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The War at Home: Labour Defences (Part Two) – politicalbetting.com

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  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,716
    edited June 2024

    We also suffered from some poor thinking by those in the public health domain. The lateral flow tests were not perfect and some we dead against them being used widely, when in population terms an imperfect, but useful test would have had a decent impact. Sure there would have been false positives and false negatives, but thats on the whole better than no test at all. And is isolating after a false positive that different from isolating through contact tracing (which I had to do)? And two false positives in a row are very unlikely, so test again, or test tomorrow etc.
    Exactly that point was made, ad nauseam, pretty early on.
    Also they're a more accurate test of infectivity than was the 'gold standard' PCR test, which provides a load of false positives (from inactive virus) in that respect.

    All of which is yet another very good argument to look at improving public health provision, which is the poor relation of healthcare.
  • Tres said:

    Election news, had one of my local Tory councillors knocking on my door. She seemed quite sad when I said I didn't agree with her that our Conservative MP (Gareth Bacon - who he? I hear you ask) has been doing a fantastic job.

    Parties on the defensive often fall back on this "he's a good local MP" stuff - as the Lib Dems did in 2015, for instance.

    Whilst it's a shot you have in the locker for those you identify as wavering supporters, it's not really one to lead with. You do kind of need to own it and defend your party. Pretending not to really be a Tory (the green leaflets etc) is pretty hopeless.
  • Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 754
    Leave him alone
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 587
    edited June 2024
    From the excellent Beyond Topline on the strength of the Lib Dem Tactical Vote

    @OwenWntr: Interesting some polling data I'm looking at has Lib Dem retention from 2019 at 78% in seats where they came 1st or 2nd, and 44% where they didn't”

    This *strongly* suggests the Lib Dem bump is due to tactical voting.

    If this is replicated in a general election, this implies *much* stronger tactical voting than 1997.

    In 1997, Lib Dems retained ~64.5% of their 1992 vote where they were 2nd, ~50% where Labour was.

    https://x.com/beyond_topline/status/1802732115496202641?s=61

    I have been extremely bullish on Lib Dem seat totals because of the above - the increased prevalence of tactical voting websites COMBINED with the fact that unlike in 2019, it’s A. Starmer instead of Corbyn, and B. Brexit being ‘done’ - makes it much much easier for Lib Dem and Labour voters to vote ‘for the other one’
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    edited June 2024
    Labour leads by 25%.

    Tied-lowest Conservative % (worse than Truss).

    Highest Reform %.

    🇬🇧 Westminster VI (14/6-17/6):

    Labour 43% (+1)
    Reform UK 18% (+1)
    Conservative 18% (–)
    Lib Dem 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (–)
    SNP 3% (–)
    Other 1% (–)

    Changes +/- 12/6-13/6

    redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/latest-gb-voti…
    https://redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    Nigelb said:

    Were they to ban the repulsive from Conhome, it would be a far lonelier place than now.
    David is not remotely repulsive, he's a very amiable and approachable individual, with no airs and graces, who knows his stuff.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Labour leads by 25%.

    Tied-lowest Conservative % (worse than Truss).

    Highest Reform %.

    🇬🇧 Westminster VI (14/6-17/6):

    Labour 43% (+1)
    Reform UK 18% (+1)
    Conservative 18% (–)
    Lib Dem 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (–)
    SNP 3% (–)
    Other 1% (–)

    Changes +/- 12/6-13/6


    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1802732944412344574
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,689
    algarkirk said:

    Ideology is simply unavoidable. The stuff of common ground we take for granted - free NHS, a welfare state, expensive defence, pensions, free education of a certain sort to 18, free(ish) speech, no religious compulsion, minimise animal cruelty, consent is essential in sexual relations, slavery is always wrong, as is torture, same sex relationships lawful - are all profoundly ideological. This is not thought so for the same reasons that fish are unaware of water.

    None exist in our form in all places at all times.
    Very Foucault.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838

    Labour leads by 25%.

    Tied-lowest Conservative % (worse than Truss).

    Highest Reform %.

    🇬🇧 Westminster VI (14/6-17/6):

    Labour 43% (+1)
    Reform UK 18% (+1)
    Conservative 18% (–)
    Lib Dem 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (–)
    SNP 3% (–)
    Other 1% (–)

    Changes +/- 12/6-13/6


    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1802732944412344574

    It's a two-horse race.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,491

    Labour leads by 25%.

    Tied-lowest Conservative % (worse than Truss).

    Highest Reform %.

    🇬🇧 Westminster VI (14/6-17/6):

    Labour 43% (+1)
    Reform UK 18% (+1)
    Conservative 18% (–)
    Lib Dem 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (–)
    SNP 3% (–)
    Other 1% (–)

    Changes +/- 12/6-13/6


    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1802732944412344574

    Incoming Leon telling us big Nige is on the Tiky Toky boosting about Reform beating the Tories.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,689

    Strikes me as a very poor use of a prison place. Chap obviously needs substantial psychiatric help.
    8 week sentence, which means he'll be in prison for a month. He's not taking up a lot of space.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819

    Parties on the defensive often fall back on this "he's a good local MP" stuff - as the Lib Dems did in 2015, for instance.

    Whilst it's a shot you have in the locker for those you identify as wavering supporters, it's not really one to lead with. You do kind of need to own it and defend your party. Pretending not to really be a Tory (the green leaflets etc) is pretty hopeless.
    To be fair to her I only moved here a couple of weeks ago and so the previous occupant may have been on her list of supporters. How sad, never mind.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    Labour leads by 25%.

    Tied-lowest Conservative % (worse than Truss).

    Highest Reform %.

    🇬🇧 Westminster VI (14/6-17/6):

    Labour 43% (+1)
    Reform UK 18% (+1)
    Conservative 18% (–)
    Lib Dem 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (–)
    SNP 3% (–)
    Other 1% (–)

    Changes +/- 12/6-13/6

    redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/latest-gb-voti…
    https://redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/

    A reassuring LLG:RefCon score of 60 (=) to 36 (+1) after the earlier 41% RefCon in the JLP poll.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    algarkirk said:

    Ideology is simply unavoidable. The stuff of common ground we take for granted - free NHS, a welfare state, expensive defence, pensions, free education of a certain sort to 18, free(ish) speech, no religious compulsion, minimise animal cruelty, consent is essential in sexual relations, slavery is always wrong, as is torture, same sex relationships lawful - are all profoundly ideological. This is not thought so for the same reasons that fish are unaware of water.

    None exist in our form in all places at all times.
    Which is why Liberalism must be defended.

    Vote Malmesbury for Social Insurance, Free Trade (but reciprocal), Reform of The Lords, and building twice as many Dreadnoughts as Imperial Germany.

  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 587
    edited June 2024

    It's a two-horse race.
    I’m really surprised Farage isn’t tweeting things like:

    “Conservatives: if you all vote Reform - we’d be on 36%, and only a few points behind Labour - then we can deny Starmer his majority.”

    Obviously we know it doesn’t work like that but it might gain them traction on socials.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,502
    PJH said:

    I'm expecting there to be a gradual shift back to the Tories, and also that they will outperform the polls as they usually do when in government. So perhaps to 27% or so in the polls, which isn't so far away from the upper end of the range now.

    I base my Reform estimate on how they have polled in by-elections, compared to the national polling at the time - they seem to get about 60% of what I would expect if the polls are right. Why this is so when compared to UKIP in 2015, I don't know. Even less of an organisation on the ground, perhaps?

    Even so, something like 40/29 would still mean a hefty defeat in terms of seats, on the scale of 1997.

    EDIT: Forgot to add - and certainly not a boring election, even if no electioneering is taking place anywhere I go.
    Certainly, in the various local and Mayoral elections, Reform tended to underperform its poll ratings. If that happens this time, one would indeed, expect the Conservatives to poll 27% or so. The danger for the Tories is if a lot of their remaining supporters conclude that a Conservative vote is a wasted vote, and stampede to Reform, to keep out Labour and the Lib Dems.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    TimS said:

    A reassuring LLG:RefCon score of 60 (=) to 36 (+1) after the earlier 41% RefCon in the JLP poll.
    MOE nonsense but FWIW that's the second poll in 48 hours or so to show the Labour share rising.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    I think Labour will be pretty pleased that their share in all latest polls is holding at 40% or above. Any slide or ’soft’ support is not backed up by the most recent polling.

    IF they can maintain through to polling, which I’m not convinced about, then they’re in for a good night.

    I’m also interested in the pb.com correlation of leadership ratings to outcome.

    With voting under way this week (1 in 5 vote by post) they are in a strong position.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198

    Make a crime of entering the country illegally. Five years in prison/youth institution.

    A valid defence is any of the following:
    * Travelled on scheduled plane, train or ferry.
    * British (or Irish Citizen) or have leave to remain at time of journey
    * Travelled directly from country of persecution (and did not go via a safe country) and claiming Asylum.

    Prison/Youth Detention centre for the purpose built on Falkland Islands.
    Nonesense on stilts.

    Anyone entering the country illegally should be deemed to have automatically enlisted in His Majesties Navy.

    The ancient traditions of the RN will make Englishmen of them - Rum, Buggery and the Lash
  • That Redfield Poll Baxtered:

    LAB 512
    LIB DEM 57
    CON 31
    REFUK 4
    GREEN 2
    SNP 21
    PC 4

    And remember, tactical voting could be better than the above indicates…
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Nonesense on stilts.

    Anyone entering the country illegally should be deemed to have automatically enlisted in His Majesties Navy.

    The ancient traditions of the RN will make Englishmen of them - Rum, Buggery and the Lash
    Err, 'sodomy' surely. At least according to Mr Churchill MP.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    edited June 2024

    Labour leads by 25%.

    Tied-lowest Conservative % (worse than Truss).

    Highest Reform %.

    🇬🇧 Westminster VI (14/6-17/6):

    Labour 43% (+1)
    Reform UK 18% (+1)
    Conservative 18% (–)
    Lib Dem 12% (-1)
    Green 5% (–)
    SNP 3% (–)
    Other 1% (–)

    Changes +/- 12/6-13/6


    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1802732944412344574

    Someone has to Baxter it:

    Lab 512
    LD 57
    Con 31
    SNP 21
    Ref 4
    PC 4
    Green 2
    Others 19

    Edit: With no tactical voting
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,838
    Farooq said:

    Dangerous to put that sort of thing about. What if on the eve of poll It's Con 22% Ref 14%? Conservatives would be quote tweeting him saying "guess you'd better swing in behind us after all, Nige"
    It would also undermine Reform's positioning if they were basically saying "we're the real Tories".
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    MOE nonsense but FWIW that's the second poll in 48 hours or so to show the Labour share rising.
    And Con can't buy an increase right now
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    TimS said:

    A reassuring LLG:RefCon score of 60 (=) to 36 (+1) after the earlier 41% RefCon in the JLP poll.
    Can I ask why we are putting up with this nonsense of adding up different party shares to make spurious grand totals?

    It’s almost as tedious as seeing FBPE after people’s social media handles.

  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    algarkirk said:

    Ideology is simply unavoidable. The stuff of common ground we take for granted - free NHS, a welfare state, expensive defence, pensions, free education of a certain sort to 18, free(ish) speech, no religious compulsion, minimise animal cruelty, consent is essential in sexual relations, slavery is always wrong, as is torture, same sex relationships lawful - are all profoundly ideological. This is not thought so for the same reasons that fish are unaware of water.

    None exist in our form in all places at all times.
    Yes. But some political leaders are more driven by ideology than others. By which I mean their actions are driven by a coherent (to them) intellectual framework and belief system. Bad news, usually. I much prefer politicians (and indeed people generally) with the insight and wisdom to realize they have little clue how the world works.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    That Redfield Poll Baxtered:

    LAB 512
    LIB DEM 57
    CON 31
    REFUK 4
    GREEN 2
    SNP 21
    PC 4

    And remember, tactical voting could be better than the above indicates…

    At least the Tories would be the third party in the Commons, and a guaranteed set of questions at PMQs...
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,385
    edited June 2024

    Make a crime of entering the country illegally. Five years in prison/youth institution.

    A valid defence is any of the following:
    * Travelled on scheduled plane, train or ferry.
    * British (or Irish Citizen) or have leave to remain at time of journey
    * Travelled directly from country of persecution (and did not go via a safe country) and claiming Asylum.

    Prison/Youth Detention centre for the purpose built on Falkland Islands.
    How will that deter people for whom a British prison is a significant step up on where ever they are currently residing? After all, you will leave HMP having been fed and boarded for five years, with fluent English, and probably some decent other skills.

    Edit to add:

    The Falkland Islands are not a great place to put a prison, because the population of Port Stanley is only 2,460.
  • Heathener said:

    I think Labour will be pretty pleased that their share in all latest polls is holding at 40% or above. Any slide or ’soft’ support is not backed up by the most recent polling.

    IF they can maintain through to polling, which I’m not convinced about, then they’re in for a good night.

    I’m also interested in the pb.com correlation of leadership ratings to outcome.

    With voting under way this week (1 in 5 vote by post) they are in a strong position.

    Yes, all the hype on here last week about how Labour 38% type polling would soon see Labour on 33% or thereabouts seems to have died down. It seems that even a fall in the polls for Labour from here on out would see them to a very healthy majority indeed - and if they stay >40% whilst the Tories are fighting REFUK and the Lib Dems then we could see some very big results indeed.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198

    Which is why Liberalism must be defended.

    Vote Malmesbury for Social Insurance, Free Trade (but reciprocal), Reform of The Lords, and building twice as many Dreadnoughts as Imperial Germany.

    … I forgot. The return of Frockcoats to Government. Seriously well dressed for serious work.


  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    … I forgot. The return of Frockcoats to Government. Seriously well dressed for serious work.


    Is that Mr Redfield and Mr Wilton in the centre of the shot?
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 587
    edited June 2024

    At least the Tories would be the third party in the Commons, and a guaranteed set of questions at PMQs...
    It has been said before but I think LOTO Davey vs Starmer at the despatch box would, at the very least, hopefully make for a much better Parliament than the last few.

    Whatever your politics - there are benefits. For example, I think the Lib Dems could hold Labour to account more effectively, because Starmer could not simply say “Well, we inherited a bad situation from the party opposite…” to every single question and have it work as well.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    By the way, that R&W poll is a 10,000 sample size. Not all of theirs are.

    A biggie.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    Very Foucault.
    I've changed my mind. There are no ideologies and everything is sorted by common sense the nature of which is obvious to all readers of the Daily Mail.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804

    It is a truth. That said Momentum certainly had/has a lot of nasty stupid people too. Not that long ago they were running the Labour Party.
    They had some. But they were mainly vibrant young idealists.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,479
    Evening all :)

    Should we not compare this Mega poll with the last R&W Mega poll (fieldwork 7-10 June) rather than with their lower sample (1500) midweek poll?

    Comparing with the last 10,000 Mega poll:

    Conservative -1
    Labour -2
    Liberal Democrat +2
    Reform +1
    Greens and SNP unchanged

    Not a lot of movement in truth.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    Anyone know when the next YouGov MRP is due to drop? Isn’t this the timeframe when they are supposed to hit peak accuracy?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,287
    I cannot for the life of me see Leon in a Premier Inn.

    Having sex with leaves, yes.

    Premier Inn, no.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    … I forgot. The return of Frockcoats to Government. Seriously well dressed for serious work.


    Is 'Properly dressed politicians' in the Reform manifesto?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    rcs1000 said:

    How will that deter people for whom a British prison is a significant step up on where ever they are currently residing? After all, you will leave HMP having been fed and boarded for five years, with fluent English, and probably some decent other skills?
    “No man will be a sailor who has contrivance enough to get himself into a jail; for being in a ship is being in a jail, with the chance of being drowned.”
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    Heathener said:

    Can I ask why we are putting up with this nonsense of adding up different party shares to make spurious grand totals?

    It’s almost as tedious as seeing FBPE after people’s social media handles.

    Before the election campaign it was noticed that the poll movements were often within these blocks, and that these totals were more stable, and, also, that a lot of the difference between pollsters was in the breakdown of support within these blocks.

    It therefore seemed to be a useful aide to understanding the polls, and the significance of changes, which can be considerably more complicated when considering five parties.
  • It would also undermine Reform's positioning if they were basically saying "we're the real Tories".
    Well perhaps “We are the only real threat to a Labour supermajority” might be something that Farage can say without sounding too pro-Tory, and putting off certain Reform voters.

    Reform have actually almost pivoted to that already haven’t they? I remember in both debates Farage has said “The Tories are finished, Starmer will be PM, but this is about who LOTO is - and who can win in 2029.”

    One of the downsides for Reform now though is that they don’t have any more debate appearances coming, do they? Slightly less chance for them to continue their bounce.

  • Heathener said:

    Anyone know when the next YouGov MRP is due to drop? Isn’t this the timeframe when they are supposed to hit peak accuracy?

    Good question. We should be due another one in the next couple of days.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    viewcode said:

    I cannot for the life of me see Leon in a Premier Inn.

    Having sex with leaves, yes.

    Premier Inn, no.
    You’d also have to reverse the numbers 2 and 6 to get the right age
  • They be shit if ever they got close to government, and make Boris Johnson look like a paragon of virtue.

    If they got really serious, competent politicians?

    That's when everyone should seriously get worried.
    Sean_F said:

    Racism need not be about skin colour at all. That's a very American way of looking at it. The Nazis had very little interest in skin colour.
    Neither did the Normans.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665

    … I forgot. The return of Frockcoats to Government. Seriously well dressed for serious work.


    See if I was PM or a member of the cabinet I would wear my morning suits all the time.

    Several years ago I chaired a board meeting replete with morning suit and people still talk about it.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917

    He married a foreigner.
    Two, in fact. Though consecutively, not concurrently.

  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    kinabalu said:

    Yes. But some political leaders are more driven by ideology than others. By which I mean their actions are driven by a coherent (to them) intellectual framework and belief system. Bad news, usually. I much prefer politicians (and indeed people generally) with the insight and wisdom to realize they have little clue how the world works.
    These too are ideologies, the details of which can be worked out from their choices. However pragmatic (a term which gives rise a range of philosophical ideas, mostly from across the pond) and agnostic (this too is an ideology) they are, it is still the case that to govern is to choose. If you chose by the flip of a coin, this too would be explicable in ideological terms.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111

    Several years ago I chaired a board meeting replete with morning suit and people still talk about it.

    They were surprised to see it paired with gold shoes...
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Thoughts and prayers for the antiwoke mob.

    Harry Kane and Gareth Southgate are more popular than any UK politician

    Harry Kane: 53% like
    Gareth Southgate: 52%
    Keir Starmer: 39%
    Angela Rayner: 30%
    Nigel Farage: 29%
    Rishi Sunak: 21%


    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1802723748727968117
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563
    edited June 2024

    We've moved on a long way from that. I think sometimes we forget about how long people live and how rapidly things change. My dad is 85, born just before the second world war. He was born into a country that was very very different to todays. Very few non-white people lived here in 1939. Homosexuality was illegal, and suppressed (although of course it always 'went on'). There was no NHS (which is NOT the same as saying that there was no healthcare). Kids left school at 14. Very few went to university.

    In 2024 we have much more diverse population (notably so in the cities, less so in rural parts). Homosexuality is no longer illegal and widely accepted, as is same sex marriage etc. Nearly half of all kids go to University were they (hopefully) mingle with all races, genders, political thought etc. Its no wonder that older folk fail to agree with the youth - they were raised in different times.

    Some like to say that science advances with every funeral (or similar). Often older academics can reject more modern theories (although I suspect its less common than the archetype). I think its a bit true for society too. Some people form views very early and never change (Corbyn, Farage seem equal and opposing examples). Others move with the times.

    I struggle with transgenderism. I'm open about this. I cannot imagine what it must be like to think that you are a different gender to what you body presents. I don't think that there is anyway that a trans person can ever fully transition. But I also think they disserve compassion and respect like anyone else.
    I’m a year older than your father, and can concur with much of your description. IIRC the first non-white person I ever saw ‘in the flesh’ was when I was about 12; he was selling buttons and so on door-to-door, in a fairly middle-class area. As far as the NHS is concerned I’ve got a prescription record book from my mother’s pharmacy from around 1942, and other records which indicate the amount of money from National Insurance dispensing which shows the massive increase in prescriptions from mid 1948 onward.
    I went to a Grammar school as a result of passing the 11+; it was a very good year for the primary school as around 12% of us went to some form of selective secondary education. I’m not sure what percentage ended up in university but I think only one or two, although several did professional courses, some of which, like mine, required full-time Further Education.
    One of the Scoutmasters locally did time for ‘interfering’ with one of the lads; General, whispered, opinion among the lads that it was a ‘six and two threes’ job. One of my fellow Scouts ‘approached’ me and I made sure that I had as little as possible to do with afterwards!
    I didn’t have anything to do with ‘people of colour’ until I went to Further Education where there were quite a few, with some of whom I was friends.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Scott_xP said:

    They were surprised to see it paired with gold shoes...
    Actually there was a bit of gold in those loafers.

    Mostly the L & V of Louis Vuitton.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    Thoughts and prayers for the antiwoke mob.

    Harry Kane and Gareth Southgate are more popular than any UK politician

    Harry Kane: 53% like
    Gareth Southgate: 52%
    Keir Starmer: 39%
    Angela Rayner: 30%
    Nigel Farage: 29%
    Rishi Sunak: 21%


    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1802723748727968117

    That gives Keir Starmer a 10-point lead over Nigel "most popular British politician" Farage.

    Quite the turnaround.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982

    That Redfield Poll Baxtered:

    LAB 512
    LIB DEM 57
    CON 31
    REFUK 4
    GREEN 2
    SNP 21
    PC 4

    And remember, tactical voting could be better than the above indicates…

    I know we don't have a crystal ball, but 31 seats ends the Tories, doesn't it? But then there is a vacuum on the centre right and right, which must be filled. By whom ? Not Farage he's too polarising.
  • Sean_F said:

    Imagine if Reform come second with 150 seats or so, and the sort of MP's we'd see.

    They wont (Farage would
    algarkirk said:

    Reform manifesto now published. A couple of notes:

    Its budget stuff is just delusional drivel. Worse, if possible, than the others and much more populist.

    There are one or two noteworthy nods to the conspiracy brigade:
    A disparaging mention of the World Economic Forum - a key conspiracy trope..

    Also a call for Public Enquiry into vaccine deaths - another trope.

    Scrap Net Zero: Code for 'Climate hoax'. Another conspiracy trope.

    Notable silences: Russia, China, Putin, Ukraine, Israel (all these are subject to correction. Vita brevis, manifesto longa).
    But not silent on Sharia law.

    Notable (and surprising) long grass: Social care.

    It will abolish TV licence, but not abolish BBC. Silence on how it is funded.

    I doubt many of their voters care about the budget details other than the direction of travel. They are furious with the conservatives, unimpressed with Labour and want to kick them all squarely in the nuts.

    Metaphorically this sums up what voting Reform in this election is about:

    https://youtu.be/lrShn8PeTz8?feature=shared
  • Big_IanBig_Ian Posts: 67

    It has been said before but I think LOTO Davey vs Starmer at the despatch box would, at the very least, hopefully make for a much better Parliament than the last few.

    Whatever your politics - there are benefits. For example, I think the Lib Dems could hold Labour to account more effectively, because Starmer could not simply say “Well, we inherited a bad situation from the party opposite…” to every single question and have it work as well.
    When was the last time the Tories were neither in government nor the official opposition?
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Heathener said:

    Anyone know when the next YouGov MRP is due to drop? Isn’t this the timeframe when they are supposed to hit peak accuracy?

    It'll probably show a 500 seat Labour majority on 33% of the vote. 😊
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    That gives Keir Starmer a 10-point lead over Nigel "most popular British politician" Farage.

    Quite the turnaround.
    The net scores are starker. Farage has higher negatives than Keir, for obvious reasons (though not as high as Rishi's, or indeed Hunt's).
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    Farooq said:

    Because it tells us about the available tactical vote pools. The thinking is LLG could switch reasonably well between each other and RC can do the same. It papers over some nuance, but it's additive, not subtractive, to our understanding.
    I get that Farrooq but sometimes when you add an ingredient to a dish you can wreck it.

    One of the things which concerns me about it is the way it gets deployed in either a) PR arguments and / or b) as backup for those claiming support for their cause is going to teleport e.g. Cons now + Reform = a massive right wing Caucus in 2029.

    It also, as you suggest, steamrolls nuance especially if we lazily apply labels Left and Right to a political landscape which is far from binary.

    I don’t think people under 50, or certainly under 40, grew up with the Swingometer.

    As an aside, and as an example of our changing landscape, if Labour do win I would LOVE to see the LibDems as the official Opposition. I reckon they would give Labour a hard time.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,035
    Heathener said:

    Can I ask why we are putting up with this nonsense of adding up different party shares to make spurious grand totals?

    It’s almost as tedious as seeing FBPE after people’s social media handles.

    It is an indication of the pool of tactical votes that might be available on the left and right.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    Big_Ian said:

    When was the last time the Tories were neither in government nor the official opposition?
    Never. They've been a party (albeit with different names) since the beginnings of our democracy I think.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624

    It is a hyperbolic title, but the criticism that she has a very strong influence on Starmer and that she has opposed nuclear weapons has a basis in fact.
    That may be true but that does not make her a threat to national security. Hyperbolic or not
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955

    Someone has to Baxter it:

    Lab 512
    LD 57
    Con 31
    SNP 21
    Ref 4
    PC 4
    Green 2
    Others 19

    Edit: With no tactical voting
    That result leads to a really worrying situation for democracy.

    You'd have the Lib Dems as the official opposition, and just 35 seats for Con and RefUK combined, despite their winning 36% of the national vote share combined.

    I was dismissive last week of Cleitophon's concern of a 'January 6th style event' and to be honest I still am. But I could easily see how a Faragist insurgency spends the next five years whipping up discontent on the basis of 'the right wing were just 7% behind Labour in this election, but have virtually no representation in our Parliamentary system.'

    I know that is how FPTP works, but it's not healthy for democracy when a large number of people no longer think the system is working for them, or adequately representing their voices in Parliament. You could see how a result like this could drive a small but not insignificant number of discontents into the arms of the 'democracy has failed us' far right types.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    That gives Keir Starmer a 10-point lead over Nigel "most popular British politician" Farage.

    Quite the turnaround.
    Don’t tell @Leon

    It doesn’t fit his matrix.
  • NovoNovo Posts: 60

    Someone has to Baxter it:

    Lab 512
    LD 57
    Con 31
    SNP 21
    Ref 4
    PC 4
    Green 2
    Others 19

    Edit: With no tactical voting
    Too little time for a Conservative come back now. Voting set to commence on Wednesday. Insufficient number of Reform gains to allow a pact with the Tories from preventing Ed Davey from becoming LOTO!
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,624
    Scott_xP said:

    The Tories chased the dragon to the right and are about to go extinct.

    Moving further right will not fix their existential problem.
    Whereas when Zammo chased the dragon he got a smack on the nose.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    Heathener said:

    I get that Farrooq but sometimes when you add an ingredient to a dish you can wreck it.

    One of the things which concerns me about it is the way it gets deployed in either a) PR arguments and / or b) as backup for those claiming support for their cause is going to teleport e.g. Cons now + Reform = a massive right wing Caucus in 2029.

    It also, as you suggest, steamrolls nuance especially if we lazily apply labels Left and Right to a political landscape which is far from binary.

    I don’t think people under 50, or certainly under 40, grew up with the Swingometer.

    As an aside, and as an example of our changing landscape, if Labour do win I would LOVE to see the LibDems as the official Opposition. I reckon they would give Labour a hard time.
    It's useful for all sorts of reasons. Doesn't make it fool proof, but why wouldn't we want to look at those totals?

    One notable point is that it smooths out some of the noise of sampling differences between pollsters. There is far more consistency in the LLG vs RefCon numbers than in individual Labour or Conservative shares, let alone the Reform or Green shares that bounce around all over the place.

    We have had very little movement of these "blocs" in months. If we did see some, that would be interesting. Indeed the 41% to RefCon in the JLP poll earlier was one such example - then forces us to analyse further.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,296
    Sean_F said:

    Imagine if Reform come second with 150 seats or so, and the sort of MP's we'd see.

    Well the BBC seems to be trying their best to get you such a result. It's wall to wall Farage today.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    OllyT said:

    It is an indication of the pool of tactical votes that might be available on the left and right.
    See my answer.

    ‘Left and Right’ is too careless these days.

    There are so many examples of this but I don’t see very much about Starmer’s Labour that I would call ‘Left’. In old fashioned terms it’s about as centrist as you could get.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 814
    TimS said:

    Never. They've been a party (albeit with different names) since the beginnings of our democracy I think.
    Not since the re-emergence of the Tories as a political force in the 1780s under Pitt (though he himself would have considered himself a Whig) as the 2-party system started to establish itself. Prior to that, government and opposition comprised competing groups of Whigs, at least since the rise of Walpole in the 1740s.
  • eristdooferistdoof Posts: 5,076

    Thoughts and prayers for the antiwoke mob.

    Harry Kane and Gareth Southgate are more popular than any UK politician

    Harry Kane: 53% like
    Gareth Southgate: 52%
    Keir Starmer: 39%
    Angela Rayner: 30%
    Nigel Farage: 29%
    Rishi Sunak: 21%


    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1802723748727968117

    Hardly surprising.

    I bet that in 1987 despite no EUro/WC tournament Bobby Robson and Gary Lineker were more polular than Thatcher, Whitelaw and Lawson, who went on to win a 102 seat majority at the start of June´.
  • ParistondaParistonda Posts: 1,844

    At least the Tories would be the third party in the Commons, and a guaranteed set of questions at PMQs...
    If the seat totals end up very close between LD and CON, could the Speaker perhaps reallocate some of the questions between LOTO and 3rd party (4 and 4 rather than current 6 and 2 for example)? The existing PMQs format only came into place in 1997 after all so it can be changed.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    See if I was PM or a member of the cabinet I would wear my morning suits all the time.

    Several years ago I chaired a board meeting replete with morning suit and people still talk about it.
    Not surprised, eating morning suits is wrong

    Top tip, morning suits look hired, even on the likes of KC. Black morning coat and striped spongebag trousers is the ticket.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    kyf_100 said:

    That result leads to a really worrying situation for democracy.

    You'd have the Lib Dems as the official opposition, and just 35 seats for Con and RefUK combined, despite their winning 36% of the national vote share combined.

    I was dismissive last week of Cleitophon's concern of a 'January 6th style event' and to be honest I still am. But I could easily see how a Faragist insurgency spends the next five years whipping up discontent on the basis of 'the right wing were just 7% behind Labour in this election, but have virtually no representation in our Parliamentary system.'

    I know that is how FPTP works, but it's not healthy for democracy when a large number of people no longer think the system is working for them, or adequately representing their voices in Parliament. You could see how a result like this could drive a small but not insignificant number of discontents into the arms of the 'democracy has failed us' far right types.
    Luckily for everyone (or unluckily for ELE fans), it's not going to happen. Reform will slip back just like Clegg did in 2010, Tories will be mid to high 20s or even 30+, and it'll be a comfortable majority for Labour but not a wipeout. I have £50 riding on it with Leon.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    Thoughts and prayers for the antiwoke mob.

    Harry Kane and Gareth Southgate are more popular than any UK politician

    Harry Kane: 53% like
    Gareth Southgate: 52%
    Keir Starmer: 39%
    Angela Rayner: 30%
    Nigel Farage: 29%
    Rishi Sunak: 21%


    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1802723748727968117

    I hope @Leon never has the balls to slag anyone else's intelligence off ever again. Farage is less popular than the LAB leader and deputy leader. Heh.
  • PJHPJH Posts: 814
    kyf_100 said:

    That result leads to a really worrying situation for democracy.

    You'd have the Lib Dems as the official opposition, and just 35 seats for Con and RefUK combined, despite their winning 36% of the national vote share combined.

    I was dismissive last week of Cleitophon's concern of a 'January 6th style event' and to be honest I still am. But I could easily see how a Faragist insurgency spends the next five years whipping up discontent on the basis of 'the right wing were just 7% behind Labour in this election, but have virtually no representation in our Parliamentary system.'

    I know that is how FPTP works, but it's not healthy for democracy when a large number of people no longer think the system is working for them, or adequately representing their voices in Parliament. You could see how a result like this could drive a small but not insignificant number of discontents into the arms of the 'democracy has failed us' far right types.
    I doubt it will happen, but not much worse than 1983 and we seem to have survived. Anyway, the Tories will not be complaining about it as it's their preferred system.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    PJH said:

    Not since the re-emergence of the Tories as a political force in the 1780s under Pitt (though he himself would have considered himself a Whig) as the 2-party system started to establish itself. Prior to that, government and opposition comprised competing groups of Whigs, at least since the rise of Walpole in the 1740s.
    It's essentially a royalist/cavalier movement dating back to the aftermath of the civil war though isn't it ("Tories"), so it's there at the founding of our democracy if not a little before. Not called the "conservative party" but the same continuing tradition.
  • Farooq said:

    The beginnings of our democracy? You mean since 1928, when we finally stopped discriminating against women in elections?
    That was only because the Tories saw electoral advantage in widening the franchise, much as Starmer does with 16-18 year olds.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    Farooq said:

    The beginnings of our democracy? You mean since 1928, when we finally stopped discriminating against women in elections?
    Some people were still getting multiple votes as recently as 1945.
  • Big_IanBig_Ian Posts: 67
    TimS said:

    Never. They've been a party (albeit with different names) since the beginnings of our democracy I think.
    As I thought. Puts it into perspective how potentially seismic this is!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,804
    148grss said:

    Sorry - I disagree. There is always an ideology. There isn't a non ideological way to view the world, let alone be in the world of politics. Even those people that argue "people just want competency from their government" have an ideology - competency at doing what, for who, in what way, etc. The things you value is about ideology, the method of delivery will be tinged by ideology, what you think is "best" will be based on ideology. There is no giant brained "non ideological" take.
    Ideology (of one sort or another) is relevant to many many things but this doesn't mean all types of government and all people are equally ideological. What it does mean is that there is no such thing as a government (or a person) free of ideology (or even close to being free of it). It's a silly conceit to claim that. And (yes) sometimes the ideology that governments (or people) can never be free of masquerades as status quo or accepted norm.

    I wonder if you and I are meaning the same thing by "ideology" though. Bet we aren't.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,917
    edited June 2024
    kyf_100 said:

    That result leads to a really worrying situation for democracy.

    You'd have the Lib Dems as the official opposition, and just 35 seats for Con and RefUK combined, despite their winning 36% of the national vote share combined.

    I was dismissive last week of Cleitophon's concern of a 'January 6th style event' and to be honest I still am. But I could easily see how a Faragist insurgency spends the next five years whipping up discontent on the basis of 'the right wing were just 7% behind Labour in this election, but have virtually no representation in our Parliamentary system.'

    I know that is how FPTP works, but it's not healthy for democracy when a large number of people no longer think the system is working for them, or adequately representing their voices in Parliament. You could see how a result like this could drive a small but not insignificant number of discontents into the arms of the 'democracy has failed us' far right types.
    Hilarious how the Right was perfectly happy with Liberal voters being effectively disenfranchised for the last century or so, but the instant it starts working to their disadvantage it becomes "a really worrying situation for democracy".

  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    Farooq said:

    The beginnings of our democracy? You mean since 1928, when we finally stopped discriminating against women in elections?
    2024 surely, when suffrage is extended to 16 year olds.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,154

    Actually there was a bit of gold in those loafers.

    Mostly the L & V of Louis Vuitton.
    Was going to flag this post on taste grounds. loafers with morning dress, dear god what were you thinking?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    boulay said:

    Was going to flag this post on taste grounds. loafers with morning dress, dear god what were you thinking?
    I have really big and wide feet.

    Brogues just pinch my feet.

    Loafers are the best for me.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    That was only because the Tories saw electoral advantage in widening the franchise, much as Starmer does with 16-18 year olds.
    You’re comparing 16-18 year old getting the vote with women getting the vote?!

    I’m teasing you, but you maybe need to be slightly more judicious on how you frame that.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Farooq said:

    The beginnings of our democracy? You mean since 1928, when we finally stopped discriminating against women in elections?
    I often have this discussion with people. The glass half full version of British history is that England* was, unquestionably, ahead of much of Western Europe in representative government from at least the middle of the seventeenth century. The glass half empty version is that we didn't become a democracy until 1928.

    *The relative power and influence of the pre-1707 Parliament of Scotland is a matter of controversy that I'm not touching with a barge pole on here. I guess I'm not a Scotch Expert after all.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    boulay said:

    Was going to flag this post on taste grounds. loafers with morning dress, dear god what were you thinking?
    A man capable of that is capable of anything. What next, rifled barrels in one’s duelling pistols!
  • QuincelQuincel Posts: 4,042
    TimS said:

    2024 surely, when suffrage is extended to 16 year olds.
    This is ridiculous. Just elect whoever Miss Universe wants in charge and be done with it.

    I call this, Universe-al Suffrage.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729

    If the seat totals end up very close between LD and CON, could the Speaker perhaps reallocate some of the questions between LOTO and 3rd party (4 and 4 rather than current 6 and 2 for example)? The existing PMQs format only came into place in 1997 after all so it can be changed.
    I'm sure if the shoe were on the other foot - which let's face it, it will be - sharing wouldn't happen.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Big shout out to Lockie Ferguson whose bowling against Papua New Guinea is

    4-4-0-3.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    TimS said:

    2024 surely, when suffrage is extended to 16 year olds.
    Why not just go the whole hog in 2028 and extend it to newborns. It would make as much sense.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    edited June 2024
    Chris said:

    Hilarious how the Right was perfectly happy with Liberal voters being effectively disenfranchised for the last century or so, but the instant it starts working to their disadvantage it becomes "a really worrying situation for democracy".

    Yes and now, all of a sudden, the voting system is an affront to democracy.

    If you didn’t want to be staring heavy defeat in the face you shouldn’t have run such a bloody sh*tshow these past 5 years.
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,300
    Still no Tory recovery. Flat, flat and -1 on the three polls released today vs last survey.

    Suggests their fall has levelled off, rather than continuing to plunge new depths. Which is something. But not the swingback many expected.

    And postal votes are starting to be submitted. Time is very much running out.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884

    If the seat totals end up very close between LD and CON, could the Speaker perhaps reallocate some of the questions between LOTO and 3rd party (4 and 4 rather than current 6 and 2 for example)? The existing PMQs format only came into place in 1997 after all so it can be changed.
    The Leader of the Opposition is a formal role within the Westminster system. I don't think it would be shared between parties.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    Why not just go the whole hog in 2028 and extend it to newborns. It would make as much sense.
    Oh Richard, that’s not your best moment.

    I know loads of people who think it’s great to open voting up to 16 yr olds and I thoroughly support it.

    We need young people as engaged as possible, not disenfranchised.

    Really, truly, the Conservative Party have shown little or no interest in the young.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    I have really big and wide feet.

    Brogues just pinch my feet.

    Loafers are the best for me.
    https://www.johnlobb.com/en_gb/bespoke

    Is the solution
This discussion has been closed.