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Could the Conservatives Really Come Third? – politicalbetting.com

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  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,779

    Labour will raise taxes by far more than the Tories would do if they were to regain office.

    This is the crucial point: the choice is between two competing alternatives for government. One has already had to raise tax, against its instincts, to deal with Covid-19, Ukraine and inflationary/interest-rate fallout, and is gradually getting things back on track. The other wants to spend much much more on public services.

    Fair enough, but that money has to come from somewhere. It's not going to come from borrowing, it can't, so it can only come from extra tax.

    Where?
    I agree with everything you say but Truss handed Labour the biggest gift in political history, and Sunak delivered the coup d'etat this week

    This is Starmer and Labour's time and of course they will raise taxes and certainly struggle with multitudes of problems which they simply have no idea how to resolve or are frightened of the political consequences

    I do not think it will be long until their honeymoon period ends, but in the meantime I genuinely hope the conservative party, or more specifically what is left of it, can regain their sanity and move to the centre where all elections are won
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,047
    DM_Andy said:

    Looking from the outside in government finances something doesn't seem to add up. We're under one of the highest tax burdens in peacetime but don't seem to get very much for our money. It feels like Labour are hoping that they will be able to spend the same money much more efficiently and be able to square that circle.

    Maybe a super majority for Starmer will allow the Labour government to make radical changes? Blair's often said that he rather wasted the majorities he had in the 1st and 2nd term and it was only in the 3rd term that the transformation of public services started. Hopefully Starmer will have listened to that.

    It's a bit of a myth - Blair did a lot in his 1st and 2nd terms and only had the bandwidth, with events on top, to do so much at once. And most people don't want radical changes.

    Starmer will find precisely the same.
  • BatteryCorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorse Posts: 4,664
    edited June 2024
    Just caught up on the debate highlights.

    Weak sauce all round I thought. I don’t think Mordaunt even believed what she was saying about £2000 of taxes. The Lib Dems got owned. And Farage seems to have had some good coaching.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,959
    Heathener said:

    Does anyone have the full list of GE opinion polls from 2019 to the present?

    The wiki page only seems to begin 1/1/23 with nothing entered for 2020, 2021, or 2022.

    Thanks muchly xx

    I have 1800 polls going back to 2015. It's what I do my EMA (Exponential Moving Average) on.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766
    DM_Andy said:

    Looking from the outside in government finances something doesn't seem to add up. We're under one of the highest tax burdens in peacetime but don't seem to get very much for our money. It feels like Labour are hoping that they will be able to spend the same money much more efficiently and be able to square that circle.

    Maybe a super majority for Starmer will allow the Labour government to make radical changes? Blair's often said that he rather wasted the majorities he had in the 1st and 2nd term and it was only in the 3rd term that the transformation of public services started. Hopefully Starmer will have listened to that.

    A lot of this is higher borrowing costs that the government can't do anything about. I think it will be marginal gains for public services unfortunately.

    I also think immigration will be kept high. They fill the fiscal gap.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,080
    @jimwaterson

    This Tory Facebook ad seems to be conceding defeat?

    (I suppose it’s not necessarily stupid to run a “who do you want to be the official opposition to a Labour government?” campaign given the state of the polls but it’s… different.)

    https://x.com/jimwaterson/status/1799352632974225571
  • ToryJimToryJim Posts: 4,192

    Mr. Pete, alas, no. Think of the wealth compound interest would've gifted me were that so...

    Mr Dancer, Given the author of the King James Bible is God, I think being a part of the Trinity would come with greater perks than compound interest 😉
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,740
    edited June 2024
    Vanilla fail
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860

    I’d say Farage won (as far as ‘winning’ is possible in a seven way debate) with Angela a good second. Penny was a bit school mommy - suffered from being stationed next to Angela, who was always going to dominate her.
    Cue several PBers instinctively biting their fists and breathing heavily.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,261
    DM_Andy said:

    Looking from the outside in government finances something doesn't seem to add up. We're under one of the highest tax burdens in peacetime but don't seem to get very much for our money. It feels like Labour are hoping that they will be able to spend the same money much more efficiently and be able to square that circle.

    Maybe a super majority for Starmer will allow the Labour government to make radical changes? Blair's often said that he rather wasted the majorities he had in the 1st and 2nd term and it was only in the 3rd term that the transformation of public services started. Hopefully Starmer will have listened to that.

    The higher tax burden is driven entirely by two components: ageing (health and pensions) and debt servicing. The latter reflects higher debt levels after Covid and the financial crisis, plus higher interest rates. Every other spending category, by and large, is flat or going down. Hence the feeling as working people that we're highly taxed and aren't getting much for it.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,740
    Heathener said:

    At it again with someone else now.

    You’re a truly terrible advert for the Conservative Party. I doubt you will listen to this but you really are.
    My favourite recent CR comment was "This violence and abuse of our politicians has got to stop" in reference to the assault of the Danish PM.

    After saying about Sir Keir:

    "I'd walk through blood to stop the man. He has deeply angered me and ripped the heart out of one of the core pillars of our local community. He is dirt."
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 54,742

    I remember my brief stint as a working journalist. Top and tailing press releases so that they actually resemble something I had written. Not sure my new friend at The Northern Scot has even done that much...

    https://www.northern-scot.co.uk/news/liberal-democrats-announce-general-election-candidate-for-ab-352651/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=facebook

    You've really mastered that "I'm no happy" look of the serious politician.

    I'd wish you every success, provided you don't help the SNP hold the seat.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    lockhimup said:

    Polling 38% might well lead to a huge Labour majority.

    L 38
    Ref 20
    Con 19
    LD 15

    For instance...
    Well, yes, but I consider that a highly unlikely spread. If Labour get 38 I'd expect minimum 25 Con
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,054
    ToryJim said:

    Mr Dancer, Given the author of the King James Bible is God, I think being a part of the Trinity would come with greater perks than compound interest 😉
    Traditional Christian belief is that Moses wrote the first five books.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,047
    I'm placing a range of (what I consider to be) value bets to cover a variety of outcomes, obviously being careful they don't cancel each other out. Because seat ranges are highly unpredictable with a wide MoE.

    Right now, I find the 15/2 with Ladbrokes (boosted) for Tories to secure 150-200 seats interesting.

    Yes, they've had a bad week with Farage and D-Day, but there's still nearly a month to go and it wouldn't take much on the day itself for them to creep into the 155-175 seats range, particularly if Reform proves a damp squib. And that still represents losing c.200 seats.

    DYOR.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Looking at Reforms step downs I think either Epping Forest or Stone etc might end up safest Tory seat in the country
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766
    Scott_xP said:

    @jimwaterson

    This Tory Facebook ad seems to be conceding defeat?

    (I suppose it’s not necessarily stupid to run a “who do you want to be the official opposition to a Labour government?” campaign given the state of the polls but it’s… different.)

    https://x.com/jimwaterson/status/1799352632974225571

    Not just conceding defeat. The Conservative ad addresses the realistic possibility they won't be the second largest party.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563
    ToryJim said:

    Mr Dancer, Given the author of the King James Bible is God, I think being a part of the Trinity would come with greater perks than compound interest 😉
    Morris is too modest.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,406
    edited June 2024

    I'm simply reporting a doctor's view not necessarily my own. I occasionally get to meet his doctor mates and it's always interesting to hear their in-house chat.
    I was at an interesting meeting yesterday on health economics and productivity. A number of speakers spoke about a workforce "quiet quitting" which is the neologism for being lazy or workshy. The audience of Midlands health professionals did not object. We all recognise the phenomenon, the question is how to fix it.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,080
    Farooq said:

    Your maths may have been temporarily in want of cake, but your substantive point is sound. It's a losing bet. The Tories will not get under 50 seats.

    Richi would not lie in a debate knowing it would be exposed

    He would not abandon veterans on D-Day having made national Service a key campaign plank

    He will not drown puppies on live TV

    The Tories will not get under 50 seats.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822
    Farooq said:

    That's not an accurate reflection of our immigration policy. I suggest you go back and czech your facts.
    Is that all the Gdańsk I get for lightening the mood?
  • murali_smurali_s Posts: 3,078
    Eabhal said:

    My favourite recent CR comment was "This violence and abuse of our politicians has got to stop" in reference to the assault of the Danish PM.

    After saying about Sir Keir:

    "I'd walk through blood to stop the man. He has deeply angered me and ripped the heart out of one of the core pillars of our local community. He is dirt."
    I honestly think CR is trolling us. He has to be a parody.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    ydoethur said:

    Is that all the Gdańsk I get for lightening the mood?
    I thought you were poznan an interesting question.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,445
    Scott_xP said:

    @jimwaterson

    This Tory Facebook ad seems to be conceding defeat?

    (I suppose it’s not necessarily stupid to run a “who do you want to be the official opposition to a Labour government?” campaign given the state of the polls but it’s… different.)

    https://x.com/jimwaterson/status/1799352632974225571

    So they’re doing the Australia strategy. I think that’s their best hope.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,606
    pigeon said:

    Most of the Christian responses will be cultural. Nominal C of E, never go near a church except for weddings and funerals. We inhabit one of the most irreligious polities on the face of the Earth.
    Scotland still more so.

    And the weddings and funerals in the C of E bit are only because English residents get a free subscription, so to speak, because it's the state cult.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563
    edited June 2024

    It's personal to me, and you said you couldn't care less.

    You got what you deserved.
    Just to let you know Casino, I haven't flagged you.

    Without wishing to go over old ground and open up wounds, my point was Labour are not currently in Government and VAT has not been exacted upon private schools.
  • What is happening in Westmorland and Lonsdale ?

    John Studholme, just about the first LD councillor on South Lakeland and certainly the man who brough Tim Farron to Westmorland seems to be standing against him as an independent.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,959
    Farooq said:

    You don't have that on github or similar, do you?
    Sorry no. It's just in a spreadsheet. I could look at putting it up on Google sheets.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 64,779
    Heathener said:

    Although we may not always see eye to eye I’ve appreciated following your thoughtful journey on this Big G.

    I might also be voting LibDem.

    I actually quite like their policies on a range of issues and I believe they may have the best chance in my constituency (Newton Abbot).

    I too dread the thought of Nigel Farage and hope he does not win Clacton, although in some ways it might be a way of keeping him quiet for 5 years if he has to serve as an MP of a far-right fringe party.
    I regret Truss and Sunak's actions, but they are insignificant when put alongside Farage pro Trump, anti vax, anti net zero far right ideals and to be honest if he does get into the HOC he will not be quiet and will be a very disruptive presence
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,298
    I can confirm I am neither Moses, nor God.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792
    Foxy said:

    Leicester East looks interesting. The bonkers crossover of community politics local politics and national politics makes for some strange cross currents. This is the area where the community disturbances between Hindutva and Muslim rabble rousers spilled over a couple of years back, and the Labour party purged itself of a number of sitting councillors because of an attempt to limit the power of the Labour mayor for being too autocratic. A number of councillors defected and seats were lost in a spread of different directions, mostly to pro-Modi Conservatives.

    The Constituency is 20% White British, 69% British South Asian including about 33% Hindu. Claudia Webbe is the deeply unpopular and invisible Independent MP parachuted in by Corbyn in 2019 over the head of the local Labour Party and since had the whip removed.

    There are 10 candidates on the ballot including Lab, Con, Reform, Green, LD and 5 others. Webbe is standing as an independent, Keith Vaz for One Leicester (composed mostly of deposed councillors from the Mayor's purge), and 3 further independents. These seem to be two Hindu and one pro-Gaza Muslim. One of the Hindu independents was recently a Conservative Councillor. The LD candidate is a well known local Councillor and health campaigner and Muslim. The Labour, Conservative and Reform candidates are all Hindu, and Vaz is Catholic, and retains a lot of support.

    It's very opaque as to how much support the various independents have, and who they will take votes from. Its a weird and heady brew and anything could happen, but I expect the Tory vote here is more pro-Sunak than nearly any other constituency in the country.

    I think Vaz and the pro-Gaza independent will mostly take votes off Labour, and the Hindutva vote may get similarly fragmented.

    Overall, I think a likely Lab win because of national issues, but I wouldn't rule out either the Tory or Vaz. The Tory is 5.5 at present, and I don't think that Vaz appears in a Constituency market yet.

    This could go anywhere!

    Comfortable Labour hold IMO
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,766

    I'm placing a range of (what I consider to be) value bets to cover a variety of outcomes, obviously being careful they don't cancel each other out. Because seat ranges are highly unpredictable with a wide MoE.

    Right now, I find the 15/2 with Ladbrokes (boosted) for Tories to secure 150-200 seats interesting.

    Yes, they've had a bad week with Farage and D-Day, but there's still nearly a month to go and it wouldn't take much on the day itself for them to creep into the 155-175 seats range, particularly if Reform proves a damp squib. And that still represents losing c.200 seats.

    DYOR.

    Decent odds I think to reflect a result that is on the edge of plausible outcomes.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563

    I can confirm I am neither Moses, nor God.

    You need not be so modest Morris. The writing style gives the game away.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822
    Anyway, to demonstrate yet again that none of our politicians have a clue what the problems are:

    https://www.tes.com/magazine/analysis/general/8-teacher-workforce-trends-recruitment-retention-pay

    This is the reality that confronts the state sector. Vat on private schools doesn't even have a remote bearing on it. And it's getting worse, not better.

    Much the same could be said for transport. I've no doubt it's similar in health.

    It can't be said for social care and social services because things are worse there.

    Let me know if any party shows signs of at least appreciating the scale of the challenge. It might persuade me to vote for them.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited June 2024
    Worth keeping an eye on the local by elections the next 3 weeks. Whilst the Tories got run close in Torbay, their vote % elsewhere in the few we have had has held up remarkably well since GE called with a gain and a hold from second in a MMW as well as holds and do not, In themselves, suggest wipeout. They suggest the core switching on now we are into a campaign.
    Yes, this is very limited data, but all additions to the collective are good
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,936

    I can confirm I am neither Moses, nor God.

    That's a pity as the DEI theme seemed to gather traction

  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,445

    The higher tax burden is driven entirely by two components: ageing (health and pensions) and debt servicing. The latter reflects higher debt levels after Covid and the financial crisis, plus higher interest rates. Every other spending category, by and large, is flat or going down. Hence the feeling as working people that we're highly taxed and aren't getting much for it.
    The lack of understanding among not just the public but the media too about the role of demographics in Western economic performance is a big problem.

    We’ve been teaching about the challenges of ageing populations in school geography since the 90s, but somehow it’s not sunk in. We even had a live case study in Japan for a similar amount of time.

    The dependency ratio in most Western countries is going inexorably upwards. There are more people needing state spending in old age, and fewer people of working age to pay for it. Britain, France and the US are not hit as hard as most but we’re still seeing the same trend. It means much more tax for the same outcomes.

    It almost certainly means a shift to wealth and property taxation at some stage.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,406

    I can confirm I am neither Moses, nor God.

    As God said to Moses, take these two tablets...
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,959
    Barnesian said:

    Sorry no. It's just in a spreadsheet. I could look at putting it up on Google sheets.
    Here it is

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1pq4DuYUELRAU8DXV37tTgme-vIxKO8n9gW7MTgPIdXA/edit?usp=sharing
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127
    FF43 said:

    A lot of this is higher borrowing costs that the government can't do anything about. I think it will be marginal gains for public services unfortunately.

    I also think immigration will be kept high. They fill the fiscal gap.
    In 2010, the tax take was about £410b, with inflation that's about £650b now. Tax in 2023/24 was about £950b with debt interest about £110b. I'm not sure what the debt interest was in 2010, but even assuming that it was zero then that's £190b extra spent for what feels like a worse return. People don't want to pay Waitrose prices for some mouldy out of date stuff from the corner shop. Will another bunch of people make that better? Maybe not but I don't think anyone wants five more years of the same guys.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,505
    @RochdalePioneers: a slightly presumptuous question if I may. Your twitter feed has an agent and lists an Edinburgh address, but implies that is for you. Is the twitter bio necessary in quite that form, as it might wrongly call into question your localness in some minds?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Foxy said:

    Leicester East looks interesting. The bonkers crossover of community politics local politics and national politics makes for some strange cross currents. This is the area where the community disturbances between Hindutva and Muslim rabble rousers spilled over a couple of years back, and the Labour party purged itself of a number of sitting councillors because of an attempt to limit the power of the Labour mayor for being too autocratic. A number of councillors defected and seats were lost in a spread of different directions, mostly to pro-Modi Conservatives.

    The Constituency is 20% White British, 69% British South Asian including about 33% Hindu. Claudia Webbe is the deeply unpopular and invisible Independent MP parachuted in by Corbyn in 2019 over the head of the local Labour Party and since had the whip removed.

    There are 10 candidates on the ballot including Lab, Con, Reform, Green, LD and 5 others. Webbe is standing as an independent, Keith Vaz for One Leicester (composed mostly of deposed councillors from the Mayor's purge), and 3 further independents. These seem to be two Hindu and one pro-Gaza Muslim. One of the Hindu independents was recently a Conservative Councillor. The LD candidate is a well known local Councillor and health campaigner and Muslim. The Labour, Conservative and Reform candidates are all Hindu, and Vaz is Catholic, and retains a lot of support.

    It's very opaque as to how much support the various independents have, and who they will take votes from. Its a weird and heady brew and anything could happen, but I expect the Tory vote here is more pro-Sunak than nearly any other constituency in the country.

    I think Vaz and the pro-Gaza independent will mostly take votes off Labour, and the Hindutva vote may get similarly fragmented.

    Overall, I think a likely Lab win because of national issues, but I wouldn't rule out either the Tory or Vaz. The Tory is 5.5 at present, and I don't think that Vaz appears in a Constituency market yet.

    This could go anywhere!

    Webbe, FWIW, has Galloway and the WPB backing if anyone wants to factor in any influence they feel he might have on the local situation. Not enough for her obviously but it might draw a few % away from the others
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,461

    Just to let you know Casino, I haven't flagged you.

    Without wishing to go over old ground and open up wounds, my point was Labour are not currently in Government and VAT has not been exacted upon private schools.
    Probable future actions are priced in

    I’d note that many of those claiming that potential VAT couldn’t have had an effect if schools, also claimed that a non-enacted change in policy on dependents caused foreign university admissions to collapse.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Farooq said:

    He'll get bored and wander off. I guarantee you if he does win he won't have a good attendance or voting record. He will be more interested in using his status -- Nigel Farage EMM PEE! -- to push his sad Trumpian policies to an increasingly weary country.

    Still, I suppose it'll be nice for him, in a way. He can die safe in the knowledge that he equalled Jared O'Mara's achievement of sitting in the Commons.
    He might even beat Sir Isaac Newtons record there (one time asking for a window to be opened)
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822
    Foxy said:

    As God said to Moses, take these two tablets...
    Which Margaret Thatcher famously rendered as 'keep taking the pills' when Callaghan compared himself to Moses (her staff eventually persuaded her 'keep taking the tablets' worked better).
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    Foxy said:

    Leicester East looks interesting. The bonkers crossover of community politics local politics and national politics makes for some strange cross currents. This is the area where the community disturbances between Hindutva and Muslim rabble rousers spilled over a couple of years back, and the Labour party purged itself of a number of sitting councillors because of an attempt to limit the power of the Labour mayor for being too autocratic. A number of councillors defected and seats were lost in a spread of different directions, mostly to pro-Modi Conservatives.

    The Constituency is 20% White British, 69% British South Asian including about 33% Hindu. Claudia Webbe is the deeply unpopular and invisible Independent MP parachuted in by Corbyn in 2019 over the head of the local Labour Party and since had the whip removed.

    There are 10 candidates on the ballot including Lab, Con, Reform, Green, LD and 5 others. Webbe is standing as an independent, Keith Vaz for One Leicester (composed mostly of deposed councillors from the Mayor's purge), and 3 further independents. These seem to be two Hindu and one pro-Gaza Muslim. One of the Hindu independents was recently a Conservative Councillor. The LD candidate is a well known local Councillor and health campaigner and Muslim. The Labour, Conservative and Reform candidates are all Hindu, and Vaz is Catholic, and retains a lot of support.

    It's very opaque as to how much support the various independents have, and who they will take votes from. Its a weird and heady brew and anything could happen, but I expect the Tory vote here is more pro-Sunak than nearly any other constituency in the country.

    I think Vaz and the pro-Gaza independent will mostly take votes off Labour, and the Hindutva vote may get similarly fragmented.

    Overall, I think a likely Lab win because of national issues, but I wouldn't rule out either the Tory or Vaz. The Tory is 5.5 at present, and I don't think that Vaz appears in a Constituency market yet.

    This could go anywhere!

    That sounds fun as a random constituency result, although personally I dislike the bringing-in of ethnic and sectarian politics, which almost never ends well.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    TimS said:

    The lack of understanding among not just the public but the media too about the role of demographics in Western economic performance is a big problem.

    We’ve been teaching about the challenges of ageing populations in school geography since the 90s, but somehow it’s not sunk in. We even had a live case study in Japan for a similar amount of time.

    The dependency ratio in most Western countries is going inexorably upwards. There are more people needing state spending in old age, and fewer people of working age to pay for it. Britain, France and the US are not hit as hard as most but we’re still seeing the same trend. It means much more tax for the same outcomes.

    It almost certainly means a shift to wealth and property taxation at some stage.
    Older voters constitute most of the burden on the state and hold most of the wealth, which they furiously resent being touched.

    "But I paid my taxes!" will be written on the tombstone of the Western democracies.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,080
    I expect Casino will be apoplectic over this...

    @Peston
    Boris Johnson today calls Starmer “Sir Keir Schnorrer” (see attached). “Schnorrer” is the Yiddish word for beggar and scrounger. It is pretty offensive. It was part of the lingua franca of my grandparents and of my childhood. I find it unsettling to see Johnson appropriating it to describe someone whose wife is Jewish - and especially when he says “if Schnorrer gets in, he will immediately begin the process of robbing this country of its new-found independence and make the UK the punk of the EU”. What do you think? Am I being over sensitive?

    https://x.com/Peston/status/1799356939945513340
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Opinium dudes haven't ramped tonight's poll yet. I guess it's either a boring reversion to mean OR its so astonishing they are planning a major ta daaaaaaaaaa! Given how pathetically they ramped the first two.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822
    Scott_xP said:

    I expect Casino will be apoplectic over this...

    @Peston
    Boris Johnson today calls Starmer “Sir Keir Schnorrer” (see attached). “Schnorrer” is the Yiddish word for beggar and scrounger. It is pretty offensive. It was part of the lingua franca of my grandparents and of my childhood. I find it unsettling to see Johnson appropriating it to describe someone whose wife is Jewish - and especially when he says “if Schnorrer gets in, he will immediately begin the process of robbing this country of its new-found independence and make the UK the punk of the EU”. What do you think? Am I being over sensitive?

    https://x.com/Peston/status/1799356939945513340

    Given Massive Johnson's long history of racism and deliberate offensiveness - no he isn't.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,080
    ydoethur said:

    Given Massive Johnson's long history of racism and deliberate offensiveness - no he isn't.
    But he changed someone's name to make a point. Apparently that is a major sin
  • bobbobbobbob Posts: 100
    edited June 2024

    The higher tax burden is driven entirely by two components: ageing (health and pensions) and debt servicing. The latter reflects higher debt levels after Covid and the financial crisis, plus higher interest rates. Every other spending category, by and large, is flat or going down. Hence the feeling as working people that we're highly taxed and aren't getting much for it.
    Student loans and private pensions are big deductions too ! It’s not just things called taxes that mean people have less money to spend and feel poorer

    has any one seen a comparison of pay and deductions and bills from eras to today ? Would be interesting to See!
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,047
    Eabhal said:

    My favourite recent CR comment was "This violence and abuse of our politicians has got to stop" in reference to the assault of the Danish PM.

    After saying about Sir Keir:

    "I'd walk through blood to stop the man. He has deeply angered me and ripped the heart out of one of the core pillars of our local community. He is dirt."
    Wade through blood is a figure of speech, not literal.

    Don't try and contrive outrage where none exists. I was - and still am - angry but I'd never advocate or encourage harm to SKS or anyone else, and would robustly condemn it if it ever occurred.

    Now, back in your box.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,505

    Worth keeping an eye on the local by elections the next 3 weeks. Whilst the Tories got run close in Torbay, their vote % elsewhere in the few we have had has held up remarkably well since GE called with a gain and a hold from second in a MMW as well as holds and do not, In themselves, suggest wipeout. They suggest the core switching on now we are into a campaign.
    Yes, this is very limited data, but all additions to the collective are good

    I've not done any calculations recently, but my impression for a good while has been that the Tories have been holding up well in local by-elections. Perhaps even above how they poll in the May rounds, where more of a message can be sent if you do desire.

    I'm not sure what that means, if anything - whether the punishment is merely being saved for GE day, or whether it does mean the Tories will outperform at the GE. Turn out is the big difference here though. But overall, I'm unconvinced that the local BEs are telling us anything much that we should attend to this side of GE day.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 37,080
    The Times paywall is down this weekend
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822
    Scott_xP said:

    But he changed someone's name to make a point. Apparently that is a major sin
    Are you talking about @Casino_Royale ? Because I was referring to Peston's last comment.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,047

    Probable future actions are priced in

    I’d note that many of those claiming that potential VAT couldn’t have had an effect if schools, also claimed that a non-enacted change in policy on dependents caused foreign university admissions to collapse.
    Of course, they want to defend their own sides policies whilst attacking the other.

    Wasn't it ever thus?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563
    Scott_xP said:

    I expect Casino will be apoplectic over this...

    @Peston
    Boris Johnson today calls Starmer “Sir Keir Schnorrer” (see attached). “Schnorrer” is the Yiddish word for beggar and scrounger. It is pretty offensive. It was part of the lingua franca of my grandparents and of my childhood. I find it unsettling to see Johnson appropriating it to describe someone whose wife is Jewish - and especially when he says “if Schnorrer gets in, he will immediately begin the process of robbing this country of its new-found independence and make the UK the punk of the EU”. What do you think? Am I being over sensitive?

    https://x.com/Peston/status/1799356939945513340

    IT'S JUST SATIRE! Isn't that the well worn "get out of jail free" card?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,197

    I'm placing a range of (what I consider to be) value bets to cover a variety of outcomes, obviously being careful they don't cancel each other out. Because seat ranges are highly unpredictable with a wide MoE.

    Right now, I find the 15/2 with Ladbrokes (boosted) for Tories to secure 150-200 seats interesting.

    Yes, they've had a bad week with Farage and D-Day, but there's still nearly a month to go and it wouldn't take much on the day itself for them to creep into the 155-175 seats range, particularly if Reform proves a damp squib. And that still represents losing c.200 seats.

    DYOR.


    Have you had a punt on turnout ?
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127

    Worth keeping an eye on the local by elections the next 3 weeks. Whilst the Tories got run close in Torbay, their vote % elsewhere in the few we have had has held up remarkably well since GE called with a gain and a hold from second in a MMW as well as holds and do not, In themselves, suggest wipeout. They suggest the core switching on now we are into a campaign.
    Yes, this is very limited data, but all additions to the collective are good

    Yes, it is limited data but the signs are good that rural areas and 'Red Wall' areas are swinging back a little bit. That's why I think that Gainsborough and Goole & Pocklington despite Electoral Calculus calling those two with Labour gain chances of 54% and 58%.

    Offsetting that is the thought that if the polls are reporting a number and there's one area that's better than the polls suggest, there can be areas where the reality is worse than the polls suggest and it feels like the South West is going to be worse for the Conservatives. Electoral Calculus suggest that Torbay, Exmouth & Exeter East and West Dorset are all Con holds but think they might all end up as LD gain.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,047

    Just to let you know Casino, I haven't flagged you.

    Without wishing to go over old ground and open up wounds, my point was Labour are not currently in Government and VAT has not been exacted upon private schools.
    Thanks. I suggest we perhaps avoid reopening the subject.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Scott_xP said:

    The Times paywall is down this weekend

    The great coming out party
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,047
    Nigelb said:


    Have you had a punt on turnout ?
    Not yet, as I haven't found odds that have attracted me.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,707
    edited June 2024
    Carnyx said:

    Scotland still more so.

    And the weddings and funerals in the C of E bit are only because English residents get a free subscription, so to speak, because it's the state cult.
    I find the "count Christians by the number of people who go to church one" interesting, There are layers to the affiliation - committed, community, cultural and so on. I don't see why such are in some way 'invalid'.

    There have been modern movements since at least the 1950s, and perhaps the 1930s or earlier, exploring concepts such as "the church outside the Church" and "secular faith". Iona and similar communities are in some way practical expressions of such movements. Writers from that earlier modernist period would be people such as Bishop John Robinson ("Honest to God") and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin ("The Phenomenon of Man", "The Divine Milieu").

    It's exactly the game the Humanist Association were playing when they managed to nobble .. er .. amend the census question. They have always claimed "we represent all the nonreligious in the population", when having just a few thousand "members" themselves.

    They also play games with nebulous surveys - there was a funny one that was nailed by a philosopher a few years ago. It could have been filled in my any priest or bishop I have ever known and they would come out as "humanist".

    Which is itself ironic because the word comes from humanist theologians such as Erasmus.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    Heathener said:

    Funnily enough most people who know me in real life, as opposed to on here, mark me as typical GenZ in outlook and views. Which I take as a compliment.
    A humourless low-IQ trans-activist dork who never has sex?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    DM_Andy said:

    Yes, it is limited data but the signs are good that rural areas and 'Red Wall' areas are swinging back a little bit. That's why I think that Gainsborough and Goole & Pocklington despite Electoral Calculus calling those two with Labour gain chances of 54% and 58%.

    Offsetting that is the thought that if the polls are reporting a number and there's one area that's better than the polls suggest, there can be areas where the reality is worse than the polls suggest and it feels like the South West is going to be worse for the Conservatives. Electoral Calculus suggest that Torbay, Exmouth & Exeter East and West Dorset are all Con holds but think they might all end up as LD gain.
    Yes the SW could be brutal. They might be saved in West Dorset by Reform not running
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,816
    edited June 2024
    Scott_xP said:

    I expect Casino will be apoplectic over this...

    @Peston
    Boris Johnson today calls Starmer “Sir Keir Schnorrer” (see attached). “Schnorrer” is the Yiddish word for beggar and scrounger. It is pretty offensive. It was part of the lingua franca of my grandparents and of my childhood. I find it unsettling to see Johnson appropriating it to describe someone whose wife is Jewish - and especially when he says “if Schnorrer gets in, he will immediately begin the process of robbing this country of its new-found independence and make the UK the punk of the EU”. What do you think? Am I being over sensitive?

    https://x.com/Peston/status/1799356939945513340

    More significant is that the entire piece is a defence of his precious Brexit. Which the country has decided was a mistake. And desperately doesn't want to talk about having wasted a decade or more on it whilst ignoring the fabric of the nation collapsing.
    He can't switch gears. He's a man of a different age. Desperately out of touch with the times.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,406
    edited June 2024
    Scott_xP said:

    @jimwaterson

    This Tory Facebook ad seems to be conceding defeat?

    (I suppose it’s not necessarily stupid to run a “who do you want to be the official opposition to a Labour government?” campaign given the state of the polls but it’s… different.)

    https://x.com/jimwaterson/status/1799352632974225571

    Is that a real Ad, or another fake?. I wouldn't expect the Tories to throw in the towel just yet.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,754
    Heathener said:

    I don’t have a tv and haven’t watched anything on tv for c. 10 years.

    I only ever use my MacBook and iPhone. Stream or rip everything. I agree with Mrs @BartholomewRoberts about TikTok for music. I love it for that.

    p.s. what is a “radio”?
    (Ok that last bit is a joke but seriously wtf is a radio these days?). Can you even buy them?
    I listen to the radio through my TV.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,197
    ydoethur said:

    Which Margaret Thatcher famously rendered as 'keep taking the pills' when Callaghan compared himself to Moses (her staff eventually persuaded her 'keep taking the tablets' worked better).
    It’s a genuine shame that you never had the experience of attempting to explain puns to her.
    That might have been one of history’s epic encounters.
  • DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 1,127

    Yes the SW could be brutal. They might be saved in West Dorset by Reform not running
    Good point, I hadn't considered that.

  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,632
    pigeon said:

    Older voters constitute most of the burden on the state and hold most of the wealth, which they furiously resent being touched.

    "But I paid my taxes!" will be written on the tombstone of the Western democracies.
    I'd almost say the problem is the other way around. What we have now is normal. But the boom of the post war period, driven by an unusually benign dependency ratio, gave an illusion of how generous the state could be.
  • Pro_RataPro_Rata Posts: 5,505
    Farooq said:

    Organic digital material (material that is not a paid advert) needs an imprint if it's published by or on behalf of one of these people or groups [candidates, registered parties, etc], and it’s election, referendum or recall petition material.
    https://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/political-registration-and-regulation/imprints
    Yes, I figured something like that, but I do go round politician twitter a bit and there is not necessarily the same level of details on the all the candidate bios.

    Maybe that has changed as recently as yesterday when people formally became candidates and Rochdale just got his ducks in a row ahead of time.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,406
    dixiedean said:

    More significant is that the entire piece is a defence of his precious Brexit. Which the country has decided was a mistake. And desperately doesn't want to talk about having wasted a decade or more on it whilst ignoring the fabric of the nation collapsing.
    He can't switch gears. He's a man of a different age. Desperately out of touch with the times.
    It was striking how unpopular Brexit was with the carefully balanced audience last night.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Leon said:

    A humourless low-IQ trans-activist dork who never has sex?
    I'm more impressed by a Gen Zer who first got into politics around the time of John Smith. A rare demographic indeed
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563

    Probable future actions are priced in

    I’d note that many of those claiming that potential VAT couldn’t have had an effect if schools, also claimed that a non-enacted change in policy on dependents caused foreign university admissions to collapse.
    I would claim that a prescription from an incumbent carries more weight than a proposition from a challenger.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792

    Opinium dudes haven't ramped tonight's poll yet. I guess it's either a boring reversion to mean OR its so astonishing they are planning a major ta daaaaaaaaaa! Given how pathetically they ramped the first two.

    Or they have taken on board my warning that the Seventh Circle of Hell is reserved for the poll rampers… and have doth repented?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881

    I'm more impressed by a Gen Zer who first got into politics around the time of John Smith. A rare demographic indeed
    ALL the gen z-ers I know store hot water in thermos flasks, take the Saturday telegraph, are well known TV commentators, have joyous spa days in London, have spent many years LIVING abroad not just VISITING, and also work as postwomen
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822

    I'm more impressed by a Gen Zer who first got into politics around the time of John Smith. A rare demographic indeed
    Another interesting point is that 'To The Manor Born' (1978) is before that poster's time and therefore unreasonable for her to know about it, but 'to the manner born' (Shakespeare, probably 1602) is not...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    edited June 2024

    Ukraine has claimed to have hit over 700 pieces of Russian artillery in a little more than a fortnight. Massive stockpiles from the Soviet era are being obliterated, now within Russia itself - with no prospect of replacement any time soon.

    Russia's warfare is predicated on long-range demolition. It's glide bombs have been very impressive in replacing artillery in this role. But with several more Patriot systems arriving in Ukraine, Russian jets are going to be far too vulnerable to deliver them.

    Russia's advance around Kharkiv seemed to have stalled. Indeed, recent reports suggest Russia is now losing ground. Putin's strategy of using up his men and finite machinery to force Ukraine to a settlement looks to be at risk of failure - and facing better quality weaponry, may suffer long term reversals. The arrival of F-16s and Mirage jets are going to make Crimea one giant pinata of Russian troops. The Kerch Straits supply ferries have already been hit and damaged; the Kerch Bridge is now in range of missiles.

    If Ukraine can make Crimea a killing fields for Russian troops stationed there, there is over the next year or so the route for a final settlement: Ukraine cedes lands in the east, whilst getting the return of Crimea. That would be a blow from which Putin would not survive - literally.

    I’m on my way to Kyiv. Literally. I’ll hand on the good news

    Edit to add: I agree with you on the military outlook. Seems Russia cannot win this any more than Ukraine can win it - in the usual sense of taking all the land back/conquering the country. It’s a muddy, bloody impasse, and my impressions of Ukraine on this trip are of a people ground down and weary but absolutely not giving in, quite the opposite. They are quietly proud of their stoic endurance - and they should be
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,990
    Foxy said:

    It was striking how unpopular Brexit was with the carefully balanced audience last night.
    Carefully balanced by party representation does not mean carefully balanced by Leave/Remain.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563
    Leon said:

    A humourless low-IQ trans-activist dork who never has sex?
    Your personal candidate profile needs more work if you hope to get a vote.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,792
    Some chaps on here are a teensy weensy bit infatuated with @Heathener
  • MattWMattW Posts: 25,707
    Off-topic, but I do wonder.

    A random thought on Tactile Paving.
    Tactile Paving is road signs for visually impaired people eg "walk here" not "hazard" across the edge of a staircase or railway platform can have serious consequences.
    Why is it not regulated as seriously as road signs on the road?

    https://x.com/mattwardman/status/1799357567304692136

    (For anyone wanting data - Tactile Paving is regulated by "Guidance", whilst Roadsigns are regulated by the "Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2016 (as amended) (TSRGD)".
  • https://x.com/HarrietHarman/status/1799363239060373919

    Basingstoke here we come..

    Hope you chaps stuck some money on Baso!
  • Some chaps on here are a teensy weensy bit infatuated with @Heathener

    You mean Leon?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563

    Carefully balanced by party representation does not mean carefully balanced by Leave/Remain.
    I worry for the Reform Remainers.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 72,822

    Ukraine has claimed to have hit over 700 pieces of Russian artillery in a little more than a fortnight. Massive stockpiles from the Soviet era are being obliterated, now within Russia itself - with no prospect of replacement any time soon.

    Russia's warfare is predicated on long-range demolition. It's glide bombs have been very impressive in replacing artillery in this role. But with several more Patriot systems arriving in Ukraine, Russian jets are going to be far too vulnerable to deliver them.

    Russia's advance around Kharkiv seemed to have stalled. Indeed, recent reports suggest Russia is now losing ground. Putin's strategy of using up his men and finite machinery to force Ukraine to a settlement looks to be at risk of failure - and facing better quality weaponry, may suffer long term reversals. The arrival of F-16s and Mirage jets are going to make Crimea one giant pinata of Russian troops. The Kerch Straits supply ferries have already been hit and damaged; the Kerch Bridge is now in range of missiles.

    If Ukraine can make Crimea a killing fields for Russian troops stationed there, there is over the next year or so the route for a final settlement: Ukraine cedes lands in the east, whilst getting the return of Crimea. That would be a blow from which Putin would not survive - literally.

    Which is why such a peace seems rather unlikely.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,406
    Cookie said:

    I'd almost say the problem is the other way around. What we have now is normal. But the boom of the post war period, driven by an unusually benign dependency ratio, gave an illusion of how generous the state could be.
    I think that a fair point.

    It's also pretty clear that a young economy is one with a lot of young workers. The roots of Japan and Italy's economic decline is demographics, and those demographics are hitting other parts of Europe including us now. They are impacting Korea, Taiwan etc too.

    Having 25% of the population retired is a massive drain on an economy in terms of both workforce (increasingly needed in low productivity sectors of health and social care) and money going to pensions, benefits and health care. It doesn't really matter if the money and workforce are being directed by government or private provision, the opportunity cost for productive work is gone either way.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,990
    Leon said:

    I’m on my way to Kyiv. Literally. I’ll hand on the good news

    Edit to add: I agree with you on the military outlook. Seems Russia cannot win this any more than Ukraine can win it - in the usual sense of taking all the land back/conquering the country. It’s a muddy, bloody impasse, and my impressions of Ukraine on this trip are of a people ground down and weary but absolutely not giving in, quite the opposite. They are quietly proud of their stoic endurance - and they should be
    Fascinating time to be there. Would love to visit, but the Good Lady Wife would veto it any time soon.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    https://x.com/HarrietHarman/status/1799363239060373919

    Basingstoke here we come..

    Hope you chaps stuck some money on Baso!

    Should be an interesting marginal this time
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 75,197
    Tax rises of £800 a year coming whoever wins UK election, thinktank finds
    Neither Labour nor Tories have committed to axing already announced rises, Resolution Foundation warns
    https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/jun/08/tax-rises-of-800-a-year-coming-whoever-wins-uk-election-thinktank-finds

    This isn’t quite true, as aren’t the Tories suggesting that they would protect pensioners (and no one else) from fiscal drag ?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,881
    edited June 2024

    Some chaps on here are a teensy weensy bit infatuated with @Heathener

    Bang to rights. I am fairly convinced she is a superb comic creation - and I admire the handiwork. The absurd contradictions are magnificent - “I take the Saturday Telegraph” being the most recent

    If she’s not a comic sockpupppet she’s a wild eccentric prone to fantasy, either way she adds to the gaiety of PB
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,658
    MattW said:

    I find the "count Christians by the number of people who go to church one" interesting, There are layers to the affiliation - committed, community, cultural and so on. I don't see why such are in some way 'invalid'.

    There have been modern movements since at least the 1950s, and perhaps the 1930s or earlier, exploring concepts such as "the church outside the Church" and "secular faith". Iona and similar communities are in some way practical expressions of such movements. Writers from that earlier modernist period would be people such as Bishop John Robinson ("Honest to God") and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin ("The Phenomenon of Man", "The Divine Milieu").

    It's exactly the game the Humanist Association were playing when they managed to nobble .. er .. amend the census question. They have always claimed "we represent all the nonreligious in the population", when having just a few thousand "members" themselves.

    They also play games with nebulous surveys - there was a funny one that was nailed by a philosopher a few years ago. It could have been filled in my any priest or bishop I have ever known and they would come out as "humanist".

    Which is itself ironic because the word comes from humanist theologians such as Erasmus.
    Yes. Two points. The decline in cultural Christianity is in many ways more alarming than the decline in actual attendance; and of course hard to measure.

    And a question for non theist humanists: If humanism of the non theist sort is remotely plausible, why do humans, revered by humanists, do such terrible things.

    Christians do this by 'fall and redemption'. It is not often noticed that the famous 'problem of evil' is tougher for humanists than it is (though it's tough) for theists.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    https://x.com/HarrietHarman/status/1799363239060373919

    Basingstoke here we come..

    Hope you chaps stuck some money on Baso!

    The only person ever to get excited at going to Basingstoke?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Leon said:

    Bang to rights. I am fairly convinced she is a superb comic creation - and I admire the handiwork. The absurd contradictions are magnificent - “I take the Saturday Telegraph” being the most recent

    If she’s not a comic sockpupppet she’s a wild eccentric prone to fantasy, either way she adds to the gaiety of PB
    Hand on side of face emoji
  • Andy_JS said:

    Have the Greens put up a full slate in Britain? I think they may have.

    Think so.
    barring last moment form filling foolishness,
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,406

    Carefully balanced by party representation does not mean carefully balanced by Leave/Remain.
    2019 was the Bbrexit referendum, but now Brexit only gets Remainers fired up for revenge.

    Reform have moved on to immigration generally and don't seem bothered by Brexit much now. It's an embarrassment even to them.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,563
    ydoethur said:

    Anyway, to demonstrate yet again that none of our politicians have a clue what the problems are:

    https://www.tes.com/magazine/analysis/general/8-teacher-workforce-trends-recruitment-retention-pay

    This is the reality that confronts the state sector. Vat on private schools doesn't even have a remote bearing on it. And it's getting worse, not better.

    Much the same could be said for transport. I've no doubt it's similar in health.

    It can't be said for social care and social services because things are worse there.

    Let me know if any party shows signs of at least appreciating the scale of the challenge. It might persuade me to vote for them.

    The reality is every department of Government is in dire financial difficulty. All the parties of the centre and centre left need to come clean on taxation. In fairness only Reform are telling the truth that by cutting taxes they will have to decimate services.

    I am not sure some of those voting Farage have the same Trumpian view of for example healthcare provision that he does.
This discussion has been closed.