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Kaboom! Is Sunak the Tory David Lloyd George? – politicalbetting.com

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    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,475
    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Growing the state ?

    Do you mean shovelling more money to the oldies ?

    Increasing the tax burden ?

    Do you realise how much this country is living beyond its means ?

    If you want a small state, low tax country you need to find a few hundred billion of spending cuts.

    Which means health cuts and pension cuts.

    Good luck getting the oldies to vote Conservative after doing that.
  • Options
    BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,096
    HYUFD said:

    Leon said:

    Leon said:

    Biden just wanders off, causing consternation to other G7 leaders. This is a daily humiliation for the USA

    https://x.com/ritapanahi/status/1801329917327773789?s=46&t=bulOICNH15U6kB0MwE6Lfw

    I can only imagine what it is like day to day inside the White House. There is no way he is making any decisions.
    Indeed

    That’s one of the saddest of all the videos I’ve seen. He’s just pitiable now, it cannot be fun, his wife needs to do the right thing. Imagine him trying to last til 2028??

    The way Macron then Meloni have to rescue him, Jeez. This is the President of the USA!
    There could have been people out of shot he was giving the thumbs up too, though to be honest he could be a brain dead corpse with no pulse and still get 45-50% against Trump
    I think there some army men packing up the gear just in shot that he was walking towards. I suspect he was a bit bored, and as President he can what he damn well likes,
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 28,767
    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 78,069
    edited June 13
    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We have high taxes, because growth has been so poor, that revenues aren't increasing and debt is increasing, so taxes go up.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for about 20 years. 2% is your minimum to keep treading water against inflationary pressures.
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 15,374
    MJW said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Sunak isn't a "wet centrist" though. He's a weird combination of the things centrists can't stand about the Tory right, and the things the Tory right don't like about their party's self-described pragmatists.

    So pleases and understands no one.

    If the Tories do have a real disaster it's because they'll be a rare example of a party that managed to totally alienate both the moderate end of its voter coalition and its extreme end at the same time. Even Corbyn only managed one of those.
    The odd thing is that Maggie got away with it, and the wet end of the party extended quite a bit further left in those days. Her talent as a politician? Different sort of threat from Socialists? Or has the old centre of the Conservative Party simply ceased to hold? Are the things that (say) Tugendhat and Braverman want incompatible in a way that wasn't true for (say) Patten and Ridley?
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 59,414
    Muesli said:

    kle4 said:

    Jonathan said:

    So you’re in number 10, you call a snap election and three weeks later are now third. What do you do?

    Well, you've tried being aggressive. You've tried begging forgiveness. You've tried warning people if you lose too badly they won't like that.

    So you just parrot your lines and pray.
    What about another 2p off NI?

    That'll do it surely.

    Issue an addendum to their manifesto.
    If they keep pledging to cut 2p off every time they’re in a hole, they’ll end up paying us National Insurance. And still lose.
    Actually. This is brilliant. This will save them at the last minute.

    The Tax Refund.

    We will pay you next year the equivalent you would have paid in tax.

    It'll massively kick start the economy and private schools would be saved.

  • Options
    PJHPJH Posts: 583
    IanB2 said:

    PJH said:

    The 18-24 YouGov subsample in full:

    LAB: 41%
    LD: 22%
    REF: 15%
    GRN: 8%
    CON: 7%

    That supports my daughter's comment earlier about Embarrassing Dad Ed's antics cutting through in a positive way amongst her age group. I don't think any of them knew who he was before.
    You can get 6/1 at Ladbrokes that Ed will be fired from a cannon before the campaign is out
    I won't take that unless you have inside information!
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 118,281

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    He is wet, but not centrist.
    Yeah.
    The entire problem with the Tory Party is that it has become unmoored from where the centre is.
    Just look at the polls. The centre right now is the far left of the LD's or the extreme right of Labour.
    It's Liz Kendall.
    That's where the median voter sits.
    You've done fuck all to appeal to them. Starmer's done loads. So you don't deserve to win. Or come second.
    I wouldn't personally agree that the median voter sits on the centre right, because people are too contradictory.

    He or she might have the views on business of Liz Kendall or Ed Davey, but the views on spending of Ed Miliband, or even Jeremy Corbyn.
    And the views of Farage on immigration
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,097
    The challenging thing for Conservatives to grasp is that’s it’s not just Sunak. It’s deeper than that.
  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 31,400
    Foxy said:

    What is the hype around Mordaunt? She strikes me as another Sunak, a complete lightweight.

    Would you rather be washed up on a desert island with Penny, or with Rishi?
    It's a no brainer. Penny strikes me as versatile, and could build and sail a boat.
    Yeah but knowing my luck she'd build one just big enough for herself and sail off without me. :smile:
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,667
    You want a black swan before voting happens?

    The Russian banking sector seems to be collapsing...
  • Options
    GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,111
    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    One of the interesting things which will hopefully come out after the election is whether there was tactical voting against Mordaunt as they thought Truss would be easier to beat. I can't imagine that Morduant would have done any worse.
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,278
    edited June 13

    MJW said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Sunak isn't a "wet centrist" though. He's a weird combination of the things centrists can't stand about the Tory right, and the things the Tory right don't like about their party's self-described pragmatists.

    So pleases and understands no one.

    If the Tories do have a real disaster it's because they'll be a rare example of a party that managed to totally alienate both the moderate end of its voter coalition and its extreme end at the same time. Even Corbyn only managed one of those.
    The odd thing is that Maggie got away with it, and the wet end of the party extended quite a bit further left in those days. Her talent as a politician? Different sort of threat from Socialists? Or has the old centre of the Conservative Party simply ceased to hold? Are the things that (say) Tugendhat and Braverman want incompatible in a way that wasn't true for (say) Patten and Ridley?
    Fine margins. Thatcher was lucky to get to 1983, had her finger on the pulse of the nations until 1987, and after that was part of the furniture, so stayed too long because no one could imagine life without her.
  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 31,400

    MJW said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Sunak isn't a "wet centrist" though. He's a weird combination of the things centrists can't stand about the Tory right, and the things the Tory right don't like about their party's self-described pragmatists.

    So pleases and understands no one.

    If the Tories do have a real disaster it's because they'll be a rare example of a party that managed to totally alienate both the moderate end of its voter coalition and its extreme end at the same time. Even Corbyn only managed one of those.
    The odd thing is that Maggie got away with it, and the wet end of the party extended quite a bit further left in those days. Her talent as a politician? Different sort of threat from Socialists? Or has the old centre of the Conservative Party simply ceased to hold? Are the things that (say) Tugendhat and Braverman want incompatible in a way that wasn't true for (say) Patten and Ridley?
    I think the big difference is that she took the centre with her. She actually shifted it a bit to the right so she still appeared to many people, at least in the first couple of terms, to be operating from the centre.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,475

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,278

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    One of the interesting things which will hopefully come out after the election is whether there was tactical voting against Mordaunt as they thought Truss would be easier to beat. I can't imagine that Morduant would have done any worse.
    I can.

    Well ok, not worse than Truss, but badly. Just look at her in these debates. Dealt a bad hand but played it poorly.
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 26,234
    ...
    Mortimer said:

    MJW said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Sunak isn't a "wet centrist" though. He's a weird combination of the things centrists can't stand about the Tory right, and the things the Tory right don't like about their party's self-described pragmatists.

    So pleases and understands no one.

    If the Tories do have a real disaster it's because they'll be a rare example of a party that managed to totally alienate both the moderate end of its voter coalition and its extreme end at the same time. Even Corbyn only managed one of those.
    This is an excellent comment. I'm a longtime member and Tory activist, so to me he seems a wet centrist.

    Sunak's terrible attempts at triangulation have pushed me to cheering on the coming defeat.
    MJW's theory is entertaining, but doesn’t hold water. Sunak's wet centrism and his right wingery don't hold equal status - his actions and policies have been totally anti-conservative. His right wingery has been performative, sporadic, and shallower than a puddle.
  • Options
    GarethoftheVale2GarethoftheVale2 Posts: 2,111

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 49,214
    edited June 13
    ....
  • Options
    dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 28,643
    edited June 13

    MJW said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Sunak isn't a "wet centrist" though. He's a weird combination of the things centrists can't stand about the Tory right, and the things the Tory right don't like about their party's self-described pragmatists.

    So pleases and understands no one.

    If the Tories do have a real disaster it's because they'll be a rare example of a party that managed to totally alienate both the moderate end of its voter coalition and its extreme end at the same time. Even Corbyn only managed one of those.
    The odd thing is that Maggie got away with it, and the wet end of the party extended quite a bit further left in those days. Her talent as a politician? Different sort of threat from Socialists? Or has the old centre of the Conservative Party simply ceased to hold? Are the things that (say) Tugendhat and Braverman want incompatible in a way that wasn't true for (say) Patten and Ridley?
    The Overton Window has simply shifted.
    Public opinion has moved significantly.
    Tory LE gains in 1968. And a win against the head in 1970.
    Corbyn 2017. They were harbingers of the new order.
    Thatcher simply took advantage of it when it did.
    Starmer is doing it now.
    That's all.
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,278
    edited June 13
    PJH said:

    IanB2 said:

    PJH said:

    The 18-24 YouGov subsample in full:

    LAB: 41%
    LD: 22%
    REF: 15%
    GRN: 8%
    CON: 7%

    That supports my daughter's comment earlier about Embarrassing Dad Ed's antics cutting through in a positive way amongst her age group. I don't think any of them knew who he was before.
    You can get 6/1 at Ladbrokes that Ed will be fired from a cannon before the campaign is out
    I won't take that unless you have inside information!
    I said the other night, and I stand by it, that if he does an Evel Knievel over some buses he will get my vote. And I would vote Leave again tomorrow.

    Ed, are you reading? I’m in a seat you could win.
  • Options
    kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,375

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 26,234
    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    It was a great pity that she was forced out. Quite apart from the fact that she wouldn't have gone for a GE prematurely (because she wanted to go to the public with visible pay off to show for her supply-side reforms), she'd have done much better than this - and probably not brought on the return of Farage.
  • Options
    RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,075

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
  • Options
    DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 986

    MiC debate poll:

    https://x.com/luketryl/status/1799203206553080254

    Farage on top, Rayner 2nd, none of the above 3rd

    Farage - 25%
    Rayner - 19%
    None of the above - 14%
    Denyer - 11%
    Flynn - 10%
    Mordaunt - 7%
    Cooper - 5%
    ap Iowerth - 2%

    Don’t know - 8%

    Wasn't that the one after the BBC 7-way on Friday?

  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 78,069

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 49,214
    DM_Andy said:

    Wasn't that the one after the BBC 7-way on Friday?

    Oops, you're right. An old tweet showed up and I thought it was from tonight.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,804
    Chameleon said:

    Mortimer said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    He is wet, but not centrist.
    Yeah.
    The entire problem with the Tory Party is that it has become unmoored from where the centre is.
    Just look at the polls. The centre right now is the far left of the LD's or the extreme right of Labour.
    It's Liz Kendall.
    That's where the median voter sits.
    You've done fuck all to appeal to them. Starmer's done loads. So you don't deserve to win. Or come second.
    I wouldn't personally agree that the median voter sits on the centre right, because people are too contradictory.

    He or she might have the views on business of Liz Kendall or Ed Davey, but the views on spending of Ed Miliband, or even Jeremy Corbyn.
    I'm resigned to the liklihood of little fundamentally changing until something major happens. A war, or an IMF bailout.

    Too many (of all ages) have got used to the state providing. That is simply unsustainable given our demographics.
    Well, not necessarily if people accept higher immigration.

    That's the key bee in their bonnet of Reform, obviously.
    There's little to no evidence the unis selling visas to aspiring deliveroo drivers has helped anything.
    There’s little evidence that that description has anything to do with reality. The Government’s own analysis has dismissed such characterisations.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 49,214
    edited June 13

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
    It was five minutes of silence with the message “Britain is Broken”

    https://x.com/nigel_farage/status/1801328700446937145
  • Options
    DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 986
    It's getting to the point that if I were in Romsey & Southampton North I would seriously consider voting Tory.
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,278
    edited June 13

    You want a black swan before voting happens?

    The Russian banking sector seems to be collapsing...

    You make that sound like it has come from nowhere and there isn’t a cause in the shape of the new sanctions….
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 118,281
    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    Corbyn in 2017 though got a hung parliament and was just 30 more gains from the Tories from winning most seats and becoming PM. Only Boris in 2019 managed to beat him convincingly and partly due to getting Leavers, many of whom love Farage, to back him to get Brexit done.

    That is a high risk strategy
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,804

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
    And what did Moffat do to upset MoonRabbit!?
  • Options
    WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 8,716
    edited June 13

    You want a black swan before voting happens?

    The Russian banking sector seems to be collapsing...

    Please expand.

    What are the new metrics if so ? Is something qualitatively diffrerent, going on ?
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,278

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
    You wouldn’t think Farage could get that many ping pong balls in there….
  • Options
    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,181

    Chameleon said:

    Mortimer said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    He is wet, but not centrist.
    Yeah.
    The entire problem with the Tory Party is that it has become unmoored from where the centre is.
    Just look at the polls. The centre right now is the far left of the LD's or the extreme right of Labour.
    It's Liz Kendall.
    That's where the median voter sits.
    You've done fuck all to appeal to them. Starmer's done loads. So you don't deserve to win. Or come second.
    I wouldn't personally agree that the median voter sits on the centre right, because people are too contradictory.

    He or she might have the views on business of Liz Kendall or Ed Davey, but the views on spending of Ed Miliband, or even Jeremy Corbyn.
    I'm resigned to the liklihood of little fundamentally changing until something major happens. A war, or an IMF bailout.

    Too many (of all ages) have got used to the state providing. That is simply unsustainable given our demographics.
    Well, not necessarily if people accept higher immigration.

    That's the key bee in their bonnet of Reform, obviously.
    There's little to no evidence the unis selling visas to aspiring deliveroo drivers has helped anything.
    There’s little evidence that that description has anything to do with reality. The Government’s own analysis has dismissed such characterisations.
    Neil O'Brian's analysis doesn't, nor do the whole cohort of ghost uni campuses in central London, or the frequent food delivery drivers using someone's account because they can't get their own due to no right to work.
  • Options
    RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,075

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
    "Britain is Broken
    Britain needs Reform"

    Static. No music or sound. For 5 minutes.

    https://twitter.com/chiller/status/1801327909740728762
  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 31,400

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
    It was five minutes of silence with the message “Britain is Broken”

    https://x.com/nigel_farage/status/1801328700446937145
    Reminds me a bit of the 1968 Hubert Humphrey PPB against Spiro Agnew.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zHyH6PHFzc
  • Options
    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 28,767
    edited June 13
    Andrew Mitchell appears to be the only person who still thinks the Tories can win the election. 😊
  • Options
    bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,278
    Andy_JS said:

    Andrew Mitchell appears to be the only person who still thinks the Tories can win the election. 😊

    Pleb.
  • Options
    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 41% (-4)
    CON: 21% (-1)
    REF: 17% (+3)
    LDM: 11% (+1)
    GRN: 6% (+1)

    via @NorstatUKPolls, 10-12 Jun

    (Changes with 5 Jun)

    https://x.com/oprosuk/status/1801378488017895839
  • Options
    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 21,466
    Tory majority now trading at 110 on Betfair Exchange.

    Hung Parliament is 23.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,804
    Chameleon said:

    Chameleon said:

    Mortimer said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    He is wet, but not centrist.
    Yeah.
    The entire problem with the Tory Party is that it has become unmoored from where the centre is.
    Just look at the polls. The centre right now is the far left of the LD's or the extreme right of Labour.
    It's Liz Kendall.
    That's where the median voter sits.
    You've done fuck all to appeal to them. Starmer's done loads. So you don't deserve to win. Or come second.
    I wouldn't personally agree that the median voter sits on the centre right, because people are too contradictory.

    He or she might have the views on business of Liz Kendall or Ed Davey, but the views on spending of Ed Miliband, or even Jeremy Corbyn.
    I'm resigned to the liklihood of little fundamentally changing until something major happens. A war, or an IMF bailout.

    Too many (of all ages) have got used to the state providing. That is simply unsustainable given our demographics.
    Well, not necessarily if people accept higher immigration.

    That's the key bee in their bonnet of Reform, obviously.
    There's little to no evidence the unis selling visas to aspiring deliveroo drivers has helped anything.
    There’s little evidence that that description has anything to do with reality. The Government’s own analysis has dismissed such characterisations.
    Neil O'Brian's analysis doesn't, nor do the whole cohort of ghost uni campuses in central London, or the frequent food delivery drivers using someone's account because they can't get their own due to no right to work.
    I don’t believe Neil O’Brian, the assistant professor at the University of Oregon, has looked at this. Did you mean O’Brien, the Tory MP? He’s running a campaign and I suspect his claims are as accurate as the many other Tory claims we’ve heard in the campaign.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,804

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 41% (-4)
    CON: 21% (-1)
    REF: 17% (+3)
    LDM: 11% (+1)
    GRN: 6% (+1)

    via @NorstatUKPolls, 10-12 Jun

    (Changes with 5 Jun)

    https://x.com/oprosuk/status/1801378488017895839

    An unwinding of tactical voting now everyone’s decided the main result is a foregone conclusion?
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,475

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
  • Options
    BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 19,549

    You want a black swan before voting happens?

    The Russian banking sector seems to be collapsing...

    And there will still be some who'll claim that that sanctions aren't achieving anything.
  • Options
    darkagedarkage Posts: 4,929
    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    I keep hearing this idea 'elections are won from the centre' from everyone. It just seems obvious to me, that if the centre stops being able to deliver, then people will look for a more radical alternative; and the more radical alternative will come from the right. Particularly if the failing centre is represented by a Labour government.

    I am often characterised as 'right wing' but I am not. I am probably going to vote Labour. I just have a strong sense this is how things will work out.
  • Options
    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 39% (-7)
    CON: 19% (-1)
    RFM: 17% (+3)
    LDM: 10% (+2)

    via @PeoplePolling, 11-12 Jun

    (Changes with 16 May)

    https://x.com/oprosuk/status/1801379309875020250
  • Options
    WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 8,716
    edited June 13

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
    But investment has been very low, by European standards.

    No wonder we haven't seen any gain, from it.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 49,214

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 39% (-7)
    CON: 19% (-1)
    RFM: 17% (+3)
    LDM: 10% (+2)

    via @PeoplePolling, 11-12 Jun

    (Changes with 16 May)

    https://x.com/oprosuk/status/1801379309875020250

    In a strange way, Labour need a Tory revival now. If the Tories collapse further, more of the Labour vote could splinter too.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 118,281

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 39% (-7)
    CON: 19% (-1)
    RFM: 17% (+3)
    LDM: 10% (+2)

    via @PeoplePolling, 11-12 Jun

    (Changes with 16 May)

    https://x.com/oprosuk/status/1801379309875020250

    First time Tories have been grateful to a Matt Goodwin poll
  • Options
    gettingbettergettingbetter Posts: 493
    My other half is ceasing to support the Conservatives. I am not surprised as we have both been pretty disenchanted since Teresa May resigned,and recent events are pretty indefensible. But what I am very surprised is that she is going Labour given we live on what must now be a Conservative-Loberal marginal.And I think most likely a Liberal gain.
  • Options
    bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 8,804
    darkage said:

    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    I keep hearing this idea 'elections are won from the centre' from everyone. It just seems obvious to me, that if the centre stops being able to deliver, then people will look for a more radical alternative; and the more radical alternative will come from the right. Particularly if the failing centre is represented by a Labour government.

    I am often characterised as 'right wing' but I am not. I am probably going to vote Labour. I just have a strong sense this is how things will work out.
    Right now, the populist right is getting its ass kicked by Labour, who are campaigning from the centre.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,475

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
    But investment has been very low, by European standards.

    No wonder we haven't seen any gain, from it.
    Its not how big an investment is that matters but how successful it is.

    A small investment with a positive rate of return is better than any investment which has a negative return.

    And if an investment has a negative rate of return then the bigger it is the worse it is.

    On a betting site everyone should be aware of this.
  • Options
    gettingbettergettingbetter Posts: 493

    My other half is ceasing to support the Conservatives. I am not surprised as we have both been pretty disenchanted since Teresa May resigned,and recent events are pretty indefensible. But what I am very surprised is that she is going Labour given we live on what must now be a Conservative-Loberal marginal.And I think most likely a Liberal gain.

    And the interesting thing is that she says it is because the Liberal candidate is an idiot. Which may well be the case, but it doesn't seem to matter whether the Labour guy is too, because he can't win.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 49,214

    darkage said:

    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    I keep hearing this idea 'elections are won from the centre' from everyone. It just seems obvious to me, that if the centre stops being able to deliver, then people will look for a more radical alternative; and the more radical alternative will come from the right. Particularly if the failing centre is represented by a Labour government.

    I am often characterised as 'right wing' but I am not. I am probably going to vote Labour. I just have a strong sense this is how things will work out.
    Right now, the populist right is getting its ass kicked by Labour, who are campaigning from the centre.
    What would you have thought of a platform of being outside the single market, cutting immigration and building more prisons in 2015?
  • Options
    kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,375
    edited June 13
    darkage said:

    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    I keep hearing this idea 'elections are won from the centre' from everyone. It just seems obvious to me, that if the centre stops being able to deliver, then people will look for a more radical alternative; and the more radical alternative will come from the right. Particularly if the failing centre is represented by a Labour government.

    I am often characterised as 'right wing' but I am not. I am probably going to vote Labour. I just have a strong sense this is how things will work out.
    To shoot the Faragist fox, all Labour or the Conservatives need to do is be sensible about immigration, accept that current levels are unsustainable, and present concrete plans to a) reduce it to sustainable levels and b) build infrastructure to cope with the enormous influx that is already here.

    Most people aren't racist, unfortunately only the racist party is saying anything about immigration at the moment.
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 19,600
    edited June 13

    Nigelb said:

    Tories are sub 20 with 4 pollsters. Its over. They will disintegrate over the next 3 weeks. I cant see them being the opposition.

    Yes. Lets pull this movement apart:
    1) Labour are shedding the soft vote that had herded into their column. Losing a few to Green, more to LibDem, some to Reform. That will reduce the number of seats they win and the majorities they get in those seats
    2) LibDems are getting a lot of attention and people like what they see. Not relevant nationally, but the target seats focus and the willingness to vote tactically will pay out. I know the party is playing it down citing past elections, but Sarah Olney's tale of woe last night is a tale of elections past, not the one in front of us
    3) Reform are transformed - the Nigel has doubled their support and the Tory dam is breaking. That Jenkyns leaflet won't be the only one. Once the dam breaks properly the surge of Tory votes to Reform is unstoppable now - watch the flow accelerate the closer we get to polling day
    4) Sorry Tories, its the end. Nobody is listening to you, and the bits they hear they laugh at - openly, to your face.

    Unless something radical happens to abruptly reverse it, this is going to be the biggest electoral shift for a century. The Tories have launched the manifesto now, its not going to pull a Farage-shooting rabbit out of the hat. And "don't give Labour a super-majority?" Not remotely enough when voters are now heading off to spread their votes about away from Labour.

    I know that ELE is "it couldn't happen here". But it IS. Look. Listen. Think. What possibly can avert it now? Fear of that anodyne Labour offer? Fear of Farage? A sudden "poor Rishi lets vote for him after all" movement?

    I have no clue what that means for seats. It's going to be fun.
    I mean this in the nicest possible way:

    You must be shitting yourself you might actually win :D
    Rochdale would make an above average MP, I think ?

    (Admittedly that’s not the highest of bars.)
    Oh I hope he does. Actually as (part of being) a kid I didn't live very far away from his seat - village/town called Cullen.

    But I doubt Mrs Rochdale thought he would win when she gave him permission to run. I'm just making that sentence up though based on what most marriages are like. Who knows. It's a bit unfair cause he surely cannot be expected to answer anyway. So I'll leave it there :wink:
    Cullen is IN the seat. Hustings there next Thursday! We've been promised an appearance by the Ross.
    Do you ever get confused, whether you're in North Aberdeenshire OR East Moray? Or is it East Aberdeenshire and North Moray? AND how do you tell for sure?

    Lead on MacDuff!
    I created an acronym on day 1 - ANME. My problem is pronunciation. Depending which part of the country you are from our local places - my village included - are pronounced very differently.

    As an incomer - and Cyber Nats are already telling me to fuck off out of their town / country - I want to get pronunciations as balanced as I can.
    ANME - pronounced "anime"?

    Regarding pronunciation, try putting an extra "f" when you say Banff = "ban'f'f". Or rather, always say one more "f" than whomever you're bandying words with does.

    (Perhaps you should clear that with Malcolm f'first?)
    Pity you can't tell cybernats to f-f-f-uck off themselves :smile: .
  • Options
    StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 15,374

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
    But investment has been very low, by European standards.

    No wonder we haven't seen any gain, from it.
    Its not how big an investment is that matters but how successful it is.

    A small investment with a positive rate of return is better than any investment which has a negative return.

    And if an investment has a negative rate of return then the bigger it is the worse it is.

    On a betting site everyone should be aware of this.
    And that's kind of the problem with taking an investment holiday for fourteen years.

    A lot of the investment choices since 2010 has been about reducing the spend, rather than thinking about the return. That favours patch'n'mend over fixing the problems properly. Throwing more staff at a problem, because the upfront cost of rethinking the system is too scary, even if it would generate big long term savings.

    And whilst that's OK as a short-term answer to a crisis, it's not sustainable over decades, and that's a fair bit of why we are where we are.
  • Options
    WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 8,716

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
    But investment has been very low, by European standards.

    No wonder we haven't seen any gain, from it.
    Its not how big an investment is that matters but how successful it is.

    A small investment with a positive rate of return is better than any investment which has a negative return.

    And if an investment has a negative rate of return then the bigger it is the worse it is.

    On a betting site everyone should be aware of this.
    But our economy is also just as structurally unequipped to the benefit from the right kind of investment. too.

    Look at Germany's for comparison, for instance.
  • Options
    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 21,466

    Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 39% (-7)
    CON: 19% (-1)
    RFM: 17% (+3)
    LDM: 10% (+2)

    via @PeoplePolling, 11-12 Jun

    (Changes with 16 May)

    https://x.com/oprosuk/status/1801379309875020250

    Goodwin beats the BPC guillotine by finally publishing the numbers 24 hours later?
  • Options
    WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 8,716
    edited June 13
    Yes, essentially a very similar post I was making to Stuart's.

    The answers to our structural economic problems are in Northern Europe, not the U.S.
  • Options
    kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,375
    HYUFD said:

    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    Corbyn in 2017 though got a hung parliament and was just 30 more gains from the Tories from winning most seats and becoming PM. Only Boris in 2019 managed to beat him convincingly and partly due to getting Leavers, many of whom love Farage, to back him to get Brexit done.

    That is a high risk strategy
    Yes, but Corbyn did well in 2017 before he was exposed for what he was. By 2019 he was a busted flush, with some of his more pungent views and colleagues being exposed to the light. Sunlight really is the best disinfectant, and I believe five years of Farage as LOTO would bring all the loons out of the woodwork, resulting in a resounding defeat in 2029.

    As I've been posting here for eight years hopefully I will still be around in five to eat my hat if I am wrong!
  • Options
    darkagedarkage Posts: 4,929

    darkage said:

    kyf_100 said:

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    I think Farage-ism needs to be tested to destruction, like Corbynism was.

    Let him be the LOTO for five years, stand as leader of RefCon in 2029, and get defeated on a hard right platform.

    Perhaps the Conservatives will see sense and start rebuilding from there.

    Elections in the UK are won from the centre.
    I keep hearing this idea 'elections are won from the centre' from everyone. It just seems obvious to me, that if the centre stops being able to deliver, then people will look for a more radical alternative; and the more radical alternative will come from the right. Particularly if the failing centre is represented by a Labour government.

    I am often characterised as 'right wing' but I am not. I am probably going to vote Labour. I just have a strong sense this is how things will work out.
    Right now, the populist right is getting its ass kicked by Labour, who are campaigning from the centre.
    Yeah but Labour is just representing the centrist blob. Their popularity is not deep. When in government they will have all the same problems as the current government and people will be rapidly dissatisfied. The idea that at this point a 'centrist, detoxified' conservative party offering the same managerial solutions would be welcomed as the answer is unlikely. People will want some more radical solutions and the right will have these. It is what I think will happen next. No one should take comfort in a massive labour victory if the 'far right' become the main opposition.
  • Options
    PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 379
    I’m seeing the phrase ‘A vote for the Tories is just a vote for Labour’ getting a ton of traction on socials…
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,475

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
    But investment has been very low, by European standards.

    No wonder we haven't seen any gain, from it.
    Its not how big an investment is that matters but how successful it is.

    A small investment with a positive rate of return is better than any investment which has a negative return.

    And if an investment has a negative rate of return then the bigger it is the worse it is.

    On a betting site everyone should be aware of this.
    And that's kind of the problem with taking an investment holiday for fourteen years.

    A lot of the investment choices since 2010 has been about reducing the spend, rather than thinking about the return. That favours patch'n'mend over fixing the problems properly. Throwing more staff at a problem, because the upfront cost of rethinking the system is too scary, even if it would generate big long term savings.

    And whilst that's OK as a short-term answer to a crisis, it's not sustainable over decades, and that's a fair bit of why we are where we are.
    A period which included the HS2 spending isn't an investment holiday.

    Which may be part of the problem - does the UK struggle with investment spending of particular types or sizes ?

    And do UK politicians get drawn to investments which are described as 'world beating' or 'biggest in Europe' ?

    We need some research as to what investments have been successful in this country and what are the failures.

    And then adjust future investment accordingly.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,475

    Andy_JS said:

    Mortimer said:

    ping said:

    Mortimer said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Are you ever going to accept that Boris and Truss have their share of the responsibility ?

    Together with all the other Conservative politicians who have disgraced themselves during sine the last election ?

    If you think that Sunak is terrible at politics then what does that say of the rest of the Conservatives party that Sunak was the only person left standing after the previous leadership failings ?
    Oh absolutely, Boris and Truss failed as well.

    But Sunak has spent the last two years doing fundamentally unConservative things. Growing the state, increasing the tax burden, restricting liberty.

    He will not be remembered well by Conservative members.

    And I totally agree with you - it shows the Parliamentary party as poor ground politicians. They should have ensured there was a proper contest after Truss resigned. By failing to do so, and then failing to oust Sunak when it became obvious he wasn't up to it, many, perhaps most of them, will end up losing their seats.
    Did you vote for Truss in the first leadership election?
    I did. I was very disappointed that her growth plans failed. I think we would probably both suggest that it was largely her own fault, however....
    She tried to do too much, too quickly. She had a full two and half years ahead of her before she had to call an election.
    It was also wrong end of the telescope....just cutting taxes will give you a sugar rush, but if you don't fix the productivity that sugar rush will crash and you will be putting them back up again.

    We haven't had consistent periods of growth above 2% for nearly 20 years.
    All that tax cuts and spending rises and other government 'stimulus' does is bring forward future economic activity.

    Effectively it steals economic activity from the future.

    The problem is that we've been doing it for so long that we're now living in the future from which the economic activity has been stolen.

    To get genuine economic growth productivity growth is needed.
    We need to do two things:
    1. Spend money to save money. One point repeated by multiple contributors in tonight's debate is that we're spending money on the wrong things. Cutting preventative medicine and then wondering why we need to firefight medical emergencies at a much higher cost. We need to spend cash up front on prevention to save more money. Higher spend now to lower spend in the long run.
    "But how do we pay for it" - we BORROW. Like a convenience store investing in new fridges with doors. Cash spent up front to save more in lower leccy costs. Short term pain, long term gain.

    2. We incentivise investment. Capitalism has become a dirty word, replaced by subsidy which is practically communism in today's moron Tory party. Invest in jobs, skills, training, infrastructure. To draw in all that foreign investment looking for something chunky to park money in. We can't improve productivity by having a poorly educated poorly trained disinterested workforce reliant on barely functional infrastructure.
    "But how do we pay for it" - again we need to think longer term.

    Here in the NE this is my frustration with the row over energy. We absolutely need to keep drilling oil and gas whilst it is still economical to do so - the alternative is to import it. But our reliance on it is winding down as are the affordable resources to tap. So we need to invest heavily -as happened 50 years ago into oil and gas - to put renewables here at the heart of the UK's energy sector. And it has bizarrely turned into a political football. No wonder investment is so hard to secure...
    Borrowing more is not short term pain for long term gain.

    It is short term gain for long term pain.

    If you want to spend more to save money then take the short term pain by increasing taxes and/or reducing other spending.

    We've had two decades of borrowing more for 'investment' but the long term gain has never been achieved.
    But investment has been very low, by European standards.

    No wonder we haven't seen any gain, from it.
    Its not how big an investment is that matters but how successful it is.

    A small investment with a positive rate of return is better than any investment which has a negative return.

    And if an investment has a negative rate of return then the bigger it is the worse it is.

    On a betting site everyone should be aware of this.
    But our economy is also just as structurally unequipped to the benefit from the right kind of investment. too.

    Look at Germany's for comparison, for instance.
    We may be structurally different to Germany but that might mean some investments work better here than in Germany and some worse.

    Bewailing that we're different to Germany or trying to imitate Germany when its not appropriate aren't going to bring positive results.

    We need to find our own strengths and invest in them.

    Altering our weaknesses is a much longer term and more fundamental process and might not be realistically possible.
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    ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,181

    Chameleon said:

    Chameleon said:

    Mortimer said:

    dixiedean said:

    Foxy said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    He is wet, but not centrist.
    Yeah.
    The entire problem with the Tory Party is that it has become unmoored from where the centre is.
    Just look at the polls. The centre right now is the far left of the LD's or the extreme right of Labour.
    It's Liz Kendall.
    That's where the median voter sits.
    You've done fuck all to appeal to them. Starmer's done loads. So you don't deserve to win. Or come second.
    I wouldn't personally agree that the median voter sits on the centre right, because people are too contradictory.

    He or she might have the views on business of Liz Kendall or Ed Davey, but the views on spending of Ed Miliband, or even Jeremy Corbyn.
    I'm resigned to the liklihood of little fundamentally changing until something major happens. A war, or an IMF bailout.

    Too many (of all ages) have got used to the state providing. That is simply unsustainable given our demographics.
    Well, not necessarily if people accept higher immigration.

    That's the key bee in their bonnet of Reform, obviously.
    There's little to no evidence the unis selling visas to aspiring deliveroo drivers has helped anything.
    There’s little evidence that that description has anything to do with reality. The Government’s own analysis has dismissed such characterisations.
    Neil O'Brian's analysis doesn't, nor do the whole cohort of ghost uni campuses in central London, or the frequent food delivery drivers using someone's account because they can't get their own due to no right to work.
    I don’t believe Neil O’Brian, the assistant professor at the University of Oregon, has looked at this. Did you mean O’Brien, the Tory MP? He’s running a campaign and I suspect his claims are as accurate as the many other Tory claims we’ve heard in the campaign.
    Good point, you've singlehandedly destroyed my argument by pointing out a one letter spelling mistake. I'd advise more using eyes and fewer fingers in ears.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 78,069
    edited June 13
    Christ, this is super thin gruel....

    Bot or not: Are fake accounts swaying voters towards Reform UK?
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1335nj316lo

    We found what is probably a bot account, but also one we thought were bots, but actual real people. I am not really sure they have a clue what they are doing.
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    Christ, this is super thin gruel....

    Bot or not: Are fake accounts swaying voters towards Reform UK?
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1335nj316lo

    We found a bot account, but also real people.

    The BBC did a massive report on AI fakes based on a Twitter account which anyone can see is a parody. But not the BBC. The owner of the account then trolled the BBC in their response. It was class.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 78,069
    edited June 13

    Christ, this is super thin gruel....

    Bot or not: Are fake accounts swaying voters towards Reform UK?
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1335nj316lo

    We found a bot account, but also real people.

    The BBC did a massive report on AI fakes based on a Twitter account which anyone can see is a parody. But not the BBC. The owner of the account then trolled the BBC in their response. It was class.
    Yes I remember that one. They aren't exactly covering themselves in glory.
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    DM_AndyDM_Andy Posts: 986
    This seems like a strange finding in the YouGov/Times crossover poll.

    From the Times (paywall) https://www.thetimes.com/article/cdc8d582-17fc-4757-8f4b-ddcee80fdfdb
    This week the Tories have adopted a strategy of warning that people who vote Reform could hand Labour a super-majority that would put Labour in power for a decade or more.
    Yet the poll highlighted the challenge facing Tory strategists in converting this sentiment into votes. Only 22 per cent of Reform voters thought Labour would win any kind of majority.

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    mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,268
    DM_Andy said:

    This seems like a strange finding in the YouGov/Times crossover poll.

    From the Times (paywall) https://www.thetimes.com/article/cdc8d582-17fc-4757-8f4b-ddcee80fdfdb

    This week the Tories have adopted a strategy of warning that people who vote Reform could hand Labour a super-majority that would put Labour in power for a decade or more.
    Yet the poll highlighted the challenge facing Tory strategists in converting this sentiment into votes. Only 22 per cent of Reform voters thought Labour would win any kind of majority.

    It's the small party "holding the balance of power" fallacy. The true believers are confident they will over perform, leading to NOM, and handing them the keys to the castle.
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 49,214

    I’m seeing the phrase ‘A vote for the Tories is just a vote for Labour’ getting a ton of traction on socials…

    Having reached the crossover point, it's perilously difficult for the Tories to make the argument in reverse without it rebounding back on them. People who want to punish the Tories but also don't want to give Labour a big majority can defect en masse to Reform.
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    EPGEPG Posts: 6,390
    The polls have turned against Labour. But also in a strange way for them.
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    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 28,767
    EPG said:

    The polls have turned against Labour. But also in a strange way for them.

    I always thought they would. They were never going to get 45-50% as the polls were saying a relatively short time ago.
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    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 28,767

    Christ, this is super thin gruel....

    Bot or not: Are fake accounts swaying voters towards Reform UK?
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1335nj316lo

    We found what is probably a bot account, but also one we thought were bots, but actual real people. I am not really sure they have a clue what they are doing.

    "Totnes is a hotbed of conspiracy theorists".

    https://www.devonlive.com/news/news-opinion/live-conspiracyland-totnes-bonkers-its-8530546
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 78,069
    edited June 14
    Andy_JS said:

    Christ, this is super thin gruel....

    Bot or not: Are fake accounts swaying voters towards Reform UK?
    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1335nj316lo

    We found what is probably a bot account, but also one we thought were bots, but actual real people. I am not really sure they have a clue what they are doing.

    "Totnes is a hotbed of conspiracy theorists".

    https://www.devonlive.com/news/news-opinion/live-conspiracyland-totnes-bonkers-its-8530546
    That podcast contained a large number of inaccuracies. They took the word of a Green councillor and didn't fact check properly. They basically pushed a conspiracy about conspiracy theories.

    BBC Verify is a basically a piss poor version of Bellingcat.
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    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 19,752

    I am not sure Sunak can fall any further but it hardly matters as nobody is listening to him

    Having said that when the 4th July arrives and the country expects a huge landslide do not be surprised if many conservatives hold their nose and vote for the party

    Its definitely possible. Hold your nose happens an awful lot.

    But, and its a big but.

    The remaining people still prone to vote Tory appear to want Farage and not Sunak or any of the 3rd rate Farage wannabes who may survive the electoral cull.

    If the current momentum continues - and its accelerating remember - then the stampede to back the Nigel will be similar to the GOP stampede to back Trump.
    Yep - there's a point where Reform is a wasted vote morphs into Conservative is a wasted vote
    And Farage is banging that specific drum like a good'un.

    That PPB earlier - wowsers! And then the poll lead. And then the "A vote for the Conservatives is a wasted vote"
    I missed the PPB, what was the shocking bit they got past the censors?
    And what did Moffat do to upset MoonRabbit!?
    Probably messed up the season finale. You know what he's like.
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,411

    I’m seeing the phrase ‘A vote for the Tories is just a vote for Labour’ getting a ton of traction on socials…

    Having reached the crossover point, it's perilously difficult for the Tories to make the argument in reverse without it rebounding back on them. People who want to punish the Tories but also don't want to give Labour a big majority can defect en masse to Reform.
    Both Farage and Reform have higher favourability ratings than Sunak and the Conservatives.
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    viewcodeviewcode Posts: 19,752
    edited June 14
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    Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 28,767
    O/T

    One of the funniest things on YouTube imo is Jonathan Meades' reaction to journalist Mark Lawson's mentioning of the fact he'd just visited the Edward Heath Museum in Salisbury.

    On this video at 11 mins 40 secs.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFkK-SKnBpg
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 31,400
    viewcode said:
    Not sure that counts as it is a link rather than a picture.

    But thanks for it non the less.
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 36,411
    I see the Conservatives held Mottingham, with a swing to them, compared to 2022, and five times the votes Reform got. An indicator that Reform is overstated in the polling?
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 6,620
    edited June 14
    Andy_JS said:

    O/T

    One of the funniest things on YouTube imo is Jonathan Meades' reaction to journalist Mark Lawson's mentioning of the fact he'd just visited the Edward Heath Museum in Salisbury.

    On this video at 11 mins 40 secs.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFkK-SKnBpg

    Good morning. You haven’t done yourself any favours here.

    Why is that even remotely funny? Arundells is a lovely house with views of the Cathedral. The museum is a fascinating collection. There are some wonderful photos and memorabilia, including of Heath’s time serving in WWII.

    I imagine I’m a lot younger than you but I try to learn about the past. People complain about the lack of education in this country and then you post something as stupid as this.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 6,620
    Jonathan said:

    The challenging thing for Conservatives to grasp is that’s it’s not just Sunak. It’s deeper than that.

    This is true. He has run an utterly abysmal campaign but they were sunk before he took over.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 64,608
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    MJWMJW Posts: 1,533

    MJW said:

    Mortimer said:

    My biggest surprise is how long it took for people to realise the obvious; that Sunak was terrible at politics and would likely fall further during an election campaign.

    Wet centrists will own this coming defeat for a long time.

    Sunak isn't a "wet centrist" though. He's a weird combination of the things centrists can't stand about the Tory right, and the things the Tory right don't like about their party's self-described pragmatists.

    So pleases and understands no one.

    If the Tories do have a real disaster it's because they'll be a rare example of a party that managed to totally alienate both the moderate end of its voter coalition and its extreme end at the same time. Even Corbyn only managed one of those.
    The odd thing is that Maggie got away with it, and the wet end of the party extended quite a bit further left in those days. Her talent as a politician? Different sort of threat from Socialists? Or has the old centre of the Conservative Party simply ceased to hold? Are the things that (say) Tugendhat and Braverman want incompatible in a way that wasn't true for (say) Patten and Ridley?
    The real Thatcher is rather different to the mythical one. With the real one being much more pragmatic in getting where she wanted. Most obviously what's now known as 'Thatcherism' is basically a greatest hits from 11 years which misses out the fact that there were U-turns (even when saying 'not for turning'), accommodations made then abandoned at a later date. She increased taxes and then benefits in consecutive budgets. Paid off the miners before screwing them. Helped create the single market before all the Up Yours Delors stuff.

    Which is not to say she isn't the ogre/heroine of popular myth (delete as applicable to your politics - I'm the former) but a far cleverer and more complex politician than her ersatz imitators who think that by saying things you achieve them.

    There were also close run things, and of course she'd eventually be brought down by Europe. The very thing that may end up killing the Conservative Party by steering it down a populist cul-de-sac because it formalised a breach (it's by no means the only thing but symbolic) from the more moderate, working age voters who used to at least consider voting Tory but now are more likely to believe aliens built the pyramids than vote Conservative.

    Braverman and Tugendhat aren't necessarily incompatible, they're just not very good and in a party that's become more and more detached from reality and sections of voters it needs to target or at least understand. The former because she's an arsonist who annoys pretty much everyone. The latter as he's not actually all that moderate in the scheme of things (compared to the pre-2016 Tories), and a bit like Sunak can't really change perceptions without a big fight with his party's right and vested interests that he almost certainly isn't up for.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 6,620
    Morning again. Catching up on sports news. Didn’t someone on here put a bet on Rory McIlroy for the US Open at pretty odds? If so that’s a promising start.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 57,299
    Oh boy.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 6,620

    Oh boy.

    What?
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    TazTaz Posts: 12,175

    Oh boy.

    A hit in the seventies for Mud, no less.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 6,620
    edited June 14
    Also catching up on various news titbits and polling, broadcasts, and debates.

    I’m not sure how anyone interested in politics can describe this is as a dull election? It’s the most interesting, and exciting, campaign of my life. I guess for different reasons 2019 and 2017 were also fun to watch, and I appreciate that if you are a Conservative party worker this must be hell on earth right now, but for neutrals it’s absolutely fascinating.

    There are still so many permutations, from truly landscape altering to something more nuanced. Can anyone really say they are sure which way this is going from here?
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 39,796

    You want a black swan before voting happens?

    The Russian banking sector seems to be collapsing...

    Please expand.

    What are the new metrics if so ? Is something qualitatively diffrerent, going on ?
    The US has put further sanctions on the sector. AIUI, foreign banks that do business is Russia may be treated as though they are Russian, meaning that they will be subject to the same sort of sanctions.

    Apparently many Russian online banks suddenly closed down Internet access, making it hard for people to access (take out) their money, and long queues have formed outside some physical banks. The Russian Central Bank have stopped trading in euros and dollars.

    Some people claim the ruble is collapsing, but as far as I can tell, there are no signs of this on the official exchange rate. Though apparently one bank buys rubles at 50 to the dollar, and sells at 200.

    https://www.newsweek.com/moscow-stock-exchange-trade-halted-ruble-collapse-sanctions-1912161
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 76,286

    I’m seeing the phrase ‘A vote for the Tories is just a vote for Labour’ getting a ton of traction on socials…

    Having reached the crossover point, it's perilously difficult for the Tories to make the argument in reverse without it rebounding back on them. People who want to punish the Tories but also don't want to give Labour a big majority can defect en masse to Reform.
    If the Yougov is anywhere near correct, Reform are surely second in my seat (Bassetlaw) right now.
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    HeathenerHeathener Posts: 6,620
    There’s little real doubt that we are witnessing what in the US used to be called The Big Mo. I suggest there are two in action right now:

    Reform are clearly on a march

    Conservatives are even more clearly on a slide

    (Labour are too but that’s probably more subtle and may well correlate with tactical voting as much as Lab-Ref switchers and anyway for now they remain miles ahead)

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