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The Battle of Tewkesbury – politicalbetting.com

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  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    edited June 2024
    Seems the Supreme Court has just effectively banned drilling for oil and gas.

    The way to stop the learned judges interfering is of course to repeal the Climate Change act that their ruling is an interpretation of.

    This of course is in Reform's manifesto. This ruling couldn't have come at a better time for them. Political catnip.

    Vladimir and various Emirs will be pleased too.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    Roger, you're a wealthy retired tampon ad executive, educated at a minor public school, who mainly lives in Villefranche-sur-Mer

    Your social circle is probably quite unusual, and may indeed be limited to 24/7 private nurses

    I have a wide circle of friends and family, home and abroad, rich and poor, who are a real mix, arty and geeky, you name it. In the past they've been everything from SWP to BNP, but mainly Labour and Tory, with a couple of Libs, Nits and UKIPs

    Not a single one is definitely voting Tory. One was edging that way but the Reform Manifesto has tempted her to Farage

    I can therefore believe these stories of total wipe-out (sorry @Sandpit). Unless there is a shy Tory effect at work, but I don't believe it, people aren't embarrassed about voting Tory or not voting Tory, they just despise them, quietly or loudly. A shy Reform vote is more likely, because Farage
    There is a shy Tory effect at work, the one that's going to ensure they get 20% of the vote. 😊
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Nigelb said:

    .

    I can't imagine anyone who cares about Shakespeare does, either.
    Yeah the idea that Boris Johnson is gonna have amazing new insights into Shakespeare, such that I might buy a book of them, is quite fanciful, indeed fatuous and ludicrous

    However I bet Boris Johnson has plenty of amazing new insights into the life and thoughts of Boris Johnson, and he was also the winner of the Brexit ref and British PM during some of the most turbulent years in all UK/global history, from Covid to Ukraine. So I probably WILL buy his memoir, as will many people worldwide - and he can write pretty well

    He will likely earn that £5m advance, unlike many political memoirs
  • 148grss148grss Posts: 4,155

    A vote for Green in the vast majority of seats is a wasted vote, pure and simple. So it's right that those votes are squeezed. There are exceptions – but not very many.
    It isn't wasted for the Greens - it's good short money. And every vote for Labour beyond the single vote needed to get more votes than the second party is also a wasted vote. The argument is "Labour are going to win anyway - so vote your heart" is fair, in my mind.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,502

    I've been chilling and thinking. I was always more drawn historically to the Tories as I was brought up in a very Labour suspicious environment, both my parents and grandparents on mums side were fully engaged with Thatcher and blamed Labour for Britain's decline in the 70s (Dads parents were and some members of the family that side still are very left wing/Trade Unionist Labour). I still very much dislike Labour, but what is the Tory party actually for? They don't care about me, they don't care about defence, they don't care about low tax for workers, just for business owners and corporates. They don't care about getting benefits down in a fair and kind way to those of us unfortunate enough to rely on them. They don't care about immigration concerns, they don't care about decency, they don't care about public service, they don't care about shit in our rivers, they don't care about affordable housing, renters, tenants, they don't care about ANYTHING.
    They are an infestation. They are the aristocracy of the interwar period, unforgivably self centred, arrogant, power hungry, distant. They are the worst of us.
    Fuck them. Seriously. Fuck them all. Let them perish and then let's see.

    It's hard to work out what they stand for, other than putting their fingers in places where fingers should not be put.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Taz said:

    Yes, that is a fair emphasis. Perhaps their time has past and, in spite of what people like Leon may think/hope, we are becoming a more left of centre "woke" nation ?
    I think the silent majority need to roar, then we will know.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107

    I may be in the minority, but is it not possible that those who had a tip about the election genuinely thought there was nothing wrong in using said tip for a wager? I know ignorance of the law (is this is legal thing, or terms and conditions with the betting firm?) is not a defence.

    There also seems to be a grey area. I placed bets on the day that things were leaking out, but before the official announcement. Was that illegal?
    Has anyone heard from MoonRabbit recently?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Sean_F said:

    It's hard to work out what they stand for, other than putting their fingers in places where fingers should not be put.
    Like the 1930s aristocracy, plundering the nation and living high on the hog before the ceiling came down. That's what they are and stand for. Greed. Unadulterated greed, both financial and personal.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,502

    Seems the Supreme Court has just effectively banned drilling for oil and gas.

    The way to stop the learned judges interfering is of course to repeal the Climate Change act that their ruling is an interpretation of.

    This of course is in Reform's manifesto. This ruling couldn't have come at a better time for them. Political catnip.

    Vladimir and various Emirs will be pleased too.

    It won't ban it, but like much feelgood legislation, it puts some more sand in the engine.
  • The fact they aren't here tells you something.
    Given the flak anyone trying to point out why they are getting traction gets, with regular "fascist" and similar comments about them , is that surprising?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107

    There are countless LibDem leaflets, which mostly are generic (not referring to the candidate) - on a given day, residents may receive 2 different ones: they are slightly overdoing it IMO. There are fairly widespread Labour leaflets and some SDP leaflets, but none so far from the Tories, who seem to have given up. LibDem posters were up first and are moderately common, though less so than in previous seats where I've been aqctive. Labour posters are catching up. I've yet to see a single Tory poster. Constituency polling varies between a smalle Labour lead to a large LibDem lead; I've yet to see a Tory lead predicted by any of them. Labour is working hard and in with a reasonable shot - but there are masses of tactical anti-Tory voters still making up their minds.
    The YouGov MRP, which has a local sample as its base unlike those that only work top down from modelling, puts the LibDems in pole position, with Labour way back tussling with Reform for third and fourth place. The recent PCC elections saw LibDems outpoll Labour in both the council areas covered by that seat. Tactical voters should by now have a clear picture of what they need to do, to defeat the Tory.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620
    Carnyx said:

    You didn't originate this LD hold and it was up to the voters. You didn't know for sure. Not so the Tory instance.
    Edit: or so one presumes. But in fairness, it is possible that Mr Sunak didn't tell *anyone* about the announcement till he made it.
  • Like the 1930s aristocracy, plundering the nation and living high on the hog before the ceiling came down. That's what they are and stand for. Greed. Unadulterated greed, both financial and personal.
    Harsh but sadly fair. With sneering contempt for the lower orders (including their own Red Wall MPs).
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563
    A message from Witham constituency. In spite of facing a substantial Tory majority (24k in 2019 and 18k in 2017, when the Labour candidate was a local man) the Labour candidate has now sent out three leaflets against one for Priti Patel.
    Nothing from anyone else yet.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,697
    eek said:

    Postal vote completed and sent off.

    Was a choice between the Lib Dem who continually posts incorrect gibberish in the comments section of the local rag or Labour - Tories ruled out for many reasons one of which is the dubious history of the law firm of our current MP.

    Hopefully next time I will have a choice of candidates

    My local LibDem councillor is good at his job, and is a respected expert in a highly technical field. His twitter feed, on the other hand, is the most insane FBPE nonsense I've ever seen - not politically but quality-wise - retweeting genuine conspiracy theories, obviously spoof accounts and so on. Whether he knows it's trash, but thinks it's good for campaigning, or whether he doesn't know is the eternal question.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107
    tpfkar said:

    On topic, Tewkesbury is one of the seats which seems clearly to be in the range between the Tories winning 50 seats, and winning 100.

    The issue for the Lib Dems is that the local teams are fighting hard in Cheltenham, then South Cotswolds, then North Cotswolds. Then it looks like a tossup between Tewkesbury and Thornbury & Yate. I don't see any signs that the Lib Dems are going kamikaze into the stretch targets and abandoning the others higher up, which means that the likes of Tewkesbury will have to rely on the local strength in the seat, without outside help.

    So it looks more to me like the Lib Dems get a good second place this time, and if the Tories don't sort themselves out in opposition, and a couple of the others locally are won, it then becomes a top tier target next time.

    North Dorset in much the same position - there are better prospects all around, so a win there would need to rely on the national campaign and a freak vote split.

    Last time the LibDems got carried away during the campaign, spending money and resources on all sorts of long shot seats and then missing many of their top targets; this time they are determined to stay focused and not repeat that mistake, but may finish by winning their top targets by miles and having a swathe of near misses across the home countries.

    Nevertheless they are right to want to make sure of landing their primary strategic objective of recovering third party status in the HoC.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955
    Leon said:

    I believe Roger is confusing me with exPBer @SeanT, and, as always, has got all the details completely wrong: the award was the Bad Sex in Fiction prize, not "Henry Miller", and it is for a passage of absurd sex writing, not a whole book

    The passage is quite quite something. The excerpts you find online do not remotely do it justice. After the lagershed I might put it on here, but it really has to be after the lagershed
    The one that ends in "aiwa"?

    I might actually have it on my bookshelf still somewhere. I picked it up in the 2000s on the basis of the notoriety of that passage, long before I ever heard of PB.

    The fact I can still remember the outline of the plot two decades later suggests it's a decent read - I read a lot and don't remember most books. A bit amis-y in places but it was the style of the time...
  • Andy_JS said:

    There is a shy Tory effect at work, the one that's going to ensure they get 20% of the vote. 😊
    I think Leon is right on this one.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    Carnyx said:

    Edit: or so one presumes. But in fairness, it is possible that Mr Sunak didn't tell *anyone* about the announcement till he made it.
    Quite. They may have known, eg, that Akshata has had enough and was pressing him to go early, and observed him looking less and less resolute. That's sort of inside info, but then so is the stuff in the thread header.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    Given the flak anyone trying to point out why they are getting traction gets, with regular "fascist" and similar comments about them , is that surprising?
    Quite so. PB is losing its touch, it is so absurdly, hysterically hostile to Reform - now polling around 20% let us note - you have to be a hard-arsed thick-skinned son of a bitch to even mention some reasons they might appeal. Luckily, I am a thick skinned SOB so I don't care, but imagine what less obdurate and grizzled lurkers might feel, coming on here?

    I saw the same on the leaders' debate with Krishnan Guru Murthy, Some Reform minded woman said that her part of England was now so overwhelmingly foreign it did not feel like home and she was thinking of emigrating. That is a perfectly legitimate point of view, we have just endured 2.4m migrants in 3 years, and that after decades of record immigraion, some parts of Britain HAVE been transformed in a few years, and if I lived in them I might feel hurt, frightened and desirous of fleeing. FFS Camden Tube can be unnerving!

    Yet Krishnan wotsit treated her like she had just said "gas all the Muslims" and he asked the leaders whether they wanted HER to leave the UK because she was an obvious racist

    If you get that kind of reaction from a well known TV presenter on live TV it's no surprise Reform voters might keep their instincts well hidden. It's disgusting and ultimately very dangerous. Let the people speak
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,721
    Leon said:

    Yeah the idea that Boris Johnson is gonna have amazing new insights into Shakespeare, such that I might buy a book of them, is quite fanciful, indeed fatuous and ludicrous

    However I bet Boris Johnson has plenty of amazing new insights into the life and thoughts of Boris Johnson, and he was also the winner of the Brexit ref and British PM during some of the most turbulent years in all UK/global history, from Covid to Ukraine. So I probably WILL buy his memoir, as will many people worldwide - and he can write pretty well

    He will likely earn that £5m advance, unlike many political memoirs
    Gave that a like.
    Though I have little interest in buying his memoir (actually, none), I appreciate that quite a few might.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,981
    Leon said:

    Quite so. PB is losing its touch, it is so absurdly, hysterically hostile to Reform - now polling around 20% let us note - you have to be a hard-arsed thick-skinned son of a bitch to even mention some reasons they might appeal. Luckily, I am a thick skinned SOB so I don't care, but imagine what less obdurate and grizzled lurkers might feel, coming on here?

    I saw the same on the leaders' debate with Krishnan Guru Murthy, Some Reform minded woman said that her part of England was now so overwhelmingly foreign it did not feel like home and she was thinking of emigrating. That is a perfectly legitimate point of view, we have just endured 2.4m migrants in 3 years, and that after decades of record immigraion, some parts of Britain HAVE been transformed in a few years, and if I lived in them I might feel hurt, frightened and desirous of fleeing. FFS Camden Tube can be unnerving!

    Yet Krishnan wotsit treated her like she had just said "gas all the Muslims" and he asked the leaders whether they wanted HER to leave the UK because she was an obvious racist

    If you get that kind of reaction from a well known TV presenter on live TV it's no surprise Reform voters might keep their instincts well hidden. It's disgusting and ultimately very dangerous. Let the people speak
    Emigrating to avoid foreigners? Quite...
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    Quite so. PB is losing its touch, it is so absurdly, hysterically hostile to Reform - now polling around 20% let us note - you have to be a hard-arsed thick-skinned son of a bitch to even mention some reasons they might appeal. Luckily, I am a thick skinned SOB so I don't care, but imagine what less obdurate and grizzled lurkers might feel, coming on here?

    I saw the same on the leaders' debate with Krishnan Guru Murthy, Some Reform minded woman said that her part of England was now so overwhelmingly foreign it did not feel like home and she was thinking of emigrating. That is a perfectly legitimate point of view, we have just endured 2.4m migrants in 3 years, and that after decades of record immigraion, some parts of Britain HAVE been transformed in a few years, and if I lived in them I might feel hurt, frightened and desirous of fleeing. FFS Camden Tube can be unnerving!

    Yet Krishnan wotsit treated her like she had just said "gas all the Muslims" and he asked the leaders whether they wanted HER to leave the UK because she was an obvious racist

    If you get that kind of reaction from a well known TV presenter on live TV it's no surprise Reform voters might keep their instincts well hidden. It's disgusting and ultimately very dangerous. Let the people speak
    Do you think Reform will surprise on the upside?

    Because I would hate for us to lose our touch.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    kyf_100 said:

    The one that ends in "aiwa"?

    I might actually have it on my bookshelf still somewhere. I picked it up in the 2000s on the basis of the notoriety of that passage, long before I ever heard of PB.

    The fact I can still remember the outline of the plot two decades later suggests it's a decent read - I read a lot and don't remember most books. A bit amis-y in places but it was the style of the time...
    Amis fils presumably?

    Top tip: The Zone Of Interest is I think his best. Much more complex than the film and no faux cockneys in it.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665

    Emigrating to avoid foreigners? Quite...
    He's another Brexit wanker traitor who emigrates to avoid the unflushed turd he created.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,721

    Aren't all bets about information asymmetry? If you have more and better information than me, you win. If I have more and better information than you, I win.

    Many years ago, I was involved in a campaign which was the defence of a theoretically marginal seat, where bookies were offering odds a little worse than evens on a Lib Dem hold. But I'd been on the doorstep and spoken to plenty of others who had, and we were cruising home to a huge win. I made a lot of money on it.

    I don't quite see at what point you think it becomes cheating...
    The point at which it's a certainty.

    Outwitting bookies on the likely odds (even if you're outwitting them massively) of an event whose outcome is yet to be decided, and getting them to take a bet on an event you already know the outcome of, are two very different things.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,620

    Quite. They may have known, eg, that Akshata has had enough and was pressing him to go early, and observed him looking less and less resolute. That's sort of inside info, but then so is the stuff in the thread header.
    But even then - politically - a dreadful look. And there we are. (I wonder who else will come out of the woodwork on this, too.)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    Do you think Reform will surprise on the upside?

    Because I would hate for us to lose our touch.
    You could try modding the site so it is slightly less hateful to anyone remotely minded to vote Reform, or even inclined to say "actually Farage has a point" etc etc

    This is not for my protection, I don't give a fuck

    But we need PB to be a broad church so we can make infiormed bets or wise predictions. It really isn't, in this instance
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,550

    A message from Witham constituency. In spite of facing a substantial Tory majority (24k in 2019 and 18k in 2017, when the Labour candidate was a local man) the Labour candidate has now sent out three leaflets against one for Priti Patel.
    Nothing from anyone else yet.

    You think lots of leaflets reminding voters their candidate is Priti Patel would be a great strategy?
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    Like the 1930s aristocracy, plundering the nation and living high on the hog before the ceiling came down. That's what they are and stand for. Greed. Unadulterated greed, both financial and personal.
    Sounds awful and aristocrat like behaviour, but did the 1930s stand out particularly?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    edited June 2024

    He's another Brexit wanker traitor who emigrates to avoid the unflushed turd he created.
    Do you think calling me a "Brexit wanker/traitor" benefits the site?
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061

    Sounds awful and aristocrat like behaviour, but did the 1930s stand out particularly?
    The interwar period was when the aristocracy reached its most disgusting imo, yes
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Leon said:

    You could try modding the site so it is slightly less hateful to anyone remotely minded to vote Reform, or even inclined to say "actually Farage has a point" etc etc

    This is not for my protection, I don't give a fuck

    But we need PB to be a broad church so we can make infiormed bets or wise predictions. It really isn't, in this instance
    You support/boost a party of UK hating appeasers/traitors.

    If you cannot stand the heat then get out of the kitchen.
  • madmacsmadmacs Posts: 95
    IanB2 said:

    Last time the LibDems got carried away during the campaign, spending money and resources on all sorts of long shot seats and then missing many of their top targets; this time they are determined to stay focused and not repeat that mistake, but may finish by winning their top targets by miles and having a swathe of near misses across the home countries.

    Nevertheless they are right to want to make sure of landing their primary strategic objective of recovering third party status in the HoC.
    I believe in Gloucestershire the Lib Dem priorities are in order Cheltenham, South Cotswolds (part in Wiltshire), Tewkesbury, and then the others.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Leon said:

    Do you think calling me a "Brexit wanker/traitor" benefits the site?
    Yes, as I am only following your style.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982
    The UK is pursuing degrowth policies and the Supreme court has added to that today.

    When will the parties be honest about that?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    You support/boost a party of UK hating appeasers/traitors.

    If you cannot stand the heat then get out of the kitchen.
    I am going to kindly presume you are still aching from your operation, and draw a polite veil over your contumely
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    Quite so. PB is losing its touch, it is so absurdly, hysterically hostile to Reform - now polling around 20% let us note - you have to be a hard-arsed thick-skinned son of a bitch to even mention some reasons they might appeal. Luckily, I am a thick skinned SOB so I don't care, but imagine what less obdurate and grizzled lurkers might feel, coming on here?

    I saw the same on the leaders' debate with Krishnan Guru Murthy, Some Reform minded woman said that her part of England was now so overwhelmingly foreign it did not feel like home and she was thinking of emigrating. That is a perfectly legitimate point of view, we have just endured 2.4m migrants in 3 years, and that after decades of record immigraion, some parts of Britain HAVE been transformed in a few years, and if I lived in them I might feel hurt, frightened and desirous of fleeing. FFS Camden Tube can be unnerving!

    Yet Krishnan wotsit treated her like she had just said "gas all the Muslims" and he asked the leaders whether they wanted HER to leave the UK because she was an obvious racist

    If you get that kind of reaction from a well known TV presenter on live TV it's no surprise Reform voters might keep their instincts well hidden. It's disgusting and ultimately very dangerous. Let the people speak
    It is quite lonely and frightening if there is very rapid demographic change locally and you find yourself surrounded by people with a very different culture.

    Less so for me as being catholic I often have as strong or stronger cultural connections with the newcomers. (our local church in a still very white area is probably the most racially diverse community in the area with a big chunk of the population from South Asia and Central and Southern Africa. Racial differences are irrelevant as the Catholicism unites).

    (I think growing up in another such community insulated me from the racial (and class snobbery) nastiness that was around in the 70s and 80s)

    But if you are a C of E mainstream elderly English person it must be very daunting. And horrible to be smeared as racist if you dare to complain.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277

    Emigrating to avoid foreigners? Quite...
    So she will bugger off to another country where she’ll be an immigrant and yet moans about too many immigrants here . It was like those vox pops in Spain during the EU ref who moaned about too many immigrants in the UK and didn’t compute that they were immigrants in Spain .
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,566

    On the topic of safe(ish) Tory seats, can I present South West Wiltshire? Current incumbent Andrew Murrison (a decent enough chap). Labour is the closest challenger but for some reason have selected a Londoner who doesn't live anywhere near Wiltshire to be their candidate. And she is also a person of colour.

    I'm not implying that the constituency is full of white power racists, far from it, but it certainly is a much less diverse part of the country than almost anywhere else.

    Betfair odds: Murrison (Tory) 1.88, Akoto (Labour) 1.8 - so slight favourite.

    DYOR but I think Murrison will be ok. (Perhaps kle4 might have an opinion as its his constituency too?)

    Murrisons literature is leaning hard on how he lives locally, so he spots a weakness there.

    I find it hard to think Labour could win with very little local strength, but the LDs do not seem to be making any effort (going to Melksham and Devizes, and Chippenham), so perhaps the national polls will mean Labour could win in a Tory wipeout situation.

    But I expect Murrison to hold on.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955

    Amis fils presumably?

    Top tip: The Zone Of Interest is I think his best. Much more complex than the film and no faux cockneys in it.
    Amis (M.) went off the boil around the time of The Information and never really got it back. I did read the zone of interest and can't remember a bloody thing about it, save for the protagonist is called Paul Doll. If I can remember the details of a book years later chances are it's good. If I draw a blank, it's a miss. I barely remember anything from an Amis book published after 1995.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited June 2024
    Nunu5 said:

    The UK is pursuing degrowth policies and the Supreme court has added to that today.

    When will the parties be honest about that?

    It'll be interesting to see Farage's response to the supreme court ruling.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    Yes, as I am only following your style.
    Ah, the sincerest form of flattery. I don't blame you, my style is quite the thing
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735

    Do you think Reform will surprise on the upside?

    Because I would hate for us to lose our touch.
    When I look at Reform I can see them winning Clacton, Ashfield is possible because that's got some interesting local issues then after that I need to look for seats where Labour will do badly and with Reform getting a lot of votes.

    My default seat for that is Redcar (as it does have a the last lot disappointed us (again) so vote for someone else tendency) but Labour hits that target at the moment.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563

    Emigrating to avoid foreigners? Quite...
    Look at the US if you want to see what happens when immigrants swamp the indigenous inhabitants. The latter are confined to reservations and treated as very definitely second-class citizens.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    eek said:

    When I look at Reform I can see them winning Clacton, Ashfield is possible because that's got some interesting local issues then after that I need to look for seats where Labour will do badly and with Reform getting a lot of votes.

    My default seat for that is Redcar (as it does have a the last lot disappointed us (again) so vote for someone else tendency) but Labour hits that target at the moment.
    What I think will be interesting is the number of (clear) second places Reform gets.

    Come the 2028/29 GE then in a lot of areas 'Only Reform can beat Labour here' becomes the default message and then Farage might end up winning a lot of seats for the first time.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited June 2024
    "Westminster’s gambling addiction
    Don't always trust the bookmakers"

    https://unherd.com/2024/06/westminsters-gambling-addiction/

    "Others won big by backing themselves against the odds. The now-disgraced Liberal MP Clement Freud — who was investigated by the Met in 2016 for histroic child sexual abuse claims — was once notorious for being the shrewdest punter in Westminster when he was the candidate in the Isle of Ely by-election in 1973. Having begun as the 33/1 outsider, he managed to place £1,000 on himself — winning the equivalent of £340,000 in today’s money when he became the MP."
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    Leon said:

    Ah, the sincerest form of flattery. I don't blame you, my style is quite the thing
    It really isn't.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107
    eek said:

    When I look at Reform I can see them winning Clacton, Ashfield is possible because that's got some interesting local issues then after that I need to look for seats where Labour will do badly and with Reform getting a lot of votes.

    My default seat for that is Redcar (as it does have a the last lot disappointed us (again) so vote for someone else tendency) but Labour hits that target at the moment.
    I’m beginning to wonder about my seat. The imposed Labour candidate is poor and the primary campaign has decided to champion the Green. If Tory popularity continues to fall it isn’t impossible that Reform could come through the middle.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,145
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    You could try modding the site so it is slightly less hateful to anyone remotely minded to vote Reform, or even inclined to say "actually Farage has a point" etc etc

    This is not for my protection, I don't give a fuck

    But we need PB to be a broad church so we can make infiormed bets or wise predictions. It really isn't, in this instance
    The absence of Reform voters on PB is telling in itself. It suggests that they are not particularly politically engaged, or are likely not to be traditional Tories (HYUFD/BigG/DavidL etc), do not have access to the internet, do not place bets or some combination of these.

    You can extract quite a lot of that if you base your betting on polling sample error, swing versus turnout, demographics and so on.

    Alternatively, the hostility you mention could lead to something hitherto unheard of - shy Reform voters. PB might be different but in my experience these types of people are more than happy to advertise their views. DYOR.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,721
    Leon said:

    Ah, the sincerest form of flattery. I don't blame you, my style is quite the thing
    It's quite a thing.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107

    What I think will be interesting is the number of (clear) second places Reform gets.

    Come the 2028/29 GE then in a lot of areas 'Only Reform can beat Labour here' becomes the default message and then Farage might end up winning a lot of seats for the first time.
    I don’t sense he’s remotely interested in a long five- to ten-year long haul.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    👀 From my Labour read on 26 May:

    “A sudden surge in activity on the betting markets sealed [Morgan McSweeney, Sir Keir Starmer’s campaign chief] conviction that a July poll would be called imminently.”


    https://x.com/Gabriel_Pogrund/status/1803763164405768609
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    nico679 said:

    So she will bugger off to another country where she’ll be an immigrant and yet moans about too many immigrants here . It was like those vox pops in Spain during the EU ref who moaned about too many immigrants in the UK and didn’t compute that they were immigrants in Spain .
    I would rather not live in a majority Muslim area, because it would entirely change the cultural feel of the neighborhood: all the pubs shut (no custom), the schools change entirely, the streets and shops are transformed. This happens, I've seen it happen in parts of Birmingham and, to a lesser extent, London

    This is not racism, it is merely preferring your own native culture: a very human thing. So if this woman now emigrates to a more traditonally Christian country, albeit foreign, she is making a rational choice

    And I have travelled widely in Muslim countries, many of them, and had marvelous times and met some of the most marvelous people. I just don't want to live in a Muslim country/locale

    Swich it around, if a load of white Christians swiftly took over half a town in Pakistan and opened pubs and closed all the mosques and opened churches then the Pakistani locals would probably feel quite aggreived and upset. And that would not be racism, either. Just human nature: their sense of upset would be justified
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    IanB2 said:

    I don’t sense he’s remotely interested in a long five- to ten-year long haul.
    Neither do I but he can disappear for a few years then come back in 2028/29 and start hammering that message.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    It really isn't.
    Well, my style pays, and indeed it pays extremely well, at times
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982
    People don't emigrate "to avoid foreigners" as some would put it.

    They emigrate because when they see the country they live in is being flooded with low wage immigration they see no hope of a better quality of life for themselves or children or even great-grandchildren. Saying such people "hate foreigners" is a purposeful misunderstanding if why they want control of our borders and restricted high quality migration into the country they live in.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,721
    With the Romanian and US decisions on Patriot, the F16s by summer story and now this, it seems there's been something of an uptick in western determination to actually prevail in Ukraine.

    S. Korea will reconsider issue of arms supply to Ukraine: presidential official
    https://x.com/YonhapNews/status/1803722781684801686
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,145

    👀 From my Labour read on 26 May:

    “A sudden surge in activity on the betting markets sealed [Morgan McSweeney, Sir Keir Starmer’s campaign chief] conviction that a July poll would be called imminently.”


    https://x.com/Gabriel_Pogrund/status/1803763164405768609

    And McSweeney blackmailed Tony Lee with his dodgy bets, forcing him to conduct the worst political campaign in history. Titanic. No brolly. D-Day.

    I'm not sure if I'm joking.
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,955
    Eabhal said:

    The absence of Reform voters on PB is telling in itself. It suggests that they are not particularly politically engaged, or are likely not to be traditional Tories (HYUFD/BigG/DavidL etc), do not have access to the internet, do not place bets or some combination of these.

    You can extract quite a lot of that if you base your betting on polling sample error, swing versus turnout, demographics and so on.

    Alternatively, the hostility you mention could lead to something hitherto unheard of - shy Reform voters. PB might be different but in my experience these types of people are more than happy to advertise their views. DYOR.
    That or PB is largely made up of middle managers and accountants from the status obsessed middle classes who consider a vote for the Faragist intifada completely non-u due to status anxiety.

    Whereas one of the richest poshos I know has shamelessly broken for reform on the basis he thinks the tories have f***Ed the country.

    I suspect it's all a bit like status conscious people shopping at asda while saying they only ever shop in waitrose.

    A lot of those types will break for reform, but won't admit it. Until enough people in their social circle make it acceptable to talk about.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    kyf_100 said:

    Amis (M.) went off the boil around the time of The Information and never really got it back. I did read the zone of interest and can't remember a bloody thing about it, save for the protagonist is called Paul Doll. If I can remember the details of a book years later chances are it's good. If I draw a blank, it's a miss. I barely remember anything from an Amis book published after 1995.
    Not read The Information. Gave up on London Fields which reads like an accurate but uninspired parody.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    kyf_100 said:

    Amis (M.) went off the boil around the time of The Information and never really got it back. I did read the zone of interest and can't remember a bloody thing about it, save for the protagonist is called Paul Doll. If I can remember the details of a book years later chances are it's good. If I draw a blank, it's a miss. I barely remember anything from an Amis book published after 1995.
    The Information is brillianjt, tho. It's my favourite of his books. Money is second. After that, yes, couldn't be arsed to open one
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665
    BTW - I apologise for the horrible Americanism I have put in the headline of the upcoming thread.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,563

    You think lots of leaflets reminding voters their candidate is Priti Patel would be a great strategy?
    Point noted; however there are several local issues where she’s been notably quiet. So far, anyway.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107
    Leon said:

    Well, my style pays, and indeed it pays extremely well, at times
    It’s sad that you so often fall back to that as the justification-of-last-resort, as if anyone else here seriously thinks that it’s any kind of scorecard.
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,243

    BTW - I apologise for the horrible Americanism I have put in the headline of the upcoming thread.

    Which is it, "supermajority" or "stepmom"?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,721
    Arrested Development again, with the emphasis on arrested...

    Brendan Clarke-Smith reported to police over taxpayer-funded letters postmarked hours after Parliament was dissolved
    https://x.com/johnestevens/status/1803688234725028178
  • paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,507
    Andy_JS said:

    I would have thought the betting companies would have someone sitting on the court to make sure they have the latest information. It's remarkable that they don't imo, if that's the case.
    The bookies' data comes from the umpires scoring pads. But umpires may not consider immediate pressing of the button as their top priority.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,934
    Nigelb said:

    With the Romanian and US decisions on Patriot, the F16s by summer story and now this, it seems there's been something of an uptick in western determination to actually prevail in Ukraine.

    S. Korea will reconsider issue of arms supply to Ukraine: presidential official
    https://x.com/YonhapNews/status/1803722781684801686

    I think the Russian visit to the North gave them the excuse they needed.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    kyf_100 said:

    That or PB is largely made up of middle managers and accountants from the status obsessed middle classes who consider a vote for the Faragist intifada completely non-u due to status anxiety.

    Whereas one of the richest poshos I know has shamelessly broken for reform on the basis he thinks the tories have f***Ed the country.

    I suspect it's all a bit like status conscious people shopping at asda while saying they only ever shop in waitrose.

    A lot of those types will break for reform, but won't admit it. Until enough people in their social circle make it acceptable to talk about.
    95% of PBers have terrible Status Anxiety
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,665

    Which is it, "supermajority" or "stepmom"?
    Neither.
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,400
    Leon said:

    Well, my style pays, and indeed it pays extremely well, at times
    So you say. No one went broke underestimating the taste of the general public they say.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,330
    kyf_100 said:

    Amis (M.) went off the boil around the time of The Information and never really got it back. I did read the zone of interest and can't remember a bloody thing about it, save for the protagonist is called Paul Doll. If I can remember the details of a book years later chances are it's good. If I draw a blank, it's a miss. I barely remember anything from an Amis book published after 1995.
    I kind of gave up on Amis after House of Meetings, but I'm puzzled by the Wiki description of Zone of Interest which seems to bear little connection with the (excellent) film of the same name - Doll is Rudolf Höss apparently. It's a good title, pregnant with the adminstrative varnish put on genocide, perhaps Glazer just stole the best bit.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    IanB2 said:

    It’s sad that you so often fall back to that as the justification-of-last-resort, as if anyone else here seriously thinks that it’s any kind of scorecard.
    Well, when you're literally talking about "style of prose" it is probably the only test that matters

    If you can make a lot of money writing in a certain style, that means a lot of people want to read it, it also means they clearly enjoy it, as they come back for more, so you continue to get paid

    So yes I will continue to make this quite obvious point, not least because it drives all the many sad, thwarted people on here completely nuts, including you
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,625
    edited June 2024

    Seems the Supreme Court has just effectively banned drilling for oil and gas.

    The way to stop the learned judges interfering is of course to repeal the Climate Change act that their ruling is an interpretation of.

    This of course is in Reform's manifesto. This ruling couldn't have come at a better time for them. Political catnip.

    Vladimir and various Emirs will be pleased too.

    From the BBC.

    "UK oil and gas plc said they will now work with Surrey County Council to amend its planning application, and that future production will fall below the levels at which an environmental assessment is required."

    Still, if the NIMBY ecoloons want to be useful idiots for Russia and the Middle East so be it.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Leon said:

    I would rather not live in a majority Muslim area, because it would entirely change the cultural feel of the neighborhood: all the pubs shut (no custom), the schools change entirely, the streets and shops are transformed. This happens, I've seen it happen in parts of Birmingham and, to a lesser extent, London

    This is not racism, it is merely preferring your own native culture: a very human thing. So if this woman now emigrates to a more traditonally Christian country, albeit foreign, she is making a rational choice

    And I have travelled widely in Muslim countries, many of them, and had marvelous times and met some of the most marvelous people. I just don't want to live in a Muslim country/locale

    Swich it around, if a load of white Christians swiftly took over half a town in Pakistan and opened pubs and closed all the mosques and opened churches then the Pakistani locals would probably feel quite aggreived and upset. And that would not be racism, either. Just human nature: their sense of upset would be justified
    Dubai waves at you. 👋🏼

    The locals are quite happy at what the place has become in the last two decades.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,721
    Leon said:

    95% of PBers have terrible Status Anxiety
    I doubt it's anything like that - though you do add to that category,
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,309
    Reform probably need to hit a very high % polling number before seats fall like dominos, because they ain't got a clue how to work seats - the LDs do.

    The only other option is their votes all materalise in specific and rich areas for them, so they scoop the 20-25 surprise seats on the night on a 20%+ share.
  • Nigelb said:

    The point at which it's a certainty.

    Outwitting bookies on the likely odds (even if you're outwitting them massively) of an event whose outcome is yet to be decided, and getting them to take a bet on an event you already know the outcome of, are two very different things.
    Isn't the example I gave was as much a certainty as this case? The candidate won in a landslide, and I KNEW that would happen - a surprise on the downside would have been a win by only a few thousand. You can say I wasn't certain and maybe it was 99.5%... but (even putting it at its maximum) that seems to have been the case here - Sunak could have had a last minute change of heart.

    We also don't, in fact, know the extent of knowledge here. Suppose CCHQ are suddenly asked by Number 10 to draw up a plan of what a July election looks like. That's a golden piece of information in terms of saying the odds on July were WAY too long - but it isn't knowledge of the date at all, but maybe a 50/50 when the odds are 10-1.

    Additionally, I go back to the point that bookies don't have to open a book, and can limit bets or exclude customers. I recall the case of the chubby goalie a few years ago where a bookie offered odds on him being seen eating a pie during an FA Cup tie. He was an unused sub, when all subs had been used - he placed a bet and promptly got himself a pie. People got holier-than-thou on that too - I say them's the breaks. Do you think he should be investigated for a potential criminal offence under the Gambling Act? It's ludicrous.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Sandpit said:

    Dubai waves at you. 👋🏼

    The locals are quite happy at what the place has become in the last two decades.
    Dubai is pretty unique tho. It was a dismal backwater and made the conscious decision to open its doors to the world as a route to prosperity. It has worked brilliantly well, and good luck to them. Ditto places like Singapore and Hong Kong (as was, sob)

    What worked for a small emirate like Dubai would go catastrophically badly in many other parts of the Muslim world, indeed it wouldn't even be allowed. Saudi is not about to let in 2m Christians keen on opening pubs and selling bacon sarnies on streetcorners
  • eekeek Posts: 29,735

    Neither do I but he can disappear for a few years then come back in 2028/29 and start hammering that message.
    How does he do that if he is stuck as the MP for Clacton and fails to keep his constituents happy...

    A lot of second places and no MPs is way better for Farage than a few wins - especially as its very unlikely the winning Reform candidates will have the expertise to be a decent constituency MP...
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 3,400
    Leon said:

    95% of PBers have terrible Status Anxiety
    Your anxiety is your own problem. It's a pretty broad church here and by and large it's been enjoyable... but if I were you I'd tone it down a bit.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,405
    Eabhal said:

    The absence of Reform voters on PB is telling in itself. It suggests that they are not particularly politically engaged, or are likely not to be traditional Tories (HYUFD/BigG/DavidL etc), do not have access to the internet, do not place bets or some combination of these.

    You can extract quite a lot of that if you base your betting on polling sample error, swing versus turnout, demographics and so on.

    Alternatively, the hostility you mention could lead to something hitherto unheard of - shy Reform voters. PB might be different but in my experience these types of people are more than happy to advertise their views. DYOR.
    If PB is suddenly full if people who are shy about sharing their opinion then I have to say that is news to me!
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,257
    Cicero said:

    Your anxiety is your own problem. It's a pretty broad church here and by and large it's been enjoyable... but if I were you I'd tone it down a bit.
    If you were actually him, then surely you wouldn't feel the need to tone it down?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,675
    IanB2 said:

    The YouGov MRP, which has a local sample as its base unlike those that only work top down from modelling, puts the LibDems in pole position, with Labour way back tussling with Reform for third and fourth place. The recent PCC elections saw LibDems outpoll Labour in both the council areas covered by that seat. Tactical voters should by now have a clear picture of what they need to do, to defeat the Tory.
    The local elections last year are atypical for reasons of Labour chaos (they only put up candidates for a few seats), now sorted out, and there are numerous MRP polls with local samples, varying from a large LibDems lead to a small Labour lead. I don't think the Tory has much chance; the LibDem is probably favourite but short of local help (the Oxford team that got Laila in have moved on to this and other seats), and arguably they should be concentrating on Henley, where Labour isn't trying as hard. It depends whether one thinks their national prospects are, say, 30, 50 or 70.
  • IanB2 said:

    It’s sad that you so often fall back to that as the justification-of-last-resort, as if anyone else here seriously thinks that it’s any kind of scorecard.
    It's when Leon questions your manhood that you really know you've won the argument (if you're a bloke).
  • Leon is doing his by-monthly "please ban me" so he can come back with a new personality.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782

    I kind of gave up on Amis after House of Meetings, but I'm puzzled by the Wiki description of Zone of Interest which seems to bear little connection with the (excellent) film of the same name - Doll is Rudolf Höss apparently. It's a good title, pregnant with the adminstrative varnish put on genocide, perhaps Glazer just stole the best bit.
    I thought Zone of Interest (the movie) was a masterpiece, the lack of any story somehow made it better, because that is life, often there is no story as such, just life going on day after day, humdrum and quotidian, yet over the wall the Holocaust

    And my God that fucking soundtrack, a work of total genius. The best, certainly most terrifying soundtrack in movie history?? At certain points it was freaking me out so much the ordinary cries of the baby made me shudder, like a baby times a million
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Leon said:

    Dubai is pretty unique tho. It was a dismal backwater and made the conscious decision to open its doors to the world as a route to prosperity. It has worked brilliantly well, and good luck to them. Ditto places like Singapore and Hong Kong (as was, sob)

    What worked for a small emirate like Dubai would go catastrophically badly in many other parts of the Muslim world, indeed it wouldn't even be allowed. Saudi is not about to let in 2m Christians keen on opening pubs and selling bacon sarnies on streetcorners
    Give me an hour or so, and I’ll be waving from the pub two doors down from my house while eating a bacon sandwich!
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819
    Leon said:

    I would rather not live in a majority Muslim area, because it would entirely change the cultural feel of the neighborhood: all the pubs shut (no custom), the schools change entirely, the streets and shops are transformed. This happens, I've seen it happen in parts of Birmingham and, to a lesser extent, London

    This is not racism, it is merely preferring your own native culture: a very human thing. So if this woman now emigrates to a more traditonally Christian country, albeit foreign, she is making a rational choice

    And I have travelled widely in Muslim countries, many of them, and had marvelous times and met some of the most marvelous people. I just don't want to live in a Muslim country/locale

    Swich it around, if a load of white Christians swiftly took over half a town in Pakistan and opened pubs and closed all the mosques and opened churches then the Pakistani locals would probably feel quite aggreived and upset. And that would not be racism, either. Just human nature: their sense of upset would be justified
    Not surprising, I remember a former poster here who used to boast about hissing at muslim women in burkhas.
  • Carnyx said:

    You didn't originate this LD hold and it was up to the voters. You didn't know for sure. Not so the Tory instance.
    That's not a valid distinction. The people accused of betting on this one didn't originate it, as far as we know. I had very strong information about what the voters planned, these people had very strong information about what Sunak planned. I really think people have gone bonkers on this.
  • stjohnstjohn Posts: 1,897
    Thanks for the article PtP. I've had a small bet on the LDs to win Tewkesbury.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Cicero said:

    Your anxiety is your own problem. It's a pretty broad church here and by and large it's been enjoyable... but if I were you I'd tone it down a bit.
    Tone down what? I am being the image of politeness

    Scroll back a few hours and you will find PB-ers outright wishing me dead and telling me to "rot in hell" and accusing me of pedophilia. Literally

    Am I responding in kind? No, I am my normal good-humoured self, with the odd barb
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,107
    Leon said:

    Well, when you're literally talking about "style of prose" it is probably the only test that matters

    If you can make a lot of money writing in a certain style, that means a lot of people want to read it, it also means they clearly enjoy it, as they come back for more, so you continue to get paid

    So yes I will continue to make this quite obvious point, not least because it drives all the many sad, thwarted people on here completely nuts, including you
    Not really. People will pay for all sorts of rubbish.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161
    eek said:

    There are a number of additional steps required to digitise to images relatively to realtime. One of which is you need the next key frame (so 0.5 seconds later) to calculate the intermediate changes

    Add network latancy and attempts to minimise bandwidth usage and you can introduce serious delays - I find 6 music can be 30 seconds behind streaming relative to DAB and were it Radio 2 you would discover there is a delay added to FM nowadays to ensure FM and DAB are in sync.
    Are the time pips on radio 4 delayed then?

    The church locally seems to be about 50 seconds behind the Angelus as broadcast on RTÉ, and I would have expected it to be the other way round, but perhaps the local church are very far behind. Local time does seem to be somewhat delayed in general.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,782
    Sandpit said:

    Give me an hour or so, and I’ll be waving from the pub two doors down from my house while eating a bacon sandwich!
    I am right now weighing up digital nomad visas. Dubai is on the list

    Do you know if they have a minimum stay criterion? eg you must live in Dubai 6 months of the year etc? Some do, some don't seem to care
  • Tres said:

    Not surprising, I remember a former poster here who used to boast about hissing at muslim women in burkhas.
    Would that be Sidney the Snake or Gordon the Goose?
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,351
    eek said:

    How does he do that if he is stuck as the MP for Clacton and fails to keep his constituents happy...

    A lot of second places and no MPs is way better for Farage than a few wins - especially as its very unlikely the winning Reform candidates will have the expertise to be a decent constituency MP...
    Ultimately, what does Nigel actually want? Lest we forget, a few weeks ago the official lines was that he wasn't even going to be a candidate. And the path some are mapping out, win in Clacton, take over the Conservative Party, become PM in 2029... It's not that plausible, is it? And for all that others have tried, Farage is the only one to make the Reform formula cut through.

    Besides, the Reform surge has been based on promising impossible bollocks. I reckon his corduroy trousers would be pretty rapidly soiled if the were ever to find himself responsible for anything.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,145
    Leon said:

    Dubai is pretty unique tho. It was a dismal backwater and made the conscious decision to open its doors to the world as a route to prosperity. It has worked brilliantly well, and good luck to them. Ditto places like Singapore and Hong Kong (as was, sob)

    What worked for a small emirate like Dubai would go catastrophically badly in many other parts of the Muslim world, indeed it wouldn't even be allowed. Saudi is not about to let in 2m Christians keen on opening pubs and selling bacon sarnies on streetcorners
    Large chunks of the UK are dismal backwaters too, to be fair. The only thing missing was massive infrastructure investment.
This discussion has been closed.