
    Looks like Gething is going to try to ignore the confidence vote if he loses. I don’t think that will make things better for him.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv224x3pmv9o
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,116
    Sandpit said:

    Her wiki page describes her as such.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwynne_Shotwell
    Gwynne Shotwell (née Rowley; born November 23, 1963[1]) is an American businesswoman and engineer. She is the president and chief operating officer of SpaceX, an American space transportation company, where she is responsible for day-to-day operations and company growth.[2]

    If you mean the other guy, he has degrees in both physics and economics.
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elon_Musk
    I meant Musky Baby, who I don't particularly see as being an engineer. Shotwell certainly is IMO, and does not get the credit she deserves for SpaceX's success.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,233
    Eabhal said:

    Yes, I think trying to mitigate based on speed is risky because the cyclist will have it all recorded on a bike computer. IF he wasn't actually caning it then you start to look dishonest. You'd have to be 100% sure he was doing something over 30mph, which is actually quite hard work on a bike (for most).
    It's also pretty easy to change the .gpx file to make Strava read whatever you want...
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Broader picture:

    If this latest 2k tax claim is tendentious, the truth is both main parties are as bad as each other. Not long ago, Labour was trying to turn Hunt’s vague aspiration to end NI into a 46 billion black hole. The reality is that the real black hole is the one connected to the spending plans (accepted by both main parties) that the Chair of the OBR (a more sober figure in public life it would be hard to imagine) called ‘worse than fiction’. Only when we force the parties to answer questions on this will we actually get a sense of what the next 5 years will be like for all of us.

    https://x.com/tombradby/status/1798276958016446755

    There’s going to be a lot of people disappointed in Starmer’s Labour government, either through a lack of spending increases or tax increases - or quite possibly both.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647
    Dura_Ace said:

    It's also pretty easy to change the .gpx file to make Strava read whatever you want...
    Good to know.
  • Having thought about things overnight and in light of the letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Treasury... I think Starmer is a much more adept politician than the Conservative Party realises.

    Starmer allowed Sunak to claim repeatedly that Labour would increase taxes by £2000 per household knowing that there was a letter from the PS to Darren Jones stating the exact opposite. Starmer gave Sunak sufficient rope and left him to finish the job. The fact that Claire Coutinho went one stage further this morning on the Today Programme is like the cherry on the cake.

    In addition, there's the clip of Starmer pointing out to Sunak that the company which Sunak cites on on costs (I can't remember which topic it was) had put out an analysis of the Conservative plans and it would cost more than those of Labour. The sideways glance from Sunak to somebody off camera - slightly panicked as if to say "Why do I not know about this? What's he talking about?" suggests Starmer bluffed him again.

    Two moments from last night's debate that allow Starmer to present Sunak as no different to Boris (lying) and Truss (not aware of all of the facts). Starmer is a canny operator.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    Farage/Clacton is having massive cut through in my cohort btw. Almost Palestine levels.

    Lots of anger about the Greens getting hundreds of council seats but no representation in the media, but this inadvertently just keeps highlighting Farage. It might boost youth turnout a little?

    Labour need to do the advert with Sunak in Farage's pocket ASAP.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008

    Also from me - the £2000 tax which won Sunak the debate tonight, and judging by the front pages, Tory press and Conservative campaign will now attempt to run with, imo it’s clearly fabricated, it’s not based on any clear policy or manifesto commitments from Labour, the attack will easily be dismantled and fall apart in the coming days. It may have been calculated by the Treasury, but it depends what they were ask to calculate, much like a computer, if you put garbage in you get garbage out.

    In relation to the tax attack, I am not all that ignorant of 1992 election. What was different in 1992 was Labours Shadow budget actually did promise tax rises. They could have rebutted the attacks much better - rather than world ending tax hikes they were only resetting to 1988, when Tory tax cuts undid the “economic miracle” and sent inflation and economy into boom and bust. But Labour chose not to fight as they believed electorate would vote for more money for public services, as £25 a month in pocket ain’t valuable when you are lying in pain in hospital corridor for 24 hrs or in pain for months waiting for operation.

    One thing you can’t do anymore Anabobs is keep posting TRUSS. Starmer reached for “TRUSS” in tonight’s debate, and it bombed 🤭

    The Trussterfuck is one of the main things that has put Labour into a strong position in the polls. But maybe it’s too away in history now, to reach for so often in this campaign? What Starmer was actually meaning by it, he can make the same point in a different phrasing.
    When I posted this last night,

    “ - the £2000 tax which won Sunak the debate tonight, and judging by the front pages, Tory press and Conservative campaign will now attempt to run with, imo it’s clearly fabricated, it’s not based on any clear policy or manifesto commitments from Labour”

    I was actually wrong, it is actually based on labour policy commitments, so I need to put my hand up and admit that.

    As explained on today’s more or less, it is promises, but fed into the treasury super computer in a particularly bent way to get garbage result out.

    If you got time to listen to first 5 minutes https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001zv06

    When I said it would fall apart in a couple of days, I was wrong on that too, it won’t even make it to this lunchtime before Rishi is proved a fraud for using it. 🤦‍♀️
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,084
    Tabby said:

    The Sun seems to be backing the Conservatives right now. They've backed the winner in every general election since 1974.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/politics/28309634/moments-tough-talking-rishi-won-key-voters/

    I'm not convinced Reform won't take most of their votes from Labour.

    But whatever happens, I can't see the Sun backing the Tories right up until the morning of election day and then Labour winning a landslide.

    I think the only election where they backed a loser was 1970, but that was part of the deal when Murdoch bought it in 1969 - that it would continue to support Labour for ten years, even though having read their 1970 election coverage they did it rather reluctantly.

    But the Sun is not the force it was.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,539
    FF43 said:

    I think the £2000 claim does work for Sunak. The number is invented but there is a grain of truth behind Labour taxing at least a bit more than the Conservatives.

    If you think tax minimisation is the be-all-and-end-all for a government Sunak is your man. Starmer needs a better answer on why it isn't the be-all-and-all. It probably isn't for most people.

    The problem is how do you actually say that without allowing Rishi to reply with so you will tax people even more...
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,661

    Welcome. That's a bold claim to begin with.
    A JL Partners poll for The Sun had Starmer winning the debate by 20 points...

    https://x.com/JLPartnersPolls/status/1798258155391942656
  • eekeek Posts: 29,539
    ydoethur said:

    I think the only election where they backed a loser was 1970, but that was part of the deal when Murdoch bought it in 1969 - that it would continue to support Labour for ten years, even though having read their 1970 election coverage they did it rather reluctantly.

    But the Sun is not the force it was.
    And it's very likely that the Sun will (reluctantly) change it's mind on July 3rd / 4th because it wants to say it won it.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    When I posted this last night,

    “ - the £2000 tax which won Sunak the debate tonight, and judging by the front pages, Tory press and Conservative campaign will now attempt to run with, imo it’s clearly fabricated, it’s not based on any clear policy or manifesto commitments from Labour”

    I was actually wrong, it is actually based on labour policy commitments, so I need to put my hand up and admit that.

    As explained on today’s more or less, it is promises, but fed into the treasury super computer in a particularly bent way to get garbage result out.

    If you got time to listen to first 5 minutes https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001zv06

    When I said it would fall apart in a couple of days, I was wrong on that too, it won’t even make it to this lunchtime before Rishi is proved a fraud for using it. 🤦‍♀️
    I enjoyed your postings last night (and today) and think they were fair and balanced. It will be interesting to see how this day goes and who wins the news cycle.

    I called the debate clearly for Sunak but the three snap polls overall give it easily to Starmer, so maybe I was wrong about that.

    I guess we'll see if it has much effect on VI.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008

    I don't know why he keeps saying this.

    It just makes me think he's a tool.
    It makes me think they have focus grouped it, to find it increases his lead over out of touch Rishi every time he says it.
  • FlatlanderFlatlander Posts: 4,877
    nova said:

    People flashing for you to cross on a two lane road are some of the most dangerous road users in my opinion.

    I will regularly refuse, as they're essentially encouraging you to drive out blind into the second lane of oncoming traffic.

    Crazy to think a professional driver did this.
    I've been the cyclist in this exact scenario (replacing the bus with a tall transit van). There wasn't a marked bike lane but the road split into two lanes at the junction and was wider than the one pictured.

    Driver says 'but he flashed me to go'...

    Never trust someone in a white transit, but as you say, you'd think a bus driver would know better.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,284
    edited June 2024
    Tabby said:

    The Sun seems to be backing the Conservatives right now. They've backed the winner in every general election since 1974.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/politics/28309634/moments-tough-talking-rishi-won-key-voters/

    I'm not convinced Reform won't take most of their votes from Labour.

    But whatever happens, I can't see the Sun backing the Tories right up until the morning of election day and then Labour winning a landslide.

    I think you should revisit the Sun's poll. Even among Tory 2019 voters he only gets two thirds and among all voters he's eviscerated! Unless they think their readers can't actually understand what they've written?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,224
    Scott_xP said:

    @PippaCrerar

    Team Sunak were delighted with their £2000* tax attack line on Labour after debate last night. But this morning it has become issue of honesty. Problematic.

    (*over four years btw)

    The bizarre bit is why is it over 4 years, rather than 5? Can't they use the same assumptions and a five year assumed term to make it £2500? Or does £2k just sound better?

    I mean, if you're making shit up, why not inflate it as much as possible?
  • Hello. My name is Nigel. I need to get myself on TV and in the papers. I will buy you a happy meal and one milkshake. Please chuck it on me. It is better than paying for advertising on Instagram and Tik Tok etc. Many thanks. It is no problem. I am a big boy and can handle it. Shame it was not Piers Morgan who did it or Jeremy Clarkson. The three egomaniacs. It is only about them and nobody else.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264
    chrisb said:

    Yes although that doesn't make it a 50/50 situation on apportioning fault, given the the new hierarchy of road users. Rule H3 lays it out more explicitly:

    You should not cut across cyclists... when you are turning into or out of a junction... just as you would not turn across the path of another motor vehicle. This applies whether they are using a cycle lane, a cycle track, or riding ahead on the road and you should give way to them.

    Do not turn at a junction if to do so would cause the cyclist... going straight ahead to stop or swerve.

    You should stop and wait for a safe gap in the flow of cyclists if necessary. This includes when cyclists are:

    - approaching, passing or moving off from a junction
    - moving past or waiting alongside stationary or slow-moving traffic
    Yep - my understanding is that the cycle lane is effectively another lane - just because the first one was clear doesn't mean that she can assume the second lane is also clear. I see accidents like this quite often in Clapham where drivers just swing across the cycle lane, rather than looking at both lanes in sequential order.

    The cyclist is stupid for not foreseeing this, but Topping's aunt is clearly at fault.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,584
    @soph_husk
    Backlash to Rishi Sunak’s £2,000 attack line flooding in

    Chris Morris, CEO of Full Fact: "It's clearly unacceptable to present your own analysis as the conclusions of independent civil servants when it's not.

    “Public trust in politics is hanging by a thread and a high-profile falsehood will turn even more people away from the democratic process. We want to see this corrected as soon as possible."

    @AndrewSparrow

    Why Treasury says it cannot endorse claim Labour would raise taxes by £2,000




    The Treasury says Sunak is a liar. That's the headline Labour wanted.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,539
    Selebian said:

    The bizarre bit is why is it over 4 years, rather than 5? Can't they use the same assumptions and a five year assumed term to make it £2500? Or does £2k just sound better?

    I mean, if you're making shit up, why not inflate it as much as possible?
    Has to be plausible - and I suspect the figure has been carefully focus grouped...
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    edited June 2024
    Selebian said:

    The bizarre bit is why is it over 4 years, rather than 5? Can't they use the same assumptions and a five year assumed term to make it £2500? Or does £2k just sound better?

    I mean, if you're making shit up, why not inflate it as much as possible?
    Curious. I would definitely go with £2,500 - implies more precision in your modelling.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,406
    ToryJim said:

    Looks like Gething is going to try to ignore the confidence vote if he loses. I don’t think that will make things better for him.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv224x3pmv9o

    Agree; even though two potential voters are absent due to sickness. It’s the vote on the day which counts, although the system ought to allow for such absentees.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,084
    Chameleon said:

    Yep - my understanding is that the cycle lane is effectively another lane - just because the first one was clear doesn't mean that she can assume the second lane is also clear. I see accidents like this quite often in Clapham where drivers just swing across the cycle lane, rather than looking at both lanes in sequential order.

    The cyclist is stupid for not foreseeing this, but Topping's aunt is clearly at fault.
    I think it's a bit harsh on a cyclist to call them 'stupid' for obeying the rules of the road. 'Reckless' to cycle at high speed, depending on how high, in crowded traffic might be nearer the mark.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 29,661
    Scott_xP said:

    @soph_husk
    Backlash to Rishi Sunak’s £2,000 attack line flooding in

    Chris Morris, CEO of Full Fact: "It's clearly unacceptable to present your own analysis as the conclusions of independent civil servants when it's not.

    “Public trust in politics is hanging by a thread and a high-profile falsehood will turn even more people away from the democratic process. We want to see this corrected as soon as possible."

    @AndrewSparrow

    Why Treasury says it cannot endorse claim Labour would raise taxes by £2,000




    The Treasury says Sunak is a liar. That's the headline Labour wanted.

    Oh dear oh dear oh dear. "Game changer" indeed.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,539
    chrisb said:

    Yes although that doesn't make it a 50/50 situation on apportioning fault, given the the new hierarchy of road users. Rule H3 lays it out more explicitly:

    You should not cut across cyclists... when you are turning into or out of a junction... just as you would not turn across the path of another motor vehicle. This applies whether they are using a cycle lane, a cycle track, or riding ahead on the road and you should give way to them.

    Do not turn at a junction if to do so would cause the cyclist... going straight ahead to stop or swerve.

    You should stop and wait for a safe gap in the flow of cyclists if necessary. This includes when cyclists are:

    - approaching, passing or moving off from a junction
    - moving past or waiting alongside stationary or slow-moving traffic
    Looking at that box though - I don't think it's possible to check for cyclists....
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    edited June 2024

    It makes me think they have focus grouped it, to find it increases his lead over out of touch Rishi every time he says it.
    Sweet spot between miner (scary man with pick axe) and doctor (posh).
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,927
    Tabby said:

    The Sun seems to be backing the Conservatives right now. They've backed the winner in every general election since 1974.

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/politics/28309634/moments-tough-talking-rishi-won-key-voters/

    I'm not convinced Reform won't take most of their votes from Labour.

    But whatever happens, I can't see the Sun backing the Tories right up until the morning of election day and then Labour winning a landslide.

    I can.

    Shouldn't you introduce yourself before opening with so trenchant an opinion ?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,584
    If you're explaining, you're losing...

    @faisalislam
    Number 10 stressing that the “Amount to” in the PM’s quote from last night below means that the PM did not say 2k was a civil service number… and so James Bowler letter does not contradict him…
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,848

    As I mentioned a while back, I had a near-incident on my bike in the village. I was turning out of a junction, where a car was waiting to turn right onto my road. He waved me on, and he (and I) missed the fact that another car was going in the other lane, legally undertaking the car turning right. I got halfway across the road when the other driver saw me (his vision blocked by the other car), and we both stopped a few feet away from a collision. Fortunately it was a 20MPH zone...

    It's not a totally analogous situation, but I put 100% of the blame on me in that case. The first driver should not have waved me on (or at least, that's how I took the motion...), and the second car driver did have right-of-way. All three of us could have acted differently, but I put myself into a potentially dangerous situation.

    Hopefully I've learnt from it.

    I don't like this "The rules say I'm right!" mindset. We all need to be a little more defensive in our driving and riding; a little more courteous of other road users.

    ""Here lies the body of Johnny O'Day
    Who died Preserving His Right of Way.

    He was Right, Dead Right, as he sailed along
    But he's just as dead as if he'd been wrong""
    This is one reason I am sceptical of the Highway Code's new hierarchy of risks concerning giving priority to pedestrians crossing at junctions. Since it's me who will end up in the back of an ambulance, I'm not crossing until I'm sure the driver has seen me and is slowing, and it is often impossible to tell with cyclists or motorcyclists. Other pedestrians (and cyclists) will take it as an excuse to leap into the path of moving cars because that's their right.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008
    Foxy said:

    The contrast with how we used to do political debates is very marked. Politicians treated each other with respect, didn't attempt to shout down or over the other and were given time to expound their points.

    Watch just a bit of Heath and Foot debating the Common Market here:

    https://youtu.be/CuZrzwm6CJs?feature=shared

    It really is chalk and cheese in terms of quality of debate, and moderation.
    Yesterday’s debate was perfect example why British democracy was reluctant for so long to import this from US. And also why those with poll leads are reluctant to throw all that hard work and arguments won into a roulette wheel days before the actual voting.

    One thing it does do, which very much grates with UK Democracy and any liberal democracy, is it frames the whole election and how you should vote, into a choice between just two parties. In that sense we should question more how just two leaders can get away with having their own debate.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,332
    A favorable article about Ed Davey and the Lib Dems campaign by Alice Thomson in The Times today might be a straw in the wind.

    After the rather sad "Leaders debate", I could see the Lib Dems pushing up their numbers. The Liberal Democrats are kind of the anti-Farage choice: they are a real party, with representation across all levels of politics, just came second in the locals (and let us remember that Farage basically got nothing, despite significantly better coverage). More to the point they have a really focussed and disciplined campaign.

    Farage is a media balloon, as much hated and loathed as any politician. The Lib Dems are far more the "none of the above" party.

    I think the Lib Dems could get to the upper end of their expectations and even into their hopes, the way things are going.
  • Manifestos next week. What surprises can we see coming up? No basic rate of income tax could be a vote winner!
  • Starmer has done it again, he allowed Sunak to hang himself live on TV. Whether it will work or not, who knows.

    Can anyone explain how JL have such different results on the debate to YouGov?
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,584
    Nigelb said:

    I can.

    Shouldn't you introduce yourself before opening with so trenchant an opinion ?
    Yes, it's not that we don't trust you, Tabby, and you are very welcome to join in the fun, but we do see a sharp increase in the number of Russian trolls at this time of the election cycle.

    If a plane crashes on the Ukraine/China border, which side do you bury the dead?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647
    I HAVE CONVEYED THE (BAD) NEWS TO MY AUNT.

    thanks again
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,084
    eek said:

    Welsh first minister to lose confidence vote as 2 Labour MPs are off sick

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cv224x3pmv9o

    Only a VONC in him personally, I think, not his government?

    So embarrassing but not Humza-style career ending.
  • When I posted this last night,

    “ - the £2000 tax which won Sunak the debate tonight, and judging by the front pages, Tory press and Conservative campaign will now attempt to run with, imo it’s clearly fabricated, it’s not based on any clear policy or manifesto commitments from Labour”

    I was actually wrong, it is actually based on labour policy commitments, so I need to put my hand up and admit that.

    As explained on today’s more or less, it is promises, but fed into the treasury super computer in a particularly bent way to get garbage result out.

    If you got time to listen to first 5 minutes https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001zv06

    When I said it would fall apart in a couple of days, I was wrong on that too, it won’t even make it to this lunchtime before Rishi is proved a fraud for using it. 🤦‍♀️
    I like this. Irrespective of one's political views, somebody can put their hand up and say "I was wrong". Call me naive, but Rishi could do worse than to follow the example of @MoonRabbit and do something similar about the "independent Treasury officials" line.
  • As I mentioned a while back, I had a near-incident on my bike in the village. I was turning out of a junction, where a car was waiting to turn right onto my road. He waved me on, and he (and I) missed the fact that another car was going in the other lane, legally undertaking the car turning right. I got halfway across the road when the other driver saw me (his vision blocked by the other car), and we both stopped a few feet away from a collision. Fortunately it was a 20MPH zone...

    It's not a totally analogous situation, but I put 100% of the blame on me in that case. The first driver should not have waved me on (or at least, that's how I took the motion...), and the second car driver did have right-of-way. All three of us could have acted differently, but I put myself into a potentially dangerous situation.

    Hopefully I've learnt from it.

    I don't like this "The rules say I'm right!" mindset. We all need to be a little more defensive in our driving and riding; a little more courteous of other road users.

    ""Here lies the body of Johnny O'Day
    Who died Preserving His Right of Way.

    He was Right, Dead Right, as he sailed along
    But he's just as dead as if he'd been wrong""
    Indeed. It's always worth keeping in mind that people are fallible, or may not be familiar with the road layout, or don't know exactly where they are going. When someone cuts across into the lane in front of you, they aren't usually doing it to annoy you; most likely they simply didn't realise they were in the wrong lane. While there are a few idiots around, most of us are just trying to get from A to B with as little hassle as possible, and sometimes we make mistakes.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,927

    Having thought about things overnight and in light of the letter from the Permanent Secretary at the Treasury... I think Starmer is a much more adept politician than the Conservative Party realises.

    Starmer allowed Sunak to claim repeatedly that Labour would increase taxes by £2000 per household knowing that there was a letter from the PS to Darren Jones stating the exact opposite. Starmer gave Sunak sufficient rope and left him to finish the job. The fact that Claire Coutinho went one stage further this morning on the Today Programme is like the cherry on the cake.

    In addition, there's the clip of Starmer pointing out to Sunak that the company which Sunak cites on on costs (I can't remember which topic it was) had put out an analysis of the Conservative plans and it would cost more than those of Labour. The sideways glance from Sunak to somebody off camera - slightly panicked as if to say "Why do I not know about this? What's he talking about?" suggests Starmer bluffed him again.

    Two moments from last night's debate that allow Starmer to present Sunak as no different to Boris (lying) and Truss (not aware of all of the facts). Starmer is a canny operator.

    It's a nice theory.

    I hope it's true; if so, it might even make the next debate interesting.
    Though I confidently expect both of them to aimlessly flounder around again.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192

    Agree; even though two potential voters are absent due to sickness. It’s the vote on the day which counts, although the system ought to allow for such absentees.
    Oh the system should definitely have a way to accommodate those that are sick. It’s not the pairing system though because no party that scents a scalp will live up to pairing, Labour wouldn’t if the shoe was on the other foot.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,978
    edited June 2024

    This is one reason I am sceptical of the Highway Code's new hierarchy of risks concerning giving priority to pedestrians crossing at junctions. Since it's me who will end up in the back of an ambulance, I'm not crossing until I'm sure the driver has seen me and is slowing, and it is often impossible to tell with cyclists or motorcyclists. Other pedestrians (and cyclists) will take it as an excuse to leap into the path of moving cars because that's their right.
    The side street thing is common across Europe/Australia. Once it beds in, we could use it to reduce traffic phases at controlled junctions, allowing you to turn right/left through a green man after the crossing is clear. Would do a great deal for traffic flow and congestion, while forcing drivers to take responsibility and not rely on the lights.

    What it also needs is a public information campaign and the redesign of junctions with 90 degree tightening, continuous pavements and bell bollards.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,135

    This is one reason I am sceptical of the Highway Code's new hierarchy of risks concerning giving priority to pedestrians crossing at junctions. Since it's me who will end up in the back of an ambulance, I'm not crossing until I'm sure the driver has seen me and is slowing, and it is often impossible to tell with cyclists or motorcyclists. Other pedestrians (and cyclists) will take it as an excuse to leap into the path of moving cars because that's their right.
    The point of the hierarchy is to make it clear to car drivers the special responsibility they have in charge of a >1 tonne vehicle, but, of course, everyone else needs to act with due care and attention.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 29,848
    ydoethur said:

    I think the only election where they backed a loser was 1970, but that was part of the deal when Murdoch bought it in 1969 - that it would continue to support Labour for ten years, even though having read their 1970 election coverage they did it rather reluctantly.

    But the Sun is not the force it was.
    By coincidence, yesterday I came across my Sun "book" of Sun front pages. When it came out (80s or 90s) the Mirror journalists in the same pub as us were all over it.
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,005
    eek said:

    And it's very likely that the Sun will (reluctantly) change it's mind on July 3rd / 4th because it wants to say it won it.
    One point is that it's the first election Labour are clear favourites for since the decline of mass newspaper readership. Put simply, The Sun is less relevant now - and it is less relevant to it that it's seen to be backing the winner given its print readership will skew to the demographics more favourable to the Conservatives.

    Ultimately, the decision makers as to who The Sun backs (is Uncle Rupe still fully compos mentis?) may decide it is more important to keep their ties to the right intact than it is to boast about backing the winner and having a cosy relationship with an incoming Labour government.

    I'd imagine they'd be quite content to 'warn' against a Labour victory then stir right-wing opposition by attacking Labour and being incredibly self-righteous about how they are 'not beholden to anyone' despite continuing to be a Tory mouthpiece.
  • jamesdoylejamesdoyle Posts: 795
    Not having a horse in the race, I didn't bother watching the debate, and overall it seems to have been a wash, with pretty much everyone without a starting bias rating it as a draw.

    On the one hand that seems almost a victory for Sunak: I expected him to be dreadful in this, so not being dreadful is a bit of a win. He probably should be quietly pleased with that bit of it.

    On the other hand, a draw isn't going to do the Cons much good - when even Con supporters are now presenting a potential 1997 scenario as a 'good' result, then you know they're in dire straits, and what the Cons need from their leader is a massive win, both to boost their own confidence and to draw some undecided voters their way. Under the headline 51/49 or 50/50, Sunak (and the Tories) are still rated as worse in every policy area tha Starmer and Labour. And this morning's unravelling of the £2000 tax claim is another advent calendar window for me.

    I feel a slight temptation to watch the 7-way debate now - not for either of these two, but to see how the smaller parties aim their fire - firing squad for Rishi, or carving out their own territories around the edges of the imminent Empire of Labour?
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,008

    Why, hello.

    🚨🚨🚨

    NEW: Starmer beats Sunak in televised debate overnight poll

    Who won the debate:

    Starmer (44%)
    Sunak (39%)
    Don't Know (17%)

    1,153 UK adults, 4-5 June


    https://twitter.com/Savanta_UK/status/1798237025038139676

    Too late!

    Someone else got to the Microphone first.

    What was YouGov’s with the don’t knows included? 🤔
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,224

    Yesterday’s debate was perfect example why British democracy was reluctant for so long to import this from US. And also why those with poll leads are reluctant to throw all that hard work and arguments won into a roulette wheel days before the actual voting.

    One thing it does do, which very much grates with UK Democracy and any liberal democracy, is it frames the whole election and how you should vote, into a choice between just two parties. In that sense we should question more how just two leaders can get away with having their own debate.
    There's more light in individual interviews, imho, similar to the Miliband and Cameron ones in 2015, although with someone less confrontational than Paxman.

    Real debates would be fascinating and potentially useful, but I'm not sure how they can be engineered. Maybe if the leaders were completely banned (mic off etc) from interrupting until given their turn to speak we might get some improvement. But even then I think we'd have leaders just trying to put their soundbites across rather than really engaging with the questions.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,927
    ydoethur said:

    I think it's a bit harsh on a cyclist to call them 'stupid' for obeying the rules of the road. 'Reckless' to cycle at high speed, depending on how high, in crowded traffic might be nearer the mark.
    The instructor on my last speed awareness course was quite happy to call someone travelling at speed into an unpredictable, crowded high street junction "stupid", even if they weren't actually breaking the law.

    FWIW.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,647

    Indeed. It's always worth keeping in mind that people are fallible, or may not be familiar with the road layout, or don't know exactly where they are going. When someone cuts across into the lane in front of you, they aren't usually doing it to annoy you; most likely they simply didn't realise they were in the wrong lane. While there are a few idiots around, most of us are just trying to get from A to B with as little hassle as possible, and sometimes we make mistakes.
    I have a rule when driving (when I am on my supercharged - by me - Boris Bike I am a lot more gobby) which is that when someone is being a dick I count to 30 and then 99.999% of the time I have forgotten what it is they did or didn't do. Gone are the days when I overtook and pulled in front of cars, hard stop-style (a dickish move in itself), to confront dicks.

    So much can go so badly wrong with road rage incidents. Lives ruined in a moment of lunacy. That 30 seconds is and could be a life saver.
This discussion has been closed.