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  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,254
    HYUFD said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    Former Post office Chair Alice Perkins is wife of Jack Straw and Labour, former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was given a CBE by Tory PM Theresa May
    Yes.

    I have readily believed that Vennells will be charged in due course. But will they really put Mrs J Straw in the dock?
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,785

    Sandpit said:

    algarkirk said:

    148grss said:

    HYUFD said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    On seats though even if Reform are level pegging with the Tories or even slightly ahead of the Tories on voteshare, the Tories still win significantly more seats than Reform, Labour and the LDs however win even more seats with a split right.

    Anyway, I suspect his return to leadership was peak Farage in the polls. He will decline as the Starmer v Sunak debates from which he is excluded continue and the Conservatives probably win back a few voters from Reform and the LDs if as is likely the Tory manifesto promises a big IHT cut
    I don't think IHT is as unpopular as conservatives think it is. One, because most people are already safe from it because who has half a million worth of assets to gift the next generation that they aren't already having to dip into to make ends meet, and two, because it is the very definition of unearned wealth. Income tax bands you can at least go "I work hard for my money, why should it be taxed so high?", with inheritance it's just a case of rich people passing on their money to their kids so they stay rich.

    I will probably have to pay some inheritance tax at some point when my grandparents pass away - they are splitting their only asset (their house) between 7 grandkids and my aunt. The house is only worth the ridiculous amount it is because it is within the M25 and the housing market is stupid. If we have to pay some tax - so be it. Again, I'd rather a functioning society than a bit more change in my pocket. The only people who really gripe about it are those who are already wedded to the "no such thing as society" mentality - the extremely wealthy who are all "I've got mine, Jack". If anything I think lots of people would be fine with inheritance tax increasing, especially on estates over £5 or £10 million.
    IHT all depends on what you want to achieve. At the moment it is paid in significant amounts only by the unlucky or the badly advised. Because for most people the threshold is £1 million the issue does not arise. Those with very serious assets have a large industry of lawyers and accountants to turn to. (They would be the principal victims of abolition of IHT. Lincoln's Inn would never be the same again). The law allows massive exemptions and (lawful) planning and avoidances.

    IMHO it should apply with fewer exemptions at a much lower rate. Like 10%. 40% is too high.
    As with any tax on “wealth”, those with actual wealth plan their lives around avoiding it, so it mostly gets paid by the middle classes who happen to have got lucky on the property market.
    In my days in the tax biz, Sandy, it was often referred to as 'the voluntary tax', although as I indicated in an earlier post, not everyone objects to volunteering.
    So, 18 year olds will be expected to pay it.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 13,678

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    Again you make sound points. Do I detect a wobble in your Tory vote? Are you heading back into the warm embrace of Wavey Davey?
    No. The election being called was a horrible shock. Even though I did predict both the shock announcement and the actual day. I now think he should have waited. Then the polls, and the spread markets, and everyone on PB excited at Conservative wipe out event made me feel sick for a week.

    Now I think, at least it draws a line, and Conservatives can go back to being proper Conservatives again. Slowly. So there is no point me posting anything other than the true history of this election, and cut through everybody’s spin.

    The Conservative debates and leadership election that come after is the important thing.
    As usual, I agree with very little of this.

    There's still four weeks to go and plenty of time for events but the current situation remains dire for the Conservatives.

    It's not a big journey from 150 to 100 or even 50 if MRP numbers are to be believed (I don't). The topline polls continue to show Labour in the low to mid 40s and the Conservatives in the low to mid 20s. The Conservative objective must now be to finish second in terms of seats (votes don't matter) and remain His Majesty's Loyal Opposition. The possibility that may not happen exists if tactical voting plays the part some think it will.

    As to what will happen after the election and let's assume for now the Conservatives do finish second with between 100-150 seats (not unreasonable from where we are now). The options will either be to quickly unite behind a new leader (improbable) or have that time-honoured phrase - "a battle for the soul of the party".

    Will the Conservatives use their autumn conference as a kind of leadership hustings? Seems reasonable - no one outside the party or forums like this will care very much. Perhaps you should join to have a vote in any membership ballot and try to work out which of the undeserving is nearest your version of "Conservatism" (whatever that is).

    The individual who emerges from that sea of electoral hazard will face a party in ruins and the first question won't be how to deal with Labour or even the LDs but how to deal with Reform - again, let's assume Farage is their sole MP. Will someone like a Braverman basically grovel to him to get him back in the fold - propose a merger between the two parties to fight the common "progressive" enemy?

    Here's a thought - the Reform leadership may sound like post-Thatcherites but the Reform membership is or are very different and many of them aren't conservative by any measure.

    As we know, leaders "evolve" - look at Kinnock and how he shifted in opposition from 1983 to 1992. When parties become serious about wanting power, they are happy to pick the leader most likely to take them there and the funerla pyre of sacred cows slaughtered on that journey will be impressive.

    The Conservative Party which wins back power will be unrecognisable from the one which loses it.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,785

    eek said:

    Are LD new favourites in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East?

    No but @RochdalePioneers now has a chance that didn't exist 2 days ago...
    We should have a PB outing. Every poster, of every political persuasion, goes up to Aberdeenshire for the day to campaign for @RochdalePioneers. Otherwise we won't have a PB MP in the next parliament and that would never do.

    That said I just looked at the train fare and it's £270 return, so maybe not.
    Excellent idea! Remember, though, that the last 90 minutes of the journey will be on a bus, and English and Welsh bus passes are not valid in Scotland.
  • eekeek Posts: 27,582
    stodge said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    Again you make sound points. Do I detect a wobble in your Tory vote? Are you heading back into the warm embrace of Wavey Davey?
    No. The election being called was a horrible shock. Even though I did predict both the shock announcement and the actual day. I now think he should have waited. Then the polls, and the spread markets, and everyone on PB excited at Conservative wipe out event made me feel sick for a week.

    Now I think, at least it draws a line, and Conservatives can go back to being proper Conservatives again. Slowly. So there is no point me posting anything other than the true history of this election, and cut through everybody’s spin.

    The Conservative debates and leadership election that come after is the important thing.
    As usual, I agree with very little of this.

    There's still four weeks to go and plenty of time for events but the current situation remains dire for the Conservatives.

    It's not a big journey from 150 to 100 or even 50 if MRP numbers are to be believed (I don't). The topline polls continue to show Labour in the low to mid 40s and the Conservatives in the low to mid 20s. The Conservative objective must now be to finish second in terms of seats (votes don't matter) and remain His Majesty's Loyal Opposition. The possibility that may not happen exists if tactical voting plays the part some think it will.

    As to what will happen after the election and let's assume for now the Conservatives do finish second with between 100-150 seats (not unreasonable from where we are now). The options will either be to quickly unite behind a new leader (improbable) or have that time-honoured phrase - "a battle for the soul of the party".

    Will the Conservatives use their autumn conference as a kind of leadership hustings? Seems reasonable - no one outside the party or forums like this will care very much. Perhaps you should join to have a vote in any membership ballot and try to work out which of the undeserving is nearest your version of "Conservatism" (whatever that is).

    The individual who emerges from that sea of electoral hazard will face a party in ruins and the first question won't be how to deal with Labour or even the LDs but how to deal with Reform - again, let's assume Farage is their sole MP. Will someone like a Braverman basically grovel to him to get him back in the fold - propose a merger between the two parties to fight the common "progressive" enemy?

    Here's a thought - the Reform leadership may sound like post-Thatcherites but the Reform membership is or are very different and many of them aren't conservative by any measure.

    As we know, leaders "evolve" - look at Kinnock and how he shifted in opposition from 1983 to 1992. When parties become serious about wanting power, they are happy to pick the leader most likely to take them there and the funerla pyre of sacred cows slaughtered on that journey will be impressive.

    The Conservative Party which wins back power will be unrecognisable from the one which loses it.
    And that Conservative Party is very unlikely to exist until 2029 at the very earliest (more likely 2032)..
  • eekeek Posts: 27,582
    Pulpstar said:

    More shenanigans. Ross announced himself as candidate. But still needs to get formally selected by the association. And from what I can see on Facebook they are NOT happy.

    Seems outrageous on David Duguid quite honestly given how the new seat is 75% his old one.
    He also needs to get all the signatures on his nomination form by 5pm tomorrow - I suspect that will be harder than he thinks given how David has been treated...
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 465
    stodge said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    Again you make sound points. Do I detect a wobble in your Tory vote? Are you heading back into the warm embrace of Wavey Davey?
    No. The election being called was a horrible shock. Even though I did predict both the shock announcement and the actual day. I now think he should have waited. Then the polls, and the spread markets, and everyone on PB excited at Conservative wipe out event made me feel sick for a week.

    Now I think, at least it draws a line, and Conservatives can go back to being proper Conservatives again. Slowly. So there is no point me posting anything other than the true history of this election, and cut through everybody’s spin.

    The Conservative debates and leadership election that come after is the important thing.
    As usual, I agree with very little of this.

    There's still four weeks to go and plenty of time for events but the current situation remains dire for the Conservatives.

    It's not a big journey from 150 to 100 or even 50 if MRP numbers are to be believed (I don't). The topline polls continue to show Labour in the low to mid 40s and the Conservatives in the low to mid 20s. The Conservative objective must now be to finish second in terms of seats (votes don't matter) and remain His Majesty's Loyal Opposition. The possibility that may not happen exists if tactical voting plays the part some think it will.

    As to what will happen after the election and let's assume for now the Conservatives do finish second with between 100-150 seats (not unreasonable from where we are now). The options will either be to quickly unite behind a new leader (improbable) or have that time-honoured phrase - "a battle for the soul of the party".

    Will the Conservatives use their autumn conference as a kind of leadership hustings? Seems reasonable - no one outside the party or forums like this will care very much. Perhaps you should join to have a vote in any membership ballot and try to work out which of the undeserving is nearest your version of "Conservatism" (whatever that is).

    The individual who emerges from that sea of electoral hazard will face a party in ruins and the first question won't be how to deal with Labour or even the LDs but how to deal with Reform - again, let's assume Farage is their sole MP. Will someone like a Braverman basically grovel to him to get him back in the fold - propose a merger between the two parties to fight the common "progressive" enemy?

    Here's a thought - the Reform leadership may sound like post-Thatcherites but the Reform membership is or are very different and many of them aren't conservative by any measure.

    As we know, leaders "evolve" - look at Kinnock and how he shifted in opposition from 1983 to 1992. When parties become serious about wanting power, they are happy to pick the leader most likely to take them there and the funerla pyre of sacred cows slaughtered on that journey will be impressive.

    The Conservative Party which wins back power will be unrecognisable from the one which loses it.
    Can you imagine the anti-climax the country will feel if the tories actually won.... another 5 years with this. Even for people who oppose labour, it is clear that something new has to happen.... it cannot go on. it would be a disaster. Even if the tories miracuously won with 1 seat, there would have to be a new GE within 6 months, because (as we all know) the right hates itself so much that it cannot govern.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,202
    edited June 6
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Morning, first phone poll is out, Ipsos
    🚨 1st GE poll from @IpsosUK has Labour lead at +20 🚨

    Labour 43%
    Conservative 23%
    Reform 9%
    Greens 9%
    Lib Dems 8%
    Others 8%

    1,014 GB adults interviewed by phone
    Fieldwork dates 31st May - 4th June

    Much better for the Tories and includes Farage's return as ReformUK leader despite which the Tories are 14% more than Reform still.

    Ends with the day of the debate too so any Rishi bounce from that not yet caught
    Rishi bounce from a debate he clearly lost says the three debate polls 🤣

    I’m expecting a Starmer bounce from his win in the debates.
    Every post debate poll had far more thinking Sunak won than the Tory voteshare, even 39% of under 50s thought Rishi won the debate
    Firstly, the three polls had Starmer winning the debate. On the only important measure from a leaders debate “which one is lying, which one do you trust most” all the polling put him miles ahead.

    Secondly I am calling out your reading across a debate snap poll, to the actual election polling, as absolutely humiliating straw clutching bollocks. When you attempt to do that, are you comparing apples with apples, sheep with sheep? A two horse race compared to multi horse race. Seriously? 🤷‍♀️

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 48,565
    HYUFD said:

    All of this confirms to me that if the Tories had a centrist candidate that people like me could vote for, they'd be walking this.

    Eh? Sunak is the centrist Tory candidate, centrist Hunt is chancellor, centrist Cameron Foreign Secretary they are leaking to Reform for not being rightwing enough if anything.
    Yes. This is the government that has presided over record immigration, and which scoops up the boat people and puts them in 3 star country hotels. After giving them Dominos pizza.

    While talking tough bollocks on immigration.

    So they pissed off the socially liberal & illiberal.

    Meanwhile the Greek coastguard actually sank migrant boats.
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671
    eek said:

    Pulpstar said:

    More shenanigans. Ross announced himself as candidate. But still needs to get formally selected by the association. And from what I can see on Facebook they are NOT happy.

    Seems outrageous on David Duguid quite honestly given how the new seat is 75% his old one.
    He also needs to get all the signatures on his nomination form by 5pm tomorrow - I suspect that will be harder than he thinks given how David has been treated...
    He needs to have his paperwork - not just the nomination form - both in and accepted by 4pm tomorrow.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 22,580

    Ipsos has reform at 9% now.... I am not getting a clear signal.

    Old poll.
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,149
    Two Lib Dem’s arrested by the Rozzas in Harrogate over shenanigans in the locals.

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1907989/lib-dems-arrested-election-harrogate

    I assume Harrogate is a top target so not sure how this might play if at all.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235

    HYUFD said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    Former Post office Chair Alice Perkins is wife of Jack Straw and Labour, former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was given a CBE by Tory PM Theresa May
    Yes.

    I have readily believed that Vennells will be charged in due course. But will they really put Mrs J Straw in the dock?
    They will either charge both or neither I suspect
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 465

    Ipsos has reform at 9% now.... I am not getting a clear signal.

    Old poll.
    Nope.... out today... sampled after farage declared to run
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235
    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    Former Post office Chair Alice Perkins is wife of Jack Straw and Labour, former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was given a CBE by Tory PM Theresa May
    Don't think that's relevant - the entire Post Office board is now a sack of cats all trying to pin the blame on anyone who isn't themselves..
    It is relevant in the sense that Labour and the Tories, even Davey and the LDs all cannot escape blame for connections to the PO scandal
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 48,565

    Meanwhile, back at Horizon Inquiry, Mrs Jack Straw continues to give spellbinding evidence.

    Nick Wallis provides a regular email commentary for subscribers. It is excellent, but for once I disagree with his assessment of a witness. He portray Perkins as an incompetent, bewildered Chair - 'Perkins in Wonderland'. My own view is that she and the Board were the source of much of the mischief the PO caused. In my experience, when a fish stinks, it does so from the head, and her evidence seemed to confirm this is what happened here.

    We need Ms Cyclefree on this one. I think she'd agree with me, but will be happy to be corrected if our leading expert on the scandal thinks otherwise.

    Part of the NU10K thing is presenting a lack of knowledge of your organisation. You are a victim, as well, of Them*.

    The goal is not to know.

    *Trans Gay Illegal Immigrant Alien AIs, probably.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,254
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    https://x.com/montie/status/1798409853230006686

    Tim Montgomerie hypothesises that the election was called to enforce certain Rishi favoured candidates in seats the Tories think they will hold.

    He is right, the snap election has meant CCHQ could impose shortlists of 3 Sunak loyalists whereas if the election was in the autumn local associations could still have picked their own candidates from the approved list and had a local in the final round
    Thanks Hyufd for confirming the view I had formed without the benefit of your experience of the Party. July 4th was a shockingly bad call, and driven by internal politics rather than a desire to minimise election losses.
    Yes it is all about ensuring the next leader of the Tory Party in opposition is Barclay, Tugendhat or Cleverly not Badenoch, Braverman, Patel or Jenrick by filling safe and lean Tory parliamentary seats where the Tory MP is standing down with Sunak loyalists as candidates
    Thanks Huyfd.

    Apart from anything else, that is a superb betting post!
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 8,422
    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
  • eekeek Posts: 27,582
    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    Former Post office Chair Alice Perkins is wife of Jack Straw and Labour, former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was given a CBE by Tory PM Theresa May
    Don't think that's relevant - the entire Post Office board is now a sack of cats all trying to pin the blame on anyone who isn't themselves..
    It is relevant in the sense that Labour and the Tories, even Davey and the LDs all cannot escape blame for connections to the PO scandal
    Everyone is at fault in the PO scandal...
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946

    Ipsos has reform at 9% now.... I am not getting a clear signal.

    Old poll.
    Nope.... out today... sampled after farage declared to run
    Partly. 31 May to 4 Jun, bulk of fieldwork pre Farage announcement.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,124
    eek said:

    The M&S "is struggling" thing on here this morning is fake news. It's had a very good year. It's true it is closing stores in areas where it does;t trade well. But that is not the same thing!

    https://www.ft.com/content/20185cd5-c1de-46b0-b3dd-ac51260ae38f

    M&S is very often the absolutely last store to leave a town

    Boro is a prime example, it lost Debenhams, then House of Fraser but Marks kept going until the lack of footfall made keeping the store open impossible.

    Same is true of Sunderland where they recently closed while moving to Washington..
    Carlisle -small city but with a gigantic rural hinterland both sides of the border - has lost Hs of Fraser and Debenhams, (and Littlewoods and BHS earlier) and the local independent department store, but still has M and S. Primark and Next also present and doing OK.
  • LennonLennon Posts: 1,769

    eek said:

    Pulpstar said:

    More shenanigans. Ross announced himself as candidate. But still needs to get formally selected by the association. And from what I can see on Facebook they are NOT happy.

    Seems outrageous on David Duguid quite honestly given how the new seat is 75% his old one.
    He also needs to get all the signatures on his nomination form by 5pm tomorrow - I suspect that will be harder than he thinks given how David has been treated...
    He needs to have his paperwork - not just the nomination form - both in and accepted by 4pm tomorrow.
    As someone who has previously been involved with entering elections paperwork (both for myself, and assisting others to do so) for a (very) minor party - I do really hope that somewhere in the country one or more of the main parties end up with either 2 candidates, or 0 candidates - and this looks like a prime spot...
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 8,422
    Farooq said:

    eek said:

    Are LD new favourites in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East?

    No but @RochdalePioneers now has a chance that didn't exist 2 days ago...
    We should have a PB outing. Every poster, of every political persuasion, goes up to Aberdeenshire for the day to campaign for @RochdalePioneers. Otherwise we won't have a PB MP in the next parliament and that would never do.

    That said I just looked at the train fare and it's £270 return, so maybe not.
    Excellent idea! Remember, though, that the last 90 minutes of the journey will be on a bus, and English and Welsh bus passes are not valid in Scotland.
    I'd love to see some of the middle-England village types trying to communicate with the locals here.
    Knock knock knock. Door opens: "fit ya wan'?" oh shit, I don't understand what he just said..
    "Terribly sorry old chap, but do you speak English?"
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235
    edited June 6
    stodge said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    Again you make sound points. Do I detect a wobble in your Tory vote? Are you heading back into the warm embrace of Wavey Davey?
    No. The election being called was a horrible shock. Even though I did predict both the shock announcement and the actual day. I now think he should have waited. Then the polls, and the spread markets, and everyone on PB excited at Conservative wipe out event made me feel sick for a week.

    Now I think, at least it draws a line, and Conservatives can go back to being proper Conservatives again. Slowly. So there is no point me posting anything other than the true history of this election, and cut through everybody’s spin.

    The Conservative debates and leadership election that come after is the important thing.
    As usual, I agree with very little of this.

    There's still four weeks to go and plenty of time for events but the current situation remains dire for the Conservatives.

    It's not a big journey from 150 to 100 or even 50 if MRP numbers are to be believed (I don't). The topline polls continue to show Labour in the low to mid 40s and the Conservatives in the low to mid 20s. The Conservative objective must now be to finish second in terms of seats (votes don't matter) and remain His Majesty's Loyal Opposition. The possibility that may not happen exists if tactical voting plays the part some think it will.

    As to what will happen after the election and let's assume for now the Conservatives do finish second with between 100-150 seats (not unreasonable from where we are now). The options will either be to quickly unite behind a new leader (improbable) or have that time-honoured phrase - "a battle for the soul of the party".

    Will the Conservatives use their autumn conference as a kind of leadership hustings? Seems reasonable - no one outside the party or forums like this will care very much. Perhaps you should join to have a vote in any membership ballot and try to work out which of the undeserving is nearest your version of "Conservatism" (whatever that is).

    The individual who emerges from that sea of electoral hazard will face a party in ruins and the first question won't be how to deal with Labour or even the LDs but how to deal with Reform - again, let's assume Farage is their sole MP. Will someone like a Braverman basically grovel to him to get him back in the fold - propose a merger between the two parties to fight the common "progressive" enemy?

    Here's a thought - the Reform leadership may sound like post-Thatcherites but the Reform membership is or are very different and many of them aren't conservative by any measure.

    As we know, leaders "evolve" - look at Kinnock and how he shifted in opposition from 1983 to 1992. When parties become serious about wanting power, they are happy to pick the leader most likely to take them there and the funerla pyre of sacred cows slaughtered on that journey will be impressive.

    The Conservative Party which wins back power will be unrecognisable from the one which loses it.
    Will it though? Cameron's Tories were more like Major's Tories than the IDS, Howard or even Hague Tories.

    Starmer Labour is closer to New Labour than Corbyn Labour. The shift away from the centre really began in Opposition not when power was lost.

    Even Kinnock only succeeded Michael Foot not Callaghan
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
  • eekeek Posts: 27,582
    Lennon said:

    eek said:

    Pulpstar said:

    More shenanigans. Ross announced himself as candidate. But still needs to get formally selected by the association. And from what I can see on Facebook they are NOT happy.

    Seems outrageous on David Duguid quite honestly given how the new seat is 75% his old one.
    He also needs to get all the signatures on his nomination form by 5pm tomorrow - I suspect that will be harder than he thinks given how David has been treated...
    He needs to have his paperwork - not just the nomination form - both in and accepted by 4pm tomorrow.
    As someone who has previously been involved with entering elections paperwork (both for myself, and assisting others to do so) for a (very) minor party - I do really hope that somewhere in the country one or more of the main parties end up with either 2 candidates, or 0 candidates - and this looks like a prime spot...
    It really does and would be exactly what Doug deserves...
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,037

    HYUFD said:

    https://x.com/montie/status/1798409853230006686

    Tim Montgomerie hypothesises that the election was called to enforce certain Rishi favoured candidates in seats the Tories think they will hold.

    He is right, the snap election has meant CCHQ could impose shortlists of 3 Sunak loyalists whereas if the election was in the autumn local associations could still have picked their own candidates from the approved list and had a local in the final round
    Surely Sunak isn't planning to try and remain as leader?

    Not a chance. He'd have to be largest party to even have a chance and that's not happening.

    There won't be any Sunak loyalists in a month, at best it's about influencing who they might pick as the new leader.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 22,197
    eristdoof said:

    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Am I the only one on here that has taken the 8/1 from SkyBet on SKS getting fewer actual votes than the 12.9m in 2017?

    Is 8/1 not fantastic value?

    No, it could be a good bet if turnout is down..
    The last election had 47m registered and a turnout of 67% = c.32m votes.
    2017 election had 47m registered and a turnout of 69% = c.33m votes.
    Corbyn’s 12.9m was 40%

    So if we assume 48m registered, but a turnout of say 60% (as in 2001), that’s 28.8m votes in total, so 12.9m votes is just under 45%

    At 8/1 that’s actually a pretty good bet. @bigjohnowls

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_United_Kingdom_general_election
    https://www.statista.com/statistics/1050929/voter-turnout-in-the-uk/
    Dont forget the extra 2 million expat voters......
    If they register. I haven’t.

    But yes, if the denominator goes up, then turnout has to be even lower for the bet to come off.
    No idea how the polling companies are dealing with this, seems like a reasonably big bit of extra variance given we don't have much idea if it will be extra 200,000 or 1,000,000 voters and they are presumably harder to poll anyway.
    As a UK overseas voter I suspect that this group is a lot more "sticky" than in general.
    First you have to jump through a few hoops to get registered as an overseas voter, and then return a letter each year to confirm your overseas address. If you move the letter gets sent to your old address so you need to actively change your address (in my constituency at least this is still all done by snail mail). Secondly the day to day politics are more at arms length and so a bigger change in the UK situation is needed to make a chang in the vote.

    So I think that overseas registered voters are much more likely to vote (as they have an interest in registering). And that they are much less likely to change their vote from last time.
    Until 2015 the highest number of overseas registered voters was 35,000.
    In 2019 it was 230,000.
    This year there are an extra 2m eligible.

    I would be amazed if the polling companies have this bit right, even if I agree once you are a registered overseas voter you will probably vote for your usual party and vote as long as you are allowed to.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,785
    AlsoLei said:

    148grss said:

    Looking at Reform and Cons polling within 2% of each other (17% and 19% respectively) - what would be a point where between the two of them the showing is relatively good, but both of them collapse in terms of seat numbers due to FPTP? I assume if they both polled equal at ~17% that could potentially stop either party getting any / a significant number of seats. Whilst I am not looking forward to this Labour super majority government, I do feel that the extinction of the Conservative party is a long time coming.

    Something like a 3:2 ratio between Refuk and Con vote share would probably be the pessimal point in terms of their combined seat total.

    So, 21% Refuk, 14% Con might get them just 9 or 10 seats apiece.

    That assumes that voting patterns stay the same otherwise, and that would be far from certain in the face of such a big upheaval in public opinion. If Refuk were able to find a couple of dozen "big beasts", they might be able to start concentrating their vote share in target seats, making them more likely to win.

    Deadline for nominations is 4pm tomorrow, though - so they've almost certainly left it too late to pick up on any surge this time round.
    For all the talk of the Lib Dems being boosted by tactical voting, nobody has talked about Reform being boosted by tactical voting. Could it happen?
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,254

    Meanwhile, back at Horizon Inquiry, Mrs Jack Straw continues to give spellbinding evidence.

    Nick Wallis provides a regular email commentary for subscribers. It is excellent, but for once I disagree with his assessment of a witness. He portray Perkins as an incompetent, bewildered Chair - 'Perkins in Wonderland'. My own view is that she and the Board were the source of much of the mischief the PO caused. In my experience, when a fish stinks, it does so from the head, and her evidence seemed to confirm this is what happened here.

    We need Ms Cyclefree on this one. I think she'd agree with me, but will be happy to be corrected if our leading expert on the scandal thinks otherwise.

    Part of the NU10K thing is presenting a lack of knowledge of your organisation. You are a victim, as well, of Them*.

    The goal is not to know.

    *Trans Gay Illegal Immigrant Alien AIs, probably.
    Listening to some of the PO Execs giving testimony, you'd think they didn't know the PO sold stamps.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 48,565
    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    Former Post office Chair Alice Perkins is wife of Jack Straw and Labour, former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was given a CBE by Tory PM Theresa May
    Don't think that's relevant - the entire Post Office board is now a sack of cats all trying to pin the blame on anyone who isn't themselves..
    It is relevant in the sense that Labour and the Tories, even Davey and the LDs all cannot escape blame for connections to the PO scandal
    Everyone is at fault in the PO scandal...
    Enough blame to go round a lot of people….



  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 27,159

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    If so, they are leaving it late because tomorrow is the deadline for candidate registration.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    Ipsos has reform at 9% now.... I am not getting a clear signal.

    You will on the 5th July !!!!!
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,682

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 22,580
    edited June 6

    Ipsos has reform at 9% now.... I am not getting a clear signal.

    Old poll.
    Nope.... out today... sampled after farage declared to run
    Nope. Fieldwork was 31 May - 4 June. Only a single day of that poll was captured after Farage decided to run (he didn't declare until 1630hrs on 3 June!) 75-80% of the fieldwork predates his declaration.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,254

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    eek said:

    HYUFD said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    Former Post office Chair Alice Perkins is wife of Jack Straw and Labour, former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was given a CBE by Tory PM Theresa May
    Don't think that's relevant - the entire Post Office board is now a sack of cats all trying to pin the blame on anyone who isn't themselves..
    It is relevant in the sense that Labour and the Tories, even Davey and the LDs all cannot escape blame for connections to the PO scandal
    Everyone is at fault in the PO scandal...
    Enough blame to go round a lot of people….



    It has puzzled me for a long time how the organisation could be so incompetent and dysfunctional at every level. Perkins' evidence makes it very clear that the Board was at the heart of the problem.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    If so, they are leaving it late because tomorrow is the deadline for candidate registration.
    Will the Tories be able to scramble together the last few names in time or will they leave a huge number of seats unfilled?

    This is very relevant for bets like CON vs REFUK vote share or CON Total Votes…
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    eristdoof said:

    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Am I the only one on here that has taken the 8/1 from SkyBet on SKS getting fewer actual votes than the 12.9m in 2017?

    Is 8/1 not fantastic value?

    No, it could be a good bet if turnout is down..
    The last election had 47m registered and a turnout of 67% = c.32m votes.
    2017 election had 47m registered and a turnout of 69% = c.33m votes.
    Corbyn’s 12.9m was 40%

    So if we assume 48m registered, but a turnout of say 60% (as in 2001), that’s 28.8m votes in total, so 12.9m votes is just under 45%

    At 8/1 that’s actually a pretty good bet. @bigjohnowls

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_United_Kingdom_general_election
    https://www.statista.com/statistics/1050929/voter-turnout-in-the-uk/
    Dont forget the extra 2 million expat voters......
    If they register. I haven’t.

    But yes, if the denominator goes up, then turnout has to be even lower for the bet to come off.
    No idea how the polling companies are dealing with this, seems like a reasonably big bit of extra variance given we don't have much idea if it will be extra 200,000 or 1,000,000 voters and they are presumably harder to poll anyway.
    As a UK overseas voter I suspect that this group is a lot more "sticky" than in general.
    First you have to jump through a few hoops to get registered as an overseas voter, and then return a letter each year to confirm your overseas address. If you move the letter gets sent to your old address so you need to actively change your address (in my constituency at least this is still all done by snail mail). Secondly the day to day politics are more at arms length and so a bigger change in the UK situation is needed to make a chang in the vote.

    So I think that overseas registered voters are much more likely to vote (as they have an interest in registering). And that they are much less likely to change their vote from last time.
    Until 2015 the highest number of overseas registered voters was 35,000.
    In 2019 it was 230,000.
    This year there are an extra 2m eligible.

    I would be amazed if the polling companies have this bit right, even if I agree once you are a registered overseas voter you will probably vote for your usual party and vote as long as you are allowed to.
    Our son is here visiting us from Vancouver and has no interest in voting in GE 24 even though he has a vote

    Indeed he has dual UK - New Zealand citizenship
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,671

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
    Ross is *already* both an MSP and Scottish Tory leader. He had announced he was quitting Westminster to focus on Holyrood. And refereeing. But obviously has changed his mind...
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 22,580
    Selebian said:

    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
    What is the 'VAT Bounce' when it is at home?
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    Lib Dems over 40.5 seats - 1.6

    Lib Dems ‘Most seats without Labour’ - 6.6

    I still think these are both stonking value
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 8,422

    Selebian said:

    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
    What is the 'VAT Bounce' when it is at home?
    I believe MoonRabbit predicted a significant recovery in Con polling when they went big on the Lab private school VAT policy and the masses were horrified by this assault on aspiration.

    That, IIRC, was her prediction. But if you don't like that prediction, she has others.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    AlsoLei said:

    148grss said:

    Looking at Reform and Cons polling within 2% of each other (17% and 19% respectively) - what would be a point where between the two of them the showing is relatively good, but both of them collapse in terms of seat numbers due to FPTP? I assume if they both polled equal at ~17% that could potentially stop either party getting any / a significant number of seats. Whilst I am not looking forward to this Labour super majority government, I do feel that the extinction of the Conservative party is a long time coming.

    Something like a 3:2 ratio between Refuk and Con vote share would probably be the pessimal point in terms of their combined seat total.

    So, 21% Refuk, 14% Con might get them just 9 or 10 seats apiece.

    That assumes that voting patterns stay the same otherwise, and that would be far from certain in the face of such a big upheaval in public opinion. If Refuk were able to find a couple of dozen "big beasts", they might be able to start concentrating their vote share in target seats, making them more likely to win.

    Deadline for nominations is 4pm tomorrow, though - so they've almost certainly left it too late to pick up on any surge this time round.
    For all the talk of the Lib Dems being boosted by tactical voting, nobody has talked about Reform being boosted by tactical voting. Could it happen?
    I thought that yesterday mainly in the red wall
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 4,785
    Pulpstar said:

    More shenanigans. Ross announced himself as candidate. But still needs to get formally selected by the association. And from what I can see on Facebook they are NOT happy.

    Seems outrageous on David Duguid quite honestly given how the new seat is 75% his old one.
    I am looking forward to First Minister’s Questions at 12.00. Kate Forbes is standing in for John Swinney. Will Douglas Ross attend?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 27,562

    The Electoral Commission has updated its donations database for Q1 2024. Zero reportable donations to the SNP. Just the regular “short money” allocation from the House of Commons, which is very likely to collapse after the general election.

    https://x.com/staylorish/status/1798614146839347245


    That brought forth an audible chuckle on the beach in corrupt Malta.

    Couldn't they hire out the Winnebago?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    Selebian said:

    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
    What is the 'VAT Bounce' when it is at home?
    Ed Davey confirming this am they oppose labours vat on private schools ?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479
    Farooq said:

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
    Moray West, Nairn and Strathspey is the clear successor seat to Moray. ANME is the clear successor seat to Duguid's old Banff & Buchan. It's objectively more a move than it is staying put. From Forres (western part of Moray) to Peterhead (eastern part of ANME) it's more than a 2 hour drive.
    A chicken run is usually defined as moving to a seat which doesn't contain any of the MP's previous seat. That isn't the case here. For example Richard Holden moving from North West Durham to Basildon & Billericay.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    Farooq said:

    Lib Dems over 40.5 seats - 1.6

    Lib Dems ‘Most seats without Labour’ - 6.6

    I still think these are both stonking value

    At those prices, sell them both.
    Curious as to why? 41 seats seems eminently achievable for the Lib Dems given the strength of their ground game and the depressed Tory vote.

    The latter is much more difficult of course but 6.6 for something that is coming up repeatedly in MRPs does not seem bad at all…
  • Clutch_BromptonClutch_Brompton Posts: 709
    So can we conclude that Douglas Ross finally understands his true chances of ever becoming First Minister?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 12,124

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    Deadline is 4 pm tomorrow.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    I don't understand this twitter post. How can anyone know what a particular party is going to do wrt nominations? Declared candidates is totally different to whether or not a party has a candidate ready to be nominated.
  • Clutch_BromptonClutch_Brompton Posts: 709
    Farooq said:

    Lib Dems over 40.5 seats - 1.6

    Lib Dems ‘Most seats without Labour’ - 6.6

    I still think these are both stonking value

    At those prices, sell them both.
    At almost any price, sell them both
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 62,156

    So can we conclude that Douglas Ross finally understands his true chances of ever becoming First Minister?

    Or Prime Minister one day ?
  • Clutch_BromptonClutch_Brompton Posts: 709
    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    They hate Mr Sunak almost as much as most Con members do
  • RogerRoger Posts: 19,796
    edited June 6
    Selebian said:

    Selebian said:

    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
    What is the 'VAT Bounce' when it is at home?
    I believe MoonRabbit predicted a significant recovery in Con polling when they went big on the Lab private school VAT policy and the masses were horrified by this assault on aspiration.

    That, IIRC, was her prediction. But if you don't like that prediction, she has others.
    By chance when looking for something else I found this: So though she obviously changed her mind there was a time when she predicted July4th. So well done Moon. You really are the messiah!!

    MoonRabbit Posts: 12,914
    May 16

    Anabobazina said:

    » show previous quotes

    She is now (or was) certain it will be in July and cannot possibly be any other month. I dare say her serial certainty will continue all bloody year.

    "It won’t be July 4th now, it’s already too late to call it with close down next week.

    I think Sunak likes being Prime Minister, and it eats him up he’s getting chucked out. Even if experts point to the optimum day in 2024 he will lose less seats and help the party by choosing that, I still think he’ll hang on till the end based on self interest. I wouldn’t even rule out January."


    Flag Quote · 1Like
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,529

    @leon you visited Paris at the wrong time. We cycled around the sights before setting off for Orleans and the prep for the Olympics is impressive. Only beggar we saw was being escorted away by 3 Gendarmes, all the litter has been picked up and the buildings hosed down. Every blade of grass is being cut to an inch of its life. The stands and decorations are going up. See surfer in the picture.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,489
    edited June 6
    Andy_JS said:

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    I don't understand this twitter post. How can anyone know what a particular party is going to do wrt nominations? Declared candidates is totally different to whether or not a party has a candidate ready to be nominated.
    Well there's only two days to go.
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,415

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    I hadn't realised they were that far behind.

    Nominations are normally submitted by the local conservative associations, aren't they? CCHQ must be starting to panic at this point - this could dominate tomorrow's news agenda, even if they do eventually manage to submit papers in most constituencies in time.
  • eekeek Posts: 27,582
    Andy_JS said:

    Farooq said:

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
    Moray West, Nairn and Strathspey is the clear successor seat to Moray. ANME is the clear successor seat to Duguid's old Banff & Buchan. It's objectively more a move than it is staying put. From Forres (western part of Moray) to Peterhead (eastern part of ANME) it's more than a 2 hour drive.
    A chicken run is usually defined as moving to a seat which doesn't contain any of the MP's previous seat. That isn't the case here. For example Richard Holden moving from North West Durham to Basildon & Billericay.
    OK it's not a 100% chicken run, but using a combination of your position in the party to push out the existing candidate because they are ill doesn't make a good look..

  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 8,422
    Roger said:

    Selebian said:

    Selebian said:

    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
    What is the 'VAT Bounce' when it is at home?
    I believe MoonRabbit predicted a significant recovery in Con polling when they went big on the Lab private school VAT policy and the masses were horrified by this assault on aspiration.

    That, IIRC, was her prediction. But if you don't like that prediction, she has others.
    By chance when looking for something else I found this: So though she obviously changed her mind there was a time when she predicted July4th. So well done Moon. You really are the messiah!!

    MoonRabbit Posts: 12,914
    May 16

    Anabobazina said:

    » show previous quotes
    She is now (or was) certain it will be in July and cannot possibly be any other month. I dare say her serial certainty will continue all bloody year.

    It won’t be July 4th now, it’s already too late to call it with close down next week.

    I think Sunak likes being Prime Minister, and it eats him up he’s getting chucked out. Even if experts point to the optimum day in 2024 he will lose less seats and help the party by choosing that, I still think he’ll hang on till the end based on self interest. I wouldn’t even rule out January.
    Flag Quote · 1Like
    To be fair to MR, she is open to changing her mind (see today's posts on the debate compared to those during the debate). I find her an entertaining poster.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 8,422
    kjh said:


    @leon you visited Paris at the wrong time. We cycled around the sights before setting off for Orleans and the prep for the Olympics is impressive. Only beggar we saw was being escorted away by 3 Gendarmes, all the litter has been picked up and the buildings hosed down. Every blade of grass is being cut to an inch of its life. The stands and decorations are going up. See surfer in the picture.

    Tarmac needs some TLC though!
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,202
    stodge said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    Again you make sound points. Do I detect a wobble in your Tory vote? Are you heading back into the warm embrace of Wavey Davey?
    No. The election being called was a horrible shock. Even though I did predict both the shock announcement and the actual day. I now think he should have waited. Then the polls, and the spread markets, and everyone on PB excited at Conservative wipe out event made me feel sick for a week.

    Now I think, at least it draws a line, and Conservatives can go back to being proper Conservatives again. Slowly. So there is no point me posting anything other than the true history of this election, and cut through everybody’s spin.

    The Conservative debates and leadership election that come after is the important thing.
    As usual, I agree with very little of this.

    There's still four weeks to go and plenty of time for events but the current situation remains dire for the Conservatives.

    It's not a big journey from 150 to 100 or even 50 if MRP numbers are to be believed (I don't). The topline polls continue to show Labour in the low to mid 40s and the Conservatives in the low to mid 20s. The Conservative objective must now be to finish second in terms of seats (votes don't matter) and remain His Majesty's Loyal Opposition. The possibility that may not happen exists if tactical voting plays the part some think it will.

    As to what will happen after the election and let's assume for now the Conservatives do finish second with between 100-150 seats (not unreasonable from where we are now). The options will either be to quickly unite behind a new leader (improbable) or have that time-honoured phrase - "a battle for the soul of the party".

    Will the Conservatives use their autumn conference as a kind of leadership hustings? Seems reasonable - no one outside the party or forums like this will care very much. Perhaps you should join to have a vote in any membership ballot and try to work out which of the undeserving is nearest your version of "Conservatism" (whatever that is).

    The individual who emerges from that sea of electoral hazard will face a party in ruins and the first question won't be how to deal with Labour or even the LDs but how to deal with Reform - again, let's assume Farage is their sole MP. Will someone like a Braverman basically grovel to him to get him back in the fold - propose a merger between the two parties to fight the common "progressive" enemy?

    Here's a thought - the Reform leadership may sound like post-Thatcherites but the Reform membership is or are very different and many of them aren't conservative by any measure.

    As we know, leaders "evolve" - look at Kinnock and how he shifted in opposition from 1983 to 1992. When parties become serious about wanting power, they are happy to pick the leader most likely to take them there and the funerla pyre of sacred cows slaughtered on that journey will be impressive.

    The Conservative Party which wins back power will be unrecognisable from the one which loses it.
    As usual we don’t agree on much 🤦‍♀️

    Except a 100-150 is what it looks like. 👍🏻

    You have given a gloomy view of Conservative recovery. But it only took 13 years to be back in government after 1997. And the bad 1906 result, to the 1924 landslide isn’t far behind.

    Yet again you are ignoring the number of voters who want to vote for centre right are nearly always much more than who wants to vote centre left, and even looking at the current polls this is obvious, despite such a mess this government has been. So I ask you to consider realignment of the centre right could happen a lot quicker than you might think.

    “try to work out which of the undeserving is nearest your version of "Conservatism" (whatever that is).”

    That’s easy to answer. I know what Conservatism is 🙂

    Conservatism exists not to stop progress, nor keep everything the same, but in acknowledgement natures way is everything forever changes, and we need to conserve what is of value and importance. You build a wall to keep the wild things out. Within the wall you build a path to get you from A to B safely in the dark or inclement weather. Where your way leads across the stream, you build a bridge. If you now do nothing to conserve the path and the wall and the bridge, nature will take them from you. It will change your world and take everything you value from you. Those things you want your children to learn in the right way, whilst on your knee? they will learn it first elsewhere, in the wrong way. The world always needs Conservative thinking and action. This is why it’s returning to UK government a lot sooner than you currently imagine.

    It’s interesting you outed yourself today as a synethete. You get all this psephology guidance to share with us, by sniffing the polls.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    I missed that. Have to wind back later on.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,557
    edited June 6
    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count. The Tories essentially collapse and are wiped out. Labour get their stonking majority, and a new populist right wing opposition.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479

    I'm still not convinced LAB will get more than 40%

    I'm still not convinced CON will end up with less than 25%

    It could end up 38-28. Still massive for LAB on that. 410-160?

    I agree, it could easily be Lab 39%, Con 26%, or something like that.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,254
    Andy_JS said:

    At the PO Inquiry, Alice Perkins just accused Paula Vennells of lying.

    I missed that. Have to wind back later on.
    It concerned Vennells remark (in an email) to the effect that Perkins advised her that if you want to get the answer you want you have to phrase the question so as to elicit it. Perkins denied all knowledge.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 61,612
    edited June 6

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    My view now is that we are increasingly looking at Reform being the Loyal Opposition on 5th July.

    As you say - all highly febrile.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 41,540
    Farooq said:

    I just went for a short walk and a thought occured to me......
    Did a young linesman from Morayshire get visited by three witches yesterday?
    Hail wee Dougie, leader of the Scons
    Hall wee Dougie MP for Aberdeenshire and Moray East
    Hail wee Dougie thou shalt be LOTO hereafter......

    Does he think given the SNP woes he's gaining seats and can present himself as the face of 'successful Unionism and Conservatism'? Set against carnage in the rest of the UK. Is that what this is all about?

    I can't even find odds.......

    Arise Sir Alec Dougie Ross

    Out, damned Ross; out!
    Something wicked this way comes (to your constituency)
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,693
    edited June 6

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Given that if YouGov hadn't changed its methodology, it would already have had a tie between Con and Refuk, unless it was an outlier we could expect to (3) in the next few days just through sampling variation.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479
    Sandpit said:

    Andy_JS said:

    Am I the only one on here that has taken the 8/1 from SkyBet on SKS getting fewer actual votes than the 12.9m in 2017?

    Is 8/1 not fantastic value?

    No, it could be a good bet if turnout is down..
    The last election had 47m registered and a turnout of 67% = c.32m votes.
    2017 election had 47m registered and a turnout of 69% = c.33m votes.
    Corbyn’s 12.9m was 40%

    So if we assume 48m registered, but a turnout of say 60% (as in 2001), that’s 28.8m votes in total, so 12.9m votes is just under 45%

    At 8/1 that’s actually a pretty good bet. @bigjohnowls

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_United_Kingdom_general_election
    https://www.statista.com/statistics/1050929/voter-turnout-in-the-uk/
    Precisely. Turnout has a big effect on the numbers, to state the obvious. Blair got less votes in 1997 than Major did in 1992 because turnout dropped from 77.7% to 71.4%.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 121,235

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count. The Tories essentially collapse and are wiped out. Labour get their stonking majority, and a new populist right wing opposition.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    2 Sunak should thank his lucky stars Starmer excluded Reform and Farage from the main leaders debates which will just be the 2 main party leaders.

    I can't see Farage getting much traction from the 7 dwarfs debate this week, when the Tories and Labour are only sending Mordaunt and Rayner and the football is on the same evening
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,489
    Here's a question. How does the theoretical (MRP or whatnot) reform vote split if there's no reform candidate in a seat.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    Andy_JS said:

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    I don't understand this twitter post. How can anyone know what a particular party is going to do wrt nominations? Declared candidates is totally different to whether or not a party has a candidate ready to be nominated.
    Implication perhaps that some Reform defections tomorrow
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Lib Dems over 40.5 seats - 1.6

    Lib Dems ‘Most seats without Labour’ - 6.6

    I still think these are both stonking value

    At those prices, sell them both.
    Curious as to why? 41 seats seems eminently achievable for the Lib Dems given the strength of their ground game and the depressed Tory vote.

    The latter is much more difficult of course but 6.6 for something that is coming up repeatedly in MRPs does not seem bad at all…
    41 seats is definitely achievable. I've pinned my colours to them getting 42. But 1.6 for 41 or over looks like a value sell.
    Similarly, if we're around the 40 mark, I don't see a route to second place. I feel the Reform effect is exaggerated and I don't think they'll get 15%. Tory clawback of Reform vote both helps themselves and hurts the Lib Dem seat count.

    But good luck with your bets, I won't be sad to be wrong in either case.
    That’s very fair. I also agree on Reform. My thinking is also to sell rather than hold - but that there will come a better moment to sell in the coming days rather than right now.
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,095
    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    I would peg the motivation here more as being that "big thing may happen!" is news and sells papers, whereas "thing everybody expects to happen will probably happen" does not.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479
    Pulpstar said:

    Here's a question. How does the theoretical (MRP or whatnot) reform vote split if there's no reform candidate in a seat.

    Depends which seat it is, but usually about half of their voters wouldn't bother to vote at all IIRC. The remainder would mostly vote Tory, but not so much in seats like Barnsley.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count. The Tories essentially collapse and are wiped out. Labour get their stonking majority, and a new populist right wing opposition.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    I would agree this is fantasy politics if it wasn't for the fact that the "moderate and sensible Netherlands", as most people always regarded it until recently, has just elected a right-wing populist government. So anything is possible.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,693
    Pulpstar said:

    Here's a question. How does the theoretical (MRP or whatnot) reform vote split if there's no reform candidate in a seat.

    This has been discussed quite a lot, and the consensus seems to be that the biggest chunk would go to the Tories, but with a substantial percentage of not voting and some to Labour and other parties.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946
    Chris said:

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Given that if YouGov hadn't changed its methodology, it would already have had a tie between Con and Refuk, unless it was an outlier we could expect to (3) in the next few days just through sampling variation.
    It's only YouGov finding this sort of support though, no other pollsters are anywhere close to crossover or as close as YG have been all along. Redfield are the only other one remotely close. YGs MRP is also totally at odds with their Sky and Times polls.
    YG could set a narrative that simply doesn't exist
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,415

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count. The Tories essentially collapse and are wiped out. Labour get their stonking majority, and a new populist right wing opposition.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Refuk are 16/1 on the Most Seats Without Labour market. Does anyone have a view as to how much value that represents?
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 300
    AlsoLei said:

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    I hadn't realised they were that far behind.

    Nominations are normally submitted by the local conservative associations, aren't they? CCHQ must be starting to panic at this point - this could dominate tomorrow's news agenda, even if they do eventually manage to submit papers in most constituencies in time.
    According to Billericay and Basildon, CCHQ has been delaying things, plus more Cons retiring. Probably saving the ultra safe seats for a last-minute parachute drop as per Holden
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    My view now is that we are increasingly looking at Reform being the Loyal Opposition on 5th July.

    As you say - all highly febrile.
    I have been thinking all week that something like numbertwelve’s scenario is within the realms of possibility, and am planning to hold my trading bets on REFUK until at least Saturday, after Farage’s debate.

    It does, I think, kind of need the big showpiece defections tomorrow.

    Here is a wildcard shout. We have been wondering for ages whether the Sun will back Labour or the Tories come polling day. What if they say “Starmer is going to win anyway, so vote Reform”. It may play well with much of their readership, and they can claim ‘the Sun wot won it’ even if Reform come 2nd.

    This might be more tempting for their editors than just outright endorsing Labour just to be on the winning team, which they might have done by now if they were going to do?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479
    edited June 6

    https://x.com/owenwntr/status/1798455958743720435?s=46

    Tories still quite some way off a full slate of candidates?

    Reform on 465, strangely DOWN 5… are they waiting for something to happen tomorrow?

    If so, they are leaving it late because tomorrow is the deadline for candidate registration.
    Will the Tories be able to scramble together the last few names in time or will they leave a huge number of seats unfilled?

    This is very relevant for bets like CON vs REFUK vote share or CON Total Votes…
    I expect the main parties have emergency procedures in place to make sure they contest all seats in the event of a snap election, because they know how bad it would look if they failed to do so. But that doesn't mean they make the names of the candidates public until the last minute, when nominations close.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 61,612
    AlsoLei said:

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count. The Tories essentially collapse and are wiped out. Labour get their stonking majority, and a new populist right wing opposition.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Refuk are 16/1 on the Most Seats Without Labour market. Does anyone have a view as to how much value that represents?
    Nice spot.

    I may well take a nibble.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 17,526

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    Would it not be generally considered a very underhand move for a nominated candidate for party A to defect to party B so near to close of nominations that party A didn't have time to find a replacement candidate?

    It's the sort of tactic that I'd expect someone like Putin to use, preventing the electorate from making a free and fair choice. We shouldn't have that sort of shenanigans in a mature democracy.

    I'd hope that the voters would severely punish any party playing that sort of game.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,682
    Farooq said:

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
    Moray West, Nairn and Strathspey is the clear successor seat to Moray. ANME is the clear successor seat to Duguid's old Banff & Buchan. It's objectively more a move than it is staying put. From Forres (western part of Moray) to Peterhead (eastern part of ANME) it's more than a 2 hour drive.
    Whichever end you are, it's a long way to the other with Scottish rural seats. Fact is Douglas Ross has represented quite big communities - such as Buckie and Keith - which are in ANME, for the last 7 years.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,529
    Selebian said:

    kjh said:


    @leon you visited Paris at the wrong time. We cycled around the sights before setting off for Orleans and the prep for the Olympics is impressive. Only beggar we saw was being escorted away by 3 Gendarmes, all the litter has been picked up and the buildings hosed down. Every blade of grass is being cut to an inch of its life. The stands and decorations are going up. See surfer in the picture.

    Tarmac needs some TLC though!
    I'm sure there will be a man with a tube of filler filling it in before August. The Gendarmes are out in force. Much more than normal.
  • sbjme19sbjme19 Posts: 194
    Andy_JS said:

    Farooq said:

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
    Moray West, Nairn and Strathspey is the clear successor seat to Moray. ANME is the clear successor seat to Duguid's old Banff & Buchan. It's objectively more a move than it is staying put. From Forres (western part of Moray) to Peterhead (eastern part of ANME) it's more than a 2 hour drive.
    A chicken run is usually defined as moving to a seat which doesn't contain any of the MP's previous seat. That isn't the case here. For example Richard Holden moving from North West Durham to Basildon & Billericay.
    On this topic I've just seen that Andy Carter, who tried to find another seat, is staying in Warrington South. Not well-known but he was on the Boris "jury", sthg to do with failed search?
    Some of the boundary losers have been re-housed, miles from where they were. The locals had a list but seem to have preferred ex-MPs.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    My view now is that we are increasingly looking at Reform being the Loyal Opposition on 5th July.

    As you say - all highly febrile.
    Remember the SDP/Liberal Alliance got 26% of the vote in 1983 and just 23 seats. The same thing would probably happen to RefUK if they polled that type of percentage.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    AlsoLei said:

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count. The Tories essentially collapse and are wiped out. Labour get their stonking majority, and a new populist right wing opposition.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Refuk are 16/1 on the Most Seats Without Labour market. Does anyone have a view as to how much value that represents?
    I got on this pre Farage announcement on Monday at 400.0 for a small stake, but have been topping up ever since as the odds have tumbled. I’m also on the Lib Dems for it which I think have a much clearer chance.

    I don’t necessarily think either will do it! But I think as trading bets they represent big value, particularly as Friday’s debate will be the first time many become aware of the LDs and Reform properly.

    There appears to be more trading value on the ‘most seats without Labour’ market than the REFUK seat totals, vote share or defections markets, even if a lot of these lines are all much more likely than REFUK actually coming 2nd in seats

    But YMMV and I’m not an expert like some here!
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,489
    edited June 6
    Andy_JS said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Here's a question. How does the theoretical (MRP or whatnot) reform vote split if there's no reform candidate in a seat.

    Depends which seat it is, but usually about half of their voters wouldn't bother to vote at all IIRC. The remainder would mostly vote Tory, but not so much in seats like Barnsley.
    My seat is 43-29 (Con) - 18 but with no reform candidate as yet.

    So if half the Reform didn't vote and say 85% of the remainder went conservative with 10% Labour and 5% Green or Lib Dem, it'd end up Lab 48, Con 40.

    You can obviously tweak those numbers how you like, as my MP is quite Reform transfer friendly but I doubt it'll be enough for him.

    Clearly with a Reform candidate he's completely toast.
  • MoonRabbit did get July right so all credit there but she basically predicted every month so I'm not sure it's a massive win.

    On the other hand, to blow my own trumpet I was always confident it would be May to the middle of the summer but I went off and I should have stuck to my guns. I believe my logic for calling the election was sound, I just got the month wrong.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,693

    Chris said:

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Given that if YouGov hadn't changed its methodology, it would already have had a tie between Con and Refuk, unless it was an outlier we could expect to (3) in the next few days just through sampling variation.
    It's only YouGov finding this sort of support though, no other pollsters are anywhere close to crossover or as close as YG have been all along. Redfield are the only other one remotely close. YGs MRP is also totally at odds with their Sky and Times polls.
    YG could set a narrative that simply doesn't exist
    But isn't that YouGov poll the only one released so far whose sampling was mostly done after the Farage announcement?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946
    edited June 6
    The number of candidates Reform front up and there make up may end up crucial to some of the seat total betting. They are currently short 150 or so. If, say, they don't stand in 100 it makes the situation in those quite critical to the seat outcomes/majority size/Tory hold ons. Plus you'd need to take about 2% off their VI and redistribute.......
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,238

    eek said:

    Are LD new favourites in Aberdeenshire North and Moray East?

    No but @RochdalePioneers now has a chance that didn't exist 2 days ago...
    We should have a PB outing. Every poster, of every political persuasion, goes up to Aberdeenshire for the day to campaign for @RochdalePioneers. Otherwise we won't have a PB MP in the next parliament and that would never do.

    That said I just looked at the train fare and it's £270 return, so maybe not.
    Excellent idea! Remember, though, that the last 90 minutes of the journey will be on a bus, and English and Welsh bus passes are not valid in Scotland.
    We're not all retired you know ;)
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 31,479
    edited June 6

    The number of candidates Reform front up and there make up may end up crucial to some of the seat total betting. They are currently short 150 or so. If, say, they don't stand in 100 it makes the situation in those quite critical to the seat outcomes/majority size/Tory hold ons. Plus you'd need to take about 2% off their VI and redistribute.......

    The "150 short" thing is just an estimate of course, as I said earlier. No-one knows what candidates a party has lined up for close of nominations tomorrow until it happens. The only reason we know candidates atm is because they or their party has decided to publicise it, and some may choose not to do so until nominations close for whatever reason.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 68,995
    Paging @Leon

    Ukrainian medic & rescuer Roman "Bolhar" Yukhnevych, 35, killed in Russian double-tap missile strike on Odesa while aiding victims.
    Hailed as “sincere & bright man” by comrades.

    Russia’s attack killed 4, including 4yo child, injured 14.

    https://x.com/EuromaidanPress/status/1798653054482280856
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 13,202
    Selebian said:

    Roger said:

    Selebian said:

    Selebian said:

    Eabhal said:

    Although a lot of everyone might think Tuesdays debate is behind us, I actually now suspect it shapes what we can guess is in front of us.

    Sunak couldn’t get through the debate without bare faced lies to EVERY question he faced. Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    It’s just sinking in with me now how bad Sunak’s performance was in that debate, because as the leader, he has set a clear lead what the answers are. Everyone one else in his party, in debates, interviews, panels, QT in front of audiences, all must repeat Sunak’s lies now.

    Starting with Mordaunt on Friday, no matter how batshit she thinks these answers are, she must say boat crossing are down, waiting lists are down, pensioners have never paid tax, the 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber the treasury really did do it. Etc etc.

    It’s not going to be easy for them, is it?

    So you have moved on from: "It’s worse than that. The Tory £2,000 Tax Attack is everywhere now, and it’s blown this election wide open. 1992 at all that"
    I'm still waiting for the VAT bounce
    Ed VAT bounce is not even a dead cat bounce, it seems :lol:
    What is the 'VAT Bounce' when it is at home?
    I believe MoonRabbit predicted a significant recovery in Con polling when they went big on the Lab private school VAT policy and the masses were horrified by this assault on aspiration.

    That, IIRC, was her prediction. But if you don't like that prediction, she has others.
    By chance when looking for something else I found this: So though she obviously changed her mind there was a time when she predicted July4th. So well done Moon. You really are the messiah!!

    MoonRabbit Posts: 12,914
    May 16

    Anabobazina said:

    » show previous quotes
    She is now (or was) certain it will be in July and cannot possibly be any other month. I dare say her serial certainty will continue all bloody year.

    It won’t be July 4th now, it’s already too late to call it with close down next week.

    I think Sunak likes being Prime Minister, and it eats him up he’s getting chucked out. Even if experts point to the optimum day in 2024 he will lose less seats and help the party by choosing that, I still think he’ll hang on till the end based on self interest. I wouldn’t even rule out January.
    Flag Quote · 1Like
    To be fair to MR, she is open to changing her mind (see today's posts on the debate compared to those during the debate). I find her an entertaining poster.
    Everyone should change their mind about how Tuesdays debate went, as new information, fact checking, more detail in the supplementary questions on the 3 debate polls has been coming in all the time since it finished, so we need to be re calculating our own thoughts all the time about what really happened. But also, crucially, what it means for what happens next, it’s certainly not over, gone and in the past.

    Tuesdays debate isn’t over. Sunak could only get through it by telling brazen lies on every question asked him - Waiting lists down (the audience gasped and laughed) boat crossings down (try saying that with Farage on the stage) Rwanda is a deterrent, Pensioners have never paid tax on pensions (he did say that, the very man who invented a pension tax and has been taxing pensions). The 2K Lie wasn’t made up by SPADs in an echo chamber, the treasury really did do it.

    So Sunak and all his team now need to stick to those answers throughout the rest of the campaign, even though those answers are not surviving first contact with the electorate?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 9,946
    Chris said:

    Chris said:

    kle4 said:

    "Nigel Farage may be about to pull off a once-in-a-century political realignment

    We could be just days away from a tipping point in the polls when Reform overtakes the Conservatives"


    "Farage’s re-entry into British politics has set off a chain reaction with uncontrollable and unpredictable consequences. The Tories are on the verge of being sucked into a death spiral. The wets and other centrist-dad wannabes must face facts: they bear full responsibility for the possible demise of their once great party."

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

    The more they encourage their readers to do it by saying it is likely the more it may happen.

    It's notable just how much formerly Tory commentators despise the party and clearly want it to be replaced.
    Picture if you will a scenario like this.

    1. Before nominations close tomorrow, Farage announces a number of Tory defections. He publishes a list of 100+ Reform target seats and states they will focus their attention on those seats. Reiterating Tories cannot win and that Tory voters need to come across to Reform.

    2. Farage has a good debate.

    3. Crossover happens in a poll or two. The MSM picks up on this and a narrative starts to run that Reform can beat the Tories.

    4. The DM, Telegraph and Express endorse Reform and reiterate the message.

    5. The movement from the Tories to Reform in the polls becomes less of a trickle and more of a flood.

    7. GE night, Reform take votes from Tories and Labour and come second in seat count.

    This is obviously fantasy politics. But the mood is febrile. I don’t think it’s impossible this could happen. But it’s the crossover at 3 that matters. If that doesn’t happen, the rest of it won’t fall into place.
    Given that if YouGov hadn't changed its methodology, it would already have had a tie between Con and Refuk, unless it was an outlier we could expect to (3) in the next few days just through sampling variation.
    It's only YouGov finding this sort of support though, no other pollsters are anywhere close to crossover or as close as YG have been all along. Redfield are the only other one remotely close. YGs MRP is also totally at odds with their Sky and Times polls.
    YG could set a narrative that simply doesn't exist
    But isn't that YouGov poll the only one released so far whose sampling was mostly done after the Farage announcement?
    Yes but they were also the only ones that had Reform that high in the first place. They have them polling 15% pre farage whereas the consensus is about 10........
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,216
    edited June 6

    I see Douglas Ross’ political career is over, and if it isn’t, it should be. Chicken run to displace ill but recovering colleague. Hope he loses.

    Not sure what you're on about. David Duguid has clearly been incapacited and a chunk of his new constituency has been represented by Douglas Ross for the last seven years so makes sense for him to take over as he's a know quantity locally. And ss he's safely in Holyrood anyway hardly a chicken run - in fact he's taking quite a reputational risk if he fails to win. Much safer to have found someone else to stand. Of course, if he does make it to Westminster then he could be quite an influential player in the much-reduced Tory parliamentary party. But will leave the MSP group the job of finding a new leader.
    That’s how it looks to the Daily Mail:

    Douglas Ross doing a chicken run to a seat currently held by one of his own MPs, booting him out in the process, is quite the look.

    https://x.com/DavidTWilcock/status/1798626593826648370

    Doesn’t look good to The Sun either.

    COMMENT: David Duguid’s statement suggests he’s well enough to stand, but Douglas Ross insists he’s too sick. This could badly damage Ross if enough are persuaded he’s acting out of self interest. What Duguid says next, if anything, will be key.

    https://x.com/ChrisMusson/status/1798657808486776866

    And after he said he’d stand down:

    Douglas Ross (CON)

    The leader of the Scottish Conservatives has said he will not stand again at Westminster in order to focus on Holyrood and being an MSP.

    He has served as MP for Moray since 2017.


    https://news.sky.com/story/amp/the-mps-who-have-announced-they-are-standing-down-at-the-next-general-election-13102764

    He’s an unprincipled opportunistic little shit.
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