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  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946
    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    Will historians write that having covid parties in Downing Street while the Queen mourned alone at her husband's funeral destroyed the once mighty Conservative Party?

    Inevitably they will, despite the reality that it was defending a no-name scoundrel with an ironic name that got 'em.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 21,540
    .
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    At least one local party member has just publicly quit the party in protest., People calling for Reform to adopt him.
    Ha. He won't stand for Reform.
    Will his voters bother turning out whoever the national party decide to parachute in?
    Depends whom they have in mind. This throws it open.

    I've been openly wondering for days on here who's best placed to unseat Duguid. In all my blinkered foolishness, I never once considered the Conservative and Unionist Party was the correct answer.
    I'm surprised you're surprised.

    The Conservative and Unionist Party is unseating hundreds of Tory MPs this election. Only more directly with Duguid.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946

    If Reform really does overtake the Tories in the polls, they could see a lot of defections.

    Any poll change as dramatic as that that would be a big media story.

    So am I right in saying, if anyone is thinking about doing it, they pretty much have to do it by Friday? And that Saturday onwards it would say 'Conservative' on their ballot paper regardless - making a defection nigh on impossible, unless they say they would join with Farage's after any election and hope that Voters figure out the difference?
    Yes. And jumping ship immediately after Friday might be considered electoral fraud, putting in a nomination under false pretences
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,415

    If Reform really does overtake the Tories in the polls, they could see a lot of defections.

    Any poll change as dramatic as that that would be a big media story.

    Refuk's weird status as a ltd company with Farage as majority shareholder must surely put potential defectors (and donors!) off, though.

    I think they'd need to at least promise to sort that out before any but the most desperate would consider defecting.
  • GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,174
    In other news, I'm going to call it that the Trump conviction has made no difference whatsoever to the polls in the US. Of course, he hasn't been sentenced yet, but I doubt that will make a difference unless he's jailed.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    At least one local party member has just publicly quit the party in protest., People calling for Reform to adopt him.
    Ha. He won't stand for Reform.
    Will his voters bother turning out whoever the national party decide to parachute in?
    Depends whom they have in mind. This throws it open.

    I've been openly wondering for days on here who's best placed to unseat Duguid. In all my blinkered foolishness, I never once considered the Conservative and Unionist Party was the correct answer.
    Local Tories have a track record of brutally turning on their own.
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-65669759
  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    I'm bored of my username.

    I'm gonna change it to Tim_in_Ruislip
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    Farooq said:

    Jeremy Hunt speaks up and it's like a breath of fresh air
    The evidence of Britain is that elections are always won from the centre ground and I think in a two-party system that will always be the case. We’ll always be a broad church, and I think that’s a good thing.

    There it is. The Conservative Party is still in there somewhere. They missed a trick in not making him leader. Too late now, just another of history's "what if"s.

    Trouble is that the Lib Dems have often tried being the centre party. It's not won them any elections. You need a large base of voters to win elections. Being on the centre won't guarantee you that.
    The LD's have always done best electorally, since the 1990's, when they have been seen to be slightly to the left of Labour, a lesson they will probably have to relearn all over again under Starmer, and challenging any of his more authoritarian policies, as they did under Blair.

    Davey will have to shift his stance a little, but that he's surprised me on the upside in this election so far.
    That was before the Greens though - LDs tried it in 2019 and lost their leader! The space is a liberal centre-right party if the tories go as cuckoo as it expected.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 48,566
    edited June 5
    AlsoLei said:

    Is it true, that Boris Buses are being taken off the streets of London? Wrath of Khan versus BoJo?

    Perhaps the fleet can be sold to Santo Domingo?

    Yep, they're now some of the oldest buses in the fleet these days - the average age of a bus in London is about 5 years, and they use older hybrid powertrains rather than fully electric.

    Most retired London buses get cascaded out to regional bus companies who don't need to work them quite as hard, but the Boris Buses might be trickier to do that with since they were built to a such a narrowly London-specific spec that won't work elsewhere (they've got a third door at the back, for example).
    What was stupid about killing the orders, was that they were built properly (for a change) in the U.K.

    The hybrid power train was designed to be upgradable to fully electric, when batteries got cheaper.

    They were introduced to reduce emissions (especially particulates) as a major part of their design.

    The “skate” - wheels, basic frame and power train were designed to be applicable to a range of bus designs.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    I'm in no position to make a call on this. What I know is that he has been seriously ill in hospital but is now recovering. He posted that he is on a rehab ward undergoing physiotherapy.

    He felt that he was able to serve, his association selected him, and that was that. And now 48 hours before the deadline they have thrown him off the ticket.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,246
    kle4 said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    They are a very old political party all things considered. Nearly 200 years by some measures.

    If they go belly up will the mantle of Tory be passed to a new party?
    I think Farage has just left it too late. The debates are set now and candidate selections are about to expire. Also, FPTP protects the Conservatives a bit- this time.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037
    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 53,392

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    Hunt is right about elections being won from the centre ground but the development of Reform is causing the Tories a major problem because they are losing so much of their hinterland to the right of centre that they should be able to rely on.

    The problem Reform and UKIP before them have is that there is never going to be a majority for them or even a large enough minority to get meaningful representation. All they are going to do is screw the Tories, a bit like so many Alba members are keen to screw the SNP in the hope that something better comes out of the wreckage.

    It may be that after 10 years or so of opposition the lesson will be learned that the centre right and the right need to hang in together if they want to win or influence the direction of this country. Maybe. But it is going to take quite a while.
  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    I know a lot of conservative young people - our entire living memory has been the tories messing up the economy, out of control immigration, even more out of control house and rental prices, tripling of uni fees, locking us away for 2 years and national service! Is it any wonder we can't wait until they're booted out?
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,540

    Ghedebrav said:

    boulay said:

    Ghedebrav said:

    carnforth said:

    If a tory leader's mother had named him Winston, mockery would abound. but Keir is unremarked upon.

    Most people have no idea who Keir Hardy is.

    Fun* fact - my parents also named me after a once-famous trade union activist.


    *OK, not actually fun.
    Jimmy Hoffa is a perfectly good name so don’t be embarrassed.
    You know what - I’m at a loose end in a Travelodge this evening, and that’s inspired me to download the audiobook of American Tabloid.
    May I also suggest "Hollywood Babylon"? Bit dated but what the hell!
    See also Scorpio Rising for a half hour of biker homo-eroticism, rock’n’roll and general cheesy fetishism. And who doesn’t like etc.

    https://youtu.be/6M08Czuqy80?si=XwZ4-wTsrpwvEdBo
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,246
    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    They're really testing the if you stand for nothing you will fall for nothing premise.

    Everyone has their own special reason to hate them and their own special reason to believe whatever they want of SKS.

    Labour barely factor in this election except as an ejection mechanism.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 8,872
    edited June 5
    Chameleon said:

    Farooq said:

    Jeremy Hunt speaks up and it's like a breath of fresh air
    The evidence of Britain is that elections are always won from the centre ground and I think in a two-party system that will always be the case. We’ll always be a broad church, and I think that’s a good thing.

    There it is. The Conservative Party is still in there somewhere. They missed a trick in not making him leader. Too late now, just another of history's "what if"s.

    Trouble is that the Lib Dems have often tried being the centre party. It's not won them any elections. You need a large base of voters to win elections. Being on the centre won't guarantee you that.
    The LD's have always done best electorally, since the 1990's, when they have been seen to be slightly to the left of Labour, a lesson they will probably have to relearn all over again under Starmer, and challenging any of his more authoritarian policies, as they did under Blair.

    Davey will have to shift his stance a little, but that he's surprised me on the upside in this election so far.
    That was before the Greens though - LDs tried it in 2019 and lost their leader! The space is a liberal centre-right party if the tories go as cuckoo as it expected.
    Hm, I'm not sure I'd regard the 2019 campaign as a centre-left one, from my point of view, at least not compared to the 2000-2010 ones. AFAIK the main challenging issue was Brexit, but the earlier LD's campaigned particularly on civil liberties issues combined with a moderately centre-left social programme.

    I do think that's where their future lies as a distinctive party, myself. Classic liberalism on ancient rights and liberties, and dipping their toes into social liberalism. I do think some of their MP's might join a new centre-right grouping if the Tories merge with Reform, though.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    I'm in no position to make a call on this. What I know is that he has been seriously ill in hospital but is now recovering. He posted that he is on a rehab ward undergoing physiotherapy.

    He felt that he was able to serve, his association selected him, and that was that. And now 48 hours before the deadline they have thrown him off the ticket.
    Very poorly handled, regardless. Best of luck and health to him.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 22,580
    That’s another thread Goodwinned.

    When will it ever end?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037

    kle4 said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    They are a very old political party all things considered. Nearly 200 years by some measures.

    If they go belly up will the mantle of Tory be passed to a new party?
    I think Farage has just left it too late. The debates are set now and candidate selections are about to expire. Also, FPTP protects the Conservatives a bit- this time.
    My suspicion was that his initial claim not to be standing was a lie designed to create maximum drama when he then 'changed' his mind, but perhaps it was genuine and it may cost Reform a few high profile defections who in the intervening days locked down a place with the Tories in weary resignation.

    Not that he's the be all and end all of the threat of Reform to the Tories, but it is on a different level with the attention he would get over Tice.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,383

    Here’s an out there scenario for the election result in the Reform bandwagon starts rolling:

    Labour: 39%
    Reform: 31%
    Lib Dems: 10%
    Tories: 10%
    Others: 10%

    Hmmm EC may not be much use for that sort of 'out there' result but gives a LAbour majority of 76 with Reform as the Official Opposition on 212. Tories on 2 seats, both in Scotland.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671
    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
    I don't know. I don't think Duguid is that sort. I'd be extremely surprised if he turns on the Tories like that. Likelier he'll focus on himself and come out to shore up the Tory candidate in a couple of weeks in a show of magnanimous unity.
    I don't even know if we will get a Reform candidate....
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 61,613
    Chameleon said:

    Will historians write that having covid parties in Downing Street while the Queen mourned alone at her husband's funeral destroyed the once mighty Conservative Party?

    Inevitably they will, despite the reality that it was defending a no-name scoundrel with an ironic name that got 'em.
    Not as colourful a story to tell for a historian. But anyway the Pincher affair is not what got the public boiling with anger.

    Britain. Play by the rules. Fair play.

    Johnson broke that and quite possibly he has destroyed his party as a consequence.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,564
    DavidL said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    Hunt is right about elections being won from the centre ground but the development of Reform is causing the Tories a major problem because they are losing so much of their hinterland to the right of centre that they should be able to rely on.

    The problem Reform and UKIP before them have is that there is never going to be a majority for them or even a large enough minority to get meaningful representation. All they are going to do is screw the Tories, a bit like so many Alba members are keen to screw the SNP in the hope that something better comes out of the wreckage.

    It may be that after 10 years or so of opposition the lesson will be learned that the centre right and the right need to hang in together if they want to win or influence the direction of this country. Maybe. But it is going to take quite a while.
    Sorry but that reeks of the entitlement that one gets from Labour/Tory people. I've no idea what a future conservative party might look like but I wouldn't assume it will be the Tories. They are staring at an historically low vote share. Calls for electoral reform may grown on the right. We have seen right of centre politics being re-imagined across the western world recently. Everything will be up in the air.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 10,295
    DavidL said:

    Jonathan said:

    Genuine question, have the Lib Dems come out with any policies yet? Curious.

    We all have to learn to sailboard, apparently.
    There have been lots of LibDem policy announcements. They don’t get as much media coverage. The latest big one was free personal care for adults
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,271
    edited June 5

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    Apart from rites not rights, I agree. As a socialist, I regard tales of the Tory Party's demise as implausible. We are quite a conservative (small c) country, and both Labour and Tory parties have survived multiple tales of their demise.

    The Labour Party, phoenix-like, rose from the ashes after 1983, and again after 2019, The Tory Party will do the same, after some self-reflection.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    I've been bullish on Labour in this election for years but I thoroughly disagree with the notion that they are guaranteed multiple election victories.

    For many reasons, the coming years could be fractious. For one thing, we could easily have all the opposition parties post election demanding PR - including a potential breakaway left faction of Labour, for instance.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844

    Chameleon said:

    Will historians write that having covid parties in Downing Street while the Queen mourned alone at her husband's funeral destroyed the once mighty Conservative Party?

    Inevitably they will, despite the reality that it was defending a no-name scoundrel with an ironic name that got 'em.
    Not as colourful a story to tell for a historian. But anyway the Pincher affair is not what got the public boiling with anger.

    Britain. Play by the rules. Fair play.

    Johnson broke that and quite possibly he has destroyed his party as a consequence.
    Yep. Johnson turned his party into a total Brexit, everything else came from that toxin.

  • SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 7,088
    AlsoLei said:

    If Reform really does overtake the Tories in the polls, they could see a lot of defections.

    Any poll change as dramatic as that that would be a big media story.

    Refuk's weird status as a ltd company with Farage as majority shareholder must surely put potential defectors (and donors!) off, though.

    I think they'd need to at least promise to sort that out before any but the most desperate would consider defecting.
    There's no shortage of extremely desperate Tory candidates at the moment.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
    I don't know. I don't think Duguid is that sort. I'd be extremely surprised if he turns on the Tories like that. Likelier he'll focus on himself and come out to shore up the Tory candidate in a couple of weeks in a show of magnanimous unity.
    I don't even know if we will get a Reform candidate....
    Is that your seat?

  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,149
    Farooq said:

    ToryJim said:

    I’ve been out this evening and I have to say the treatment of David Duguid utterly disgusts me. They should have given him more dignity and certainly more respect. It is an appalling way to behave to dump a person recovery from a medical issue at the 11th hour. Shame on whoever did that. Shame.

    I'm intrigued to see what reason is/has been given. If it's because he's been ill then yes, wholly agree. But there have been some murmurings about his ties to BP and potential conflicts of interests. I can't say I followed it much (something to do with a family member's shares??) so I've no idea whether that's involved.
    Whatever reason you think you might have you talk to the individual first. You might end up at the same place in the end but how you do things is important. I didn’t think it was a good idea to try to stand from a hospital bed, but it was his decision and if his local colleagues disagreed they should have sought to change his position. If it is something else driving this they should still have talked to him because now they look like utter shits.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,383

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    I'm in no position to make a call on this. What I know is that he has been seriously ill in hospital but is now recovering. He posted that he is on a rehab ward undergoing physiotherapy.

    He felt that he was able to serve, his association selected him, and that was that. And now 48 hours before the deadline they have thrown him off the ticket.
    "A spokesperson for the Scottish Tories said: "David Duguid is unfortunately unable to stand in this election. "

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/24369290.scottish-tories-drop-candidate-recovering-serious-illness/

    A rather unfortunate phrase given that he has had a spinal illness.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,246

    DavidL said:

    Jonathan said:

    Genuine question, have the Lib Dems come out with any policies yet? Curious.

    We all have to learn to sailboard, apparently.
    There have been lots of LibDem policy announcements. They don’t get as much media coverage. The latest big one was free personal care for adults
    Ed Davey will wipe your bum, personally.
  • GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,174

    The other question would be where the centre-right Tories would go.
    Neither Starmer's vision of a particular kind of New Labour, nor the Lib Dems, are actually a natural fit.

    They'd really need a new party or political space, I think, and where does the organisation or profile for that come from.

    I would divide the electorate into 4 main groups:

    1) Right wing economics, socially liberal - the metropolitan elite, Cameroons, Blairites etc - Times and FT readers
    2) Right wing economics, socially conservative - shire Tories - Mail and Telegraph readers
    3) Left wing economics, socially liberal - Corbynites, Greenies - Guardian readers
    4) Left wing economics, socially conservative - Red Wallers - Mirror and Sun readers

    Now traditionally the divide has been on economics - groups 1&2 for Con vs. 3&4 for Lab

    What we saw with the Brexit debate and has happened in the US is a new alignment on cultural issues 1&3 vs. 2&4. If we continue down this path then that may well lead to a complete realignment and break both main parties. We could then end up with a situation where SW Norfolk and Sunderland Central vote for a socially conservative party, while Maidenhead and Hackney N vote for a socially liberal party.

    Your centre right Tories then end up like the Country Club republicans in the US and have to decide whether culture or economics is more important.
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,415

    AlsoLei said:

    Is it true, that Boris Buses are being taken off the streets of London? Wrath of Khan versus BoJo?

    Perhaps the fleet can be sold to Santo Domingo?

    Yep, they're now some of the oldest buses in the fleet these days - the average age of a bus in London is about 5 years, and they use older hybrid powertrains rather than fully electric.

    Most retired London buses get cascaded out to regional bus companies who don't need to work them quite as hard, but the Boris Buses might be trickier to do that with since they were built to a such a narrowly London-specific spec that won't work elsewhere (they've got a third door at the back, for example).
    What was stupid about killing the orders, was that they were built properly (for a change) in the U.K.

    The hybrid power train was designed to be upgradable to fully electric, when batteries got cheaper.

    They were introduced to reduce emissions (especially particulates) as a major part of their design.

    The “skate” - wheels, basic frame and power train were designed to be applicable to a range of bus designs.
    Wrightbus offered a non-London variant with only two doors and one staircase, but there weren't many takers (I think all the ones built ended up in London anyway). Their rather more successful Gemini 3 uses a lot of the New Routemaster design, but is based on a Volvo chassis.

    Since being rescued from bankruptcy, I think they're concentrating on hydrogen buses these days.

    Basically, it seems that it was too expensive for any non-London operators.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844

    AlsoLei said:

    If Reform really does overtake the Tories in the polls, they could see a lot of defections.

    Any poll change as dramatic as that that would be a big media story.

    Refuk's weird status as a ltd company with Farage as majority shareholder must surely put potential defectors (and donors!) off, though.

    I think they'd need to at least promise to sort that out before any but the most desperate would consider defecting.
    There's no shortage of extremely desperate Tory candidates at the moment.
    Yeah but a concrete life ring won't help...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037

    DavidL said:

    Jonathan said:

    Genuine question, have the Lib Dems come out with any policies yet? Curious.

    We all have to learn to sailboard, apparently.
    There have been lots of LibDem policy announcements. They don’t get as much media coverage. The latest big one was free personal care for adults
    Ed Davey will wipe your bum, personally.
    The firm hand of government?
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671
    Foxy said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
    I don't know. I don't think Duguid is that sort. I'd be extremely surprised if he turns on the Tories like that. Likelier he'll focus on himself and come out to shore up the Tory candidate in a couple of weeks in a show of magnanimous unity.
    I don't even know if we will get a Reform candidate....
    Is that your seat?

    Yes sir
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's not an employee. For better or, evidently, worse.

    No idea if he could sue the SCUP - but it would take too long to get reinstated as a candidate in the lawcourts.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 35,424
    edited June 5
    Richi's next big idea is harsher prison sentencing

    While letting prisoners out due to overcrowding, and failing to fund the courts for 14 years.

    His team really do hate him
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,271

    DavidL said:

    Jonathan said:

    Genuine question, have the Lib Dems come out with any policies yet? Curious.

    We all have to learn to sailboard, apparently.
    There have been lots of LibDem policy announcements. They don’t get as much media coverage. The latest big one was free personal care for adults
    Ed Davey will wipe your bum, personally.
    Kinder, gentler, grown-up politics.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037
    Scott_xP said:

    Richi's next big idea is harsher prison sentencing

    While letting prisoners out due to overcrowding, and failing ti fund the courts for 14 years.

    His team really do hate him

    Harsher sentencing is a perennial favourite of those running for elections. A bit more money for criminal justice would get a lot more bang for its buck.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474
    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    I'm in no position to make a call on this. What I know is that he has been seriously ill in hospital but is now recovering. He posted that he is on a rehab ward undergoing physiotherapy.

    He felt that he was able to serve, his association selected him, and that was that. And now 48 hours before the deadline they have thrown him off the ticket.
    "A spokesperson for the Scottish Tories said: "David Duguid is unfortunately unable to stand in this election. "

    https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/24369290.scottish-tories-drop-candidate-recovering-serious-illness/

    A rather unfortunate phrase given that he has had a spinal illness.
    WTF? "unable to stand"?

    They don't give a rat fuck do they, even for their own. And he IS able to stand. They just decided not to left him.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,202

    Scott_xP said:

    So, the Tories did manage to get everybody talking about tax.

    Every news outlet has done a forensic analysis of how big a lie it was.

    Awesome work, lads. Trebles all round...

    People misremember how 2016 net/gross £350M a week trick actually played out. Bus was going round for weeks before any furore began. A great many people voted on the basis it was actually true, anda huge sun of money in the scheme of things. Some people actually took years to realise the truth behind it.

    But yesterday’s 2K lie had no time at all to do its business, before it changed today into a different understanding in the publics mind. In less than 24hrs this ploy collapsed and has became universally known as dubious claim. It’s already in the minds of those fleeting observer of politics – in other words the vast majority of people – who may only hear about the story in the loosest terms, as the row about another Tory lie. Even the Clangers have already heard its dubious from the tin chicken, who by some miracle can get Chris Masons podcast in her left ear.

    Will Sunak’s dubious tax claim stick in voters’ minds?
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq55e9dz79lo

    All the news today about it being a lie, is already far more powerful than anything the Tories can now do to convince it isn’t. It’s now the very opposite of the 2016 bus. What it is advertising when people see it now is same old Tories always lying.

    It’s going to have a negative impact on the Conservative campaign unless they can back away from it.
    Nah, everyone knows Labour will need to put up taxes and aren't saying where.

    Every trick like this has a kernel of truth in it.
    Trick. You are calling it a trick now, not a hard cold fact?

    You are beginning to back away from thinking it might still work, I can sense that.

    Here’s the kicker. When Sunak faces all those interviews in coming weeks, does he want to be quizzed about the 2K Lie? Does he want it to come up in interviews. Look how his 2K Lie has been successfully shredded on all the news programmes today - he’s going to have to go through that same shred, in every interview, every week - not merely the next one on one debate, when Starmer is ready and waiting for him with all these strong lines of attack. Everybody’s now ready and waiting for him.

    Ignoring the Civil Service immediately called him a liar, which will always be the first thing he will have to try and spin, take just one other aspect - the SPADs who created this only got it to come up to 2K figure, because the only people they had paying tax to fill the bigged up black hole, are working families. How financially illiterate does that sound? And Rishi’s going to have that put to him, just like that, and again and again he’s going to have to admit that, yes, that bit is actually true.

    The damage this can cause Sunak’s credibility and the campaign has not been thought through, has it?
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
    I don't know. I don't think Duguid is that sort. I'd be extremely surprised if he turns on the Tories like that. Likelier he'll focus on himself and come out to shore up the Tory candidate in a couple of weeks in a show of magnanimous unity.
    I don't even know if we will get a Reform candidate....
    Well if the Tories don't get their papers in soon the unionist vote will just have to alight behind the next placed unionist party, the LDs.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    Apart from rites not rights, I agree. As a socialist, I regard tales of the Tory Party's demise as implausible. We are quite a conservative (small c) country, and both Labour and Tory parties have survived multiple tales of their demise.

    The Labour Party, phoenix-like, rose from the ashes after 1983, and again after 2019, The Tory Party will do the same, after some self-reflection.
    Equally many were burying the Lib Dems after 2015 and mocking their ‘fightback’.

    And yet now here we are with multiple Baxterised polls placing Team Parasail as His Majesty’s Next Opposition.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,149
    Farooq said:

    ToryJim said:

    Farooq said:

    ToryJim said:

    I’ve been out this evening and I have to say the treatment of David Duguid utterly disgusts me. They should have given him more dignity and certainly more respect. It is an appalling way to behave to dump a person recovery from a medical issue at the 11th hour. Shame on whoever did that. Shame.

    I'm intrigued to see what reason is/has been given. If it's because he's been ill then yes, wholly agree. But there have been some murmurings about his ties to BP and potential conflicts of interests. I can't say I followed it much (something to do with a family member's shares??) so I've no idea whether that's involved.
    Whatever reason you think you might have you talk to the individual first. You might end up at the same place in the end but how you do things is important. I didn’t think it was a good idea to try to stand from a hospital bed, but it was his decision and if his local colleagues disagreed they should have sought to change his position. If it is something else driving this they should still have talked to him because now they look like utter shits.
    We don't know that they haven't spoken to him. It could be the party has a good reason to want to shift him out and he said no, so they've done it anyway. It doesn't strike me that the Tories would just bump him to one side because he's been in hospital, it doesn't pass the smell test. The Tories have been campaigning here, delivering leaflets. He's got a decent enough organisation and this seat was probably heading back to him before this.
    I think we're missing a piece of the puzzle here.
    Possibly, but on the evidence we have it looks pretty crappy behaviour.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474
    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    There was that BP shares affair but it was months ago and all he got was a finger-tap on the wrist, so I can't believe it's that.

    https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2024/feb/13/tory-mp-david-duguid-failed-to-declare-wifes-bp-shares-before-oil-and-gas-debates
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,246

    The other question would be where the centre-right Tories would go.
    Neither Starmer's vision of a particular kind of New Labour, nor the Lib Dems, are actually a natural fit.

    They'd really need a new party or political space, I think, and where does the organisation or profile for that come from.

    I would divide the electorate into 4 main groups:

    1) Right wing economics, socially liberal - the metropolitan elite, Cameroons, Blairites etc - Times and FT readers
    2) Right wing economics, socially conservative - shire Tories - Mail and Telegraph readers
    3) Left wing economics, socially liberal - Corbynites, Greenies - Guardian readers
    4) Left wing economics, socially conservative - Red Wallers - Mirror and Sun readers

    Now traditionally the divide has been on economics - groups 1&2 for Con vs. 3&4 for Lab

    What we saw with the Brexit debate and has happened in the US is a new alignment on cultural issues 1&3 vs. 2&4. If we continue down this path then that may well lead to a complete realignment and break both main parties. We could then end up with a situation where SW Norfolk and Sunderland Central vote for a socially conservative party, while Maidenhead and Hackney N vote for a socially liberal party.

    Your centre right Tories then end up like the Country Club republicans in the US and have to decide whether culture or economics is more important.
    You mean Culture Club then?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 34,383
    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    In Scotland though? Surely not.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,480
    Leon said:

    Irish woman mauled to death by her own XL Bully

    Enough. Hire a death squad from El Salvador and Kill. Them. All

    Why are human beings so slow to learn when it comes to things like XL bully dogs? Baffling.
  • Tim_in_RuislipTim_in_Ruislip Posts: 402
    Ahem;
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844
    edited June 5
    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
    I don't know. I don't think Duguid is that sort. I'd be extremely surprised if he turns on the Tories like that. Likelier he'll focus on himself and come out to shore up the Tory candidate in a couple of weeks in a show of magnanimous unity.
    I don't even know if we will get a Reform candidate....
    Well if the Tories don't get their papers in soon the unionist vote will just have to alight behind the next placed unionist party, the LDs.
    At 67 on Bet365 that is worth a quid!

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,246
    Andy_JS said:

    Leon said:

    Irish woman mauled to death by her own XL Bully

    Enough. Hire a death squad from El Salvador and Kill. Them. All

    Why are human beings so slow to learn when it comes to things like XL bully dogs? Baffling.
    Presume those who've already got them simply don't want to get rid of them and have convinced themselves theirs is alright.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 17,526

    kle4 said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    They are a very old political party all things considered. Nearly 200 years by some measures.

    If they go belly up will the mantle of Tory be passed to a new party?
    I think Farage has just left it too late. The debates are set now and candidate selections are about to expire. Also, FPTP protects the Conservatives a bit- this time.
    Yes. Imagine Farage had re-entered the fray not long after Truss had been toppled - which was when Reform started to rise in the polls. He'd have had time to attract people to Reform, to create an organisation, to fight a couple of rounds of local elections, to do better in the by-elections, to put pressure on the Tories and perhaps attract defections. Things could be very different.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,480
    "Nigel Farage has driven the Tories to a state of near-total psychological collapse
    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives

    ALLISTER HEATH"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/05/tory-left-driving-party-to-annihilation-at-farage-hands/
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 80,473
    edited June 5
    Another triple lock from the Tories....

    The “family home tax guarantee” is made up of new Tory pledges in three specific areas of property tax.

    The first is promising that more council tax bands, “expensive” council tax revaluations and council tax discounts will not be implemented under a Tory government.

    The second is that the party will maintain private residence relief, where people do not pay capital gains tax on their main home when it is sold.

    The third is that the Tories will not increase the rate or level of stamp duty.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/06/05/jeremy-hunt-challenges-keir-starmer-on-property-tax/

    It clear the Tory tactic is to keep shifting on every area that is / can be taxed and promising no increases and then challenge Labour to say no they wouldn't raise that either. Obviously it is dishonest as both parties are going to have to raise taxes somewhere.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    In Scotland though? Surely not.
    Oh stop it lol
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,238
    edited June 5

    The other question would be where the centre-right Tories would go.
    Neither Starmer's vision of a particular kind of New Labour, nor the Lib Dems, are actually a natural fit.

    They'd really need a new party or political space, I think, and where does the organisation or profile for that come from.

    The (80s) SDP is how you do it. Form a new breakaway party and enter into a marriage of convenience with the LibDems.

    Then pray that Starmer doesn’t embark on a patriotic war in the Falklands.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 16,942
    Leon said:

    Irish woman mauled to death by her own XL Bully

    Enough. Hire a death squad from El Salvador and Kill. Them. All

    Irish women? Bit harsh…
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474
    ToryJim said:

    Farooq said:

    ToryJim said:

    Farooq said:

    ToryJim said:

    I’ve been out this evening and I have to say the treatment of David Duguid utterly disgusts me. They should have given him more dignity and certainly more respect. It is an appalling way to behave to dump a person recovery from a medical issue at the 11th hour. Shame on whoever did that. Shame.

    I'm intrigued to see what reason is/has been given. If it's because he's been ill then yes, wholly agree. But there have been some murmurings about his ties to BP and potential conflicts of interests. I can't say I followed it much (something to do with a family member's shares??) so I've no idea whether that's involved.
    Whatever reason you think you might have you talk to the individual first. You might end up at the same place in the end but how you do things is important. I didn’t think it was a good idea to try to stand from a hospital bed, but it was his decision and if his local colleagues disagreed they should have sought to change his position. If it is something else driving this they should still have talked to him because now they look like utter shits.
    We don't know that they haven't spoken to him. It could be the party has a good reason to want to shift him out and he said no, so they've done it anyway. It doesn't strike me that the Tories would just bump him to one side because he's been in hospital, it doesn't pass the smell test. The Tories have been campaigning here, delivering leaflets. He's got a decent enough organisation and this seat was probably heading back to him before this.
    I think we're missing a piece of the puzzle here.
    Possibly, but on the evidence we have it looks pretty crappy behaviour.
    Verging on disability discrimination, though whether it counts as that is a legal rather than moral issue in terms of definition (ie if he genuinely could not do the job of campaigning).

    But he's not a SCUP employee so they would just say tough (to quote one of our Tories).
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 16,643

    The other question would be where the centre-right Tories would go.
    Neither Starmer's vision of a particular kind of New Labour, nor the Lib Dems, are actually a natural fit.

    They'd really need a new party or political space, I think, and where does the organisation or profile for that come from.

    The (80s) SDP is how you do it. Form a new breakaway party and enter into a marriage of convenience with the LibDems.

    Then pray that Starmer doesn’t embark on a patriotic war in the Falklands.
    Anyone know if the Liberal Unionist brand is still available? Harder part might be finding an unused bit of the visible spectrum.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 80,473
    edited June 5
    Leon said:

    Irish woman mauled to death by her own XL Bully

    Enough. Hire a death squad from El Salvador and Kill. Them. All

    Good job Defra didnt underestimate the number of these dogs by a factor of 7 in the UK....and come up with a policy that does next to nothing to reduce the mere 70k of them.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/04/22/xl-bullies-seven-times-more-britain-government-estimated/
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671
    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,480
    Belated thanks for the header Viewcode.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 35,424

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    How will you get it into the fridge?
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    kle4 said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    They are a very old political party all things considered. Nearly 200 years by some measures.

    If they go belly up will the mantle of Tory be passed to a new party?
    I think Farage has just left it too late. The debates are set now and candidate selections are about to expire. Also, FPTP protects the Conservatives a bit- this time.
    Yes. Imagine Farage had re-entered the fray not long after Truss had been toppled - which was when Reform started to rise in the polls. He'd have had time to attract people to Reform, to create an organisation, to fight a couple of rounds of local elections, to do better in the by-elections, to put pressure on the Tories and perhaps attract defections. Things could be very different.
    He likes money, he likes action, he likes being the maverick outsider. He likes offering simple solutions to complex problems.

    He doesn’t want the hard work, boredom and scrutiny of being an actual politician.

    This - along with FPTP - are why Reform are unlikely to supplant the Cons.
  • GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,174
    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    Who do you mean by HIM? Boris? Dave?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474
    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Tonight the LibDems put out a PPB all about compassion. Caring for people who are disabled and ill.
    Tonight - the Tories deselect David Duguid as candidate in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East - over the protest from his local association
    https://www.facebook.com/DavidDuguidMP

    Pity all the Conservative leaflets so far have been branded with his name and face with barely a mention of the party :lol:
    Now what?
    Now they lose the seat?
    Could be. This seat has been looking lean-Con for a while. If this proves highly disruptive (and from what Rochdale says about people resigning or calling for Reform, it might yet) then it's open for someone else. But there's a month of campaigning still. They could steady this and retain enough votes.
    I think there's just such incentive for any malcontented Tories to go for Reform that even the small personal vote of a local MP will be sufficient to cost them in such a tight area as Scotland.
    I don't know. I don't think Duguid is that sort. I'd be extremely surprised if he turns on the Tories like that. Likelier he'll focus on himself and come out to shore up the Tory candidate in a couple of weeks in a show of magnanimous unity.
    I don't even know if we will get a Reform candidate....
    Well if the Tories don't get their papers in soon the unionist vote will just have to alight behind the next placed unionist party, the LDs.
    Or Reform. I mean, if the Tories won last time ...
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 27,817
    DavidL said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    Hunt is right about elections being won from the centre ground but the development of Reform is causing the Tories a major problem because they are losing so much of their hinterland to the right of centre that they should be able to rely on.

    The problem Reform and UKIP before them have is that there is never going to be a majority for them or even a large enough minority to get meaningful representation. All they are going to do is screw the Tories, a bit like so many Alba members are keen to screw the SNP in the hope that something better comes out of the wreckage.

    It may be that after 10 years or so of opposition the lesson will be learned that the centre right and the right need to hang in together if they want to win or influence the direction of this country. Maybe. But it is going to take quite a while.
    I don’t really think this is true. The majority of those polled align with Reformite views on immigration. Many would, if comparing manifestos, probably like a lot of what Reform has to say - including many of those currently polling in favour of Labour. What's been keeping parties like on the fringes is the fact that they've been out of contention for seats. If they overtake the Tories, that's not the case any more.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,480

    The other question would be where the centre-right Tories would go.
    Neither Starmer's vision of a particular kind of New Labour, nor the Lib Dems, are actually a natural fit.

    They'd really need a new party or political space, I think, and where does the organisation or profile for that come from.

    I would divide the electorate into 4 main groups:

    1) Right wing economics, socially liberal - the metropolitan elite, Cameroons, Blairites etc - Times and FT readers
    2) Right wing economics, socially conservative - shire Tories - Mail and Telegraph readers
    3) Left wing economics, socially liberal - Corbynites, Greenies - Guardian readers
    4) Left wing economics, socially conservative - Red Wallers - Mirror and Sun readers

    Now traditionally the divide has been on economics - groups 1&2 for Con vs. 3&4 for Lab

    What we saw with the Brexit debate and has happened in the US is a new alignment on cultural issues 1&3 vs. 2&4. If we continue down this path then that may well lead to a complete realignment and break both main parties. We could then end up with a situation where SW Norfolk and Sunderland Central vote for a socially conservative party, while Maidenhead and Hackney N vote for a socially liberal party.

    Your centre right Tories then end up like the Country Club republicans in the US and have to decide whether culture or economics is more important.
    You mean Culture Club then?
    Church of the poison mind.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474

    Leon said:

    Irish woman mauled to death by her own XL Bully

    Enough. Hire a death squad from El Salvador and Kill. Them. All

    Good job Defra didnt underestimate the number of these dogs by a factor of 7 in the UK....and come up with a policy that does next to nothing to reduce the mere 70k of them.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/04/22/xl-bullies-seven-times-more-britain-government-estimated/
    Also a policy which turns out to be useless in defining the breed for elimination. Just encourages the canine equivalent of binary chemical weapons.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,202
    Andy_JS said:

    "Nigel Farage has driven the Tories to a state of near-total psychological collapse
    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives

    ALLISTER HEATH"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/05/tory-left-driving-party-to-annihilation-at-farage-hands/

    It’s only the weird yougov polls which have Reform anywhere near the Conservatives. If one of their polls show Tories in third, it definitely doesn’t mean Tories in third.

    Everyone know there is no electioneering tomorrow? It’s a rest day. 🥱 😴
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156
    edited June 5
    Farooq said:

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    It's obviously a joke, G.
    Not sure that it will be seen as that and best not to repeat it
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 61,613
    edited June 5
    Andy_JS said:

    "Nigel Farage has driven the Tories to a state of near-total psychological collapse
    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives

    ALLISTER HEATH"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/05/tory-left-driving-party-to-annihilation-at-farage-hands/

    Heath's relentless production line of articles saying Britain is utterly broken beyond repair and been destroyed by years of blob/davos thinking can't have helped though.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 21,540

    The other question would be where the centre-right Tories would go.
    Neither Starmer's vision of a particular kind of New Labour, nor the Lib Dems, are actually a natural fit.

    They'd really need a new party or political space, I think, and where does the organisation or profile for that come from.

    I would divide the electorate into 4 main groups:

    1) Right wing economics, socially liberal - the metropolitan elite, Cameroons, Blairites etc - Times and FT readers
    2) Right wing economics, socially conservative - shire Tories - Mail and Telegraph readers
    3) Left wing economics, socially liberal - Corbynites, Greenies - Guardian readers
    4) Left wing economics, socially conservative - Red Wallers - Mirror and Sun readers

    Now traditionally the divide has been on economics - groups 1&2 for Con vs. 3&4 for Lab

    What we saw with the Brexit debate and has happened in the US is a new alignment on cultural issues 1&3 vs. 2&4. If we continue down this path then that may well lead to a complete realignment and break both main parties. We could then end up with a situation where SW Norfolk and Sunderland Central vote for a socially conservative party, while Maidenhead and Hackney N vote for a socially liberal party.

    Your centre right Tories then end up like the Country Club republicans in the US and have to decide whether culture or economics is more important.
    You mean Culture Club then?
    Starmer, Starmer, Starmer, Starmer
    Starmer Chameleon...
    He's a man (a man) without convictions ...
  • GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,174
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    Who do you mean by HIM? Boris? Dave?
    The B word - don't say it, he'll appear!
    Dave isn't terrible. Better than Duguid.
    B would never stand in Scotland. He's too English for that. If B was to be parachuted in somewhere, I guess it would be for a very Brexity seat in the Midlands or East
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,480
    "Zac Goldsmith
    @ZacGoldsmith

    I understand the anger towards Sunak who has damaged the Party almost beyond repair and all but guaranteed the majority of his MPs will lose their job next month.
    But it’s hard to muster much sympathy given that none of this would have happened without the complicity of a majority of the Party & what is now unfolding was entirely predictable- indeed predicted.
    The hope is that when Sunak disappears off to California in a few weeks there are at least some decent MPs left around which to rebuild 🤞🙏🤞"

    https://x.com/ZacGoldsmith/status/1795059856446980240
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156
    edited June 5

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    You are a lib dem candidate joking about milkshakes attacks?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235

    In other news, I'm going to call it that the Trump conviction has made no difference whatsoever to the polls in the US. Of course, he hasn't been sentenced yet, but I doubt that will make a difference unless he's jailed.

    There has been a slight shift to Biden but only fractional. I expect the convention bounces and debates to shift the polls more than his sentencing though
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844

    DavidL said:

    Sean_F said:

    I think we have to accept that the game is up for the Conservative Party. As it is for Les Republicans in France, the Italian and Dutch Christian Democrats. Or the French or Greek Socialists. Parties eventually run out of road, and cease to speak for anyone other than careerists.

    Parties can be re-invented and it might be easier to do so in opposition. The Conservative party has survived for a very long time so I wouldn't be issuing the last rights just yet.

    Matthew Goodwin (calm down) makes the point that among the few conservative young people he knows, none associates with the Conservative party.
    Hunt is right about elections being won from the centre ground but the development of Reform is causing the Tories a major problem because they are losing so much of their hinterland to the right of centre that they should be able to rely on.

    The problem Reform and UKIP before them have is that there is never going to be a majority for them or even a large enough minority to get meaningful representation. All they are going to do is screw the Tories, a bit like so many Alba members are keen to screw the SNP in the hope that something better comes out of the wreckage.

    It may be that after 10 years or so of opposition the lesson will be learned that the centre right and the right need to hang in together if they want to win or influence the direction of this country. Maybe. But it is going to take quite a while.
    I don’t really think this is true. The majority of those polled align with Reformite views on immigration. Many would, if comparing manifestos, probably like a lot of what Reform has to say - including many of those currently polling in favour of Labour. What's been keeping parties like on the fringes is the fact that they've been out of contention for seats. If they overtake the Tories, that's not the case any more.
    Yes, but apart from immigration Reform has nothing, and for the vast majority of the country immigration is not a major driver of how we vote.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037
    Andy_JS said:

    "Nigel Farage has driven the Tories to a state of near-total psychological collapse
    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives

    ALLISTER HEATH"

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/05/tory-left-driving-party-to-annihilation-at-farage-hands/

    We might, but the eagerness of some media rampers to see it happen is definitely reaching fever pitch.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235

    Pulpstar said:

    Wonder how this would work.

    For any constituency

    Halve the 2019 Tory vote.
    Give Labour their 2017 vote.
    Give reform the UKIP 2015 vote
    Give the Lib Dems their 2019 vote...

    Romford has had pretty minimal changes;

    Con 15200
    Lab 15893 (!!)
    Ref 11208
    LD 2708

    Blimey. But then not blimey. Especially with Nigel back.

    And Gosport is unchanged;

    Con 16100
    Lab 13436
    Ref 9266
    LD 5473

    Prolly smells about right, albeit from a distance.
    Romford was Labour in 1997
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,474
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    Who do you mean by HIM? Boris? Dave?
    The B word - don't say it, he'll appear!
    Dave isn't terrible. Better than Duguid.
    He can expatiate on his family's hunting estate (on Jura I think?), as I recall.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 50,713

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    That was debunked within a few minutes of the claim first being made. It's was case of mistaken identity.

    "A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes."
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    You are a lib dem candidate joking about milkshakes attacks?
    Joking about the fact we still have a WIMPY to buy milkshakes from.

    Nobody in politics should have milkshake or anything else thrown at them. Even if they are Farage.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Carnyx said:

    Farooq said:

    Re David Duguid, i dont know enough about his state of health to have a firm opinion but to those more knowledgable is there an aspect of 'duty of care' to this?

    He's had some kind of spine infection, and pneumonia. This is public knowledge, shared by Duguid himself, so no problems talking about it. I don't know his state other than I got a vague sense he was out of the worst of it. I can't be sure.
    He seems surprised and disappointed by it, which makes me think something else is going on. A candidate they want to parachute in or a brewing scandal around Duguid himself.

    I'm bracing myself for Ruth Davidson to appear :lol:
    I did wonder for a moment, but peerage, though. She'd need to dump that to be credible as a candidate (whatever the law).
    Cmon, let me have this one, I'm just terrified it's HIM. Ruth, I could cope with. But jesus fucking christ, not HIM.
    Who do you mean by HIM? Boris? Dave?
    The B word - don't say it, he'll appear!
    Dave isn't terrible. Better than Duguid.
    B would never stand in Scotland. He's too English for that. If B was to be parachuted in somewhere, I guess it would be for a very Brexity seat in the Midlands or East
    Nah, nowhere north of Watford.

    He will sit this one out. He is too astute to be involved in this shitshow.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,202

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    You are a lib dem candidate joking about milkshakes attacks?
    That Farage set the attack up on himself is 100% fake news. In fact it is pushing a conspiracy, is it not?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235
    edited June 5
    Chameleon said:

    Farooq said:

    Jeremy Hunt speaks up and it's like a breath of fresh air
    The evidence of Britain is that elections are always won from the centre ground and I think in a two-party system that will always be the case. We’ll always be a broad church, and I think that’s a good thing.

    There it is. The Conservative Party is still in there somewhere. They missed a trick in not making him leader. Too late now, just another of history's "what if"s.

    Trouble is that the Lib Dems have often tried being the centre party. It's not won them any elections. You need a large base of voters to win elections. Being on the centre won't guarantee you that.
    The LD's have always done best electorally, since the 1990's, when they have been seen to be slightly to the left of Labour, a lesson they will probably have to relearn all over again under Starmer, and challenging any of his more authoritarian policies, as they did under Blair.

    Davey will have to shift his stance a little, but that he's surprised me on the upside in this election so far.
    That was before the Greens though - LDs tried it in 2019 and lost their leader! The space is a liberal centre-right party if the tories go as cuckoo as it expected.
    An economically centre right, pro EU and socially liberal party was the LDs led by Clegg in 2015, it got 7.9% of the vote and 8 MPs
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    That was debunked within a few minutes of the claim first being made. It's was case of mistaken identity.

    "A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes."
    The alleged proponent has been arrested and identified as a Corbyn supporter
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,480
    edited June 5

    DavidL said:

    Jonathan said:

    Genuine question, have the Lib Dems come out with any policies yet? Curious.

    We all have to learn to sailboard, apparently.
    There have been lots of LibDem policy announcements. They don’t get as much media coverage. The latest big one was free personal care for adults
    Ed Davey will wipe your bum, personally.
    He was doing his bit to win over Reform UK voters today by getting a speeding ticket. 😊
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 47,844

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    You are a lib dem candidate joking about milkshakes attacks?
    That Farage set the attack up on himself is 100% fake news. In fact it is pushing a conspiracy, is it not?
    Yep, a bit like the fake news of a £2000 tax rise.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    If the Tories do parachute Him in, which flavour of milkshake do you recommend I buy?

    Vanilla, Chocolate, Banana, Strawberry or Salted Caramel?

    https://wimpy.uk.com/menus/drinks

    Not sure what you mean but I hope it is not connected to the widely condemned milk shake attack on Farage

    Its a joke. Besides Farage appears to have set up the milkshake "attack" for publicity. And it worked beautifully.
    You are a lib dem candidate joking about milkshakes attacks?
    That Farage set the attack up on himself is 100% fake news. In fact it is pushing a conspiracy, is it not?
    Self-publicity is what he does. Have seen a couple of "he set it up things" with pictures and everything. If that isn't right then happy to be corrected.

    The truth matters then? Interesting development after the excitement of last night.
  • GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,174
    Been having a bit more of a look at the polling for Canada 1993. In some ways the Progressive Conservatives were still lucky to get 2 seats as Reform Canada only overtook them in the polls right at the end of the campaign:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_1993_Canadian_federal_election

    After the 1993 election the PCs collapsed even further, down to 6% at one point before recovering somewhat:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_1997_Canadian_federal_election
This discussion has been closed.