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  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484
    Evening all :)

    The changes with the last Redfield & Wilton 10,000 sample poll last Monday are Labour -1 and Reform +1 so virtually no move from a large sample poll in a week.

    The gender split is interesting - among men, Labour leads Reform 36-20 with Conservatives on 18, LDs on 10% and 7% DKs. Among women, Labour leads Conservatives 40-14 with Reform on 13%, DKs on 13% and LDs on 11%.

    On turnout, R&W have 57% Certain and 20% Probable so a turnout in the mid to high 60s seems possible.

    Among those likely to vote, Labour has 37.9%, Reform 16.7%, Conservative 15.9%, LDs 10.5% (10.46% so rounded down) and Don't Knows at 9.9%.

    Stripping out the DKs puts Labour at 42%, Reform on 18.6%, Conservatives on 17.6%, Liberal Democrats on 11.6%.

    It's imprecise but in the last Mega Poll the Conservatives led Reform by five (1306-1301). Now, Reform leads by 1327 to 1260 so a small move to Reform in the last week. Labour has lost ground among men (down from 39 to 36) but up a fraction with women from 39 to 40.

    The DKs are up slightly as well - may just be the sample.

  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787
    Leon said:

    We are ignoring the possibility - which I suggested a couple of days ago - that Farageputinukrainegate HAS had an effect but it’s just not showing - because it has killed the reform surge so their vote is now stuck around 15-19

    Without his foolish words he might now be on 20+

    Agreed. He is putting a cap on potential support. He would have been safer blaming it all on weakness from Obama and Cameron not standing up in 2014 when Crimea was annexed.

    Credit to Nick Robinson for forcing the story.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    From Deltapoll twitter
    🚨New Voting Intention🚨
    Labour lead by 24 points in our latest poll.
    Con 19% (-)
    Lab 43% (-3)
    Lib Dem 13% (+3)
    Reform 15% (-1)
    SNP 2% (-)
    Green 5% (-)
    Other 2% (+1)
    Fieldwork: 21st to 24th June 2024
    Sample: 1,568 GB adults
    (Changes from 14th - 17th June 2024)
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821
    gonatas said:

    I think that sleepy, Conservative, Hereford North will be interesting come polling day.
    Greens have moved from 14s to 6/1 to 3/1 last time I looked.
    There appears to be a shift by Labour voters to Greens here which has nothing to do with SKS not being left wing enough, but
    everything to do with the chance to remove Bill Wiggin.

    And the shit in the Wye, as it were
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    gonatas said:

    I think that sleepy, Conservative, Hereford North will be interesting come polling day.
    Greens have moved from 14s to 6/1 to 3/1 last time I looked.
    There appears to be a shift by Labour voters to Greens here which has nothing to do with SKS not being left wing enough, but
    everything to do with the chance to remove Bill Wiggin.

    I havn't made many bad bets this election (those where odds have gone against me since betting) but I did a terrible one on the greens getting no seats a month ago
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,325
    ...

    Dirty sleazy nobody on the slide?

    Run it passed me one more time, as I must have been off school the week they done this.

    How does nobody go down, and 3 go up?
    102%. I suspect it's rounding up.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821

    Agreed. He is putting a cap on potential support. He would have been safer blaming it all on weakness from Obama and Cameron not standing up in 2014 when Crimea was annexed.

    Credit to Nick Robinson for forcing the story.
    Farage may still get that late surge as people forget the Ukraine stuff. Who knows. He only needs to take 2-3 more from the Tories and they are finished forever and he can take over
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,920
    eristdoof said:

    7 Months ago it was 'The Tories always swingback in the 6 months before an election' then it was 'There'll be swing back to the government once the date is anounced.' Then it was 'There'll be swing back once the manifestos are published'.

    Now it's 'There'll be swing back in the voting booths'.

    The straws keep on getting thinner...
    I thought we were on to "There'll be swing back in 2029" now?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    Biggest swing ever in 2024 followed by biggest loss ever in 2029.

    It's just the mathematics.
    It is. But that biggest loss ever could be a good majority. This is also the mathematics.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529
    kinabalu said:

    If people voting Conservative also want Starmer in number ten he's going to have a humungous mandate!
    Unfortunately for Starmer its a mandate for conflicting things, many of which are effectively impossible to achieve in any case.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787
    Leon said:

    Farage may still get that late surge as people forget the Ukraine stuff. Who knows. He only needs to take 2-3 more from the Tories and they are finished forever and he can take over
    He may, but its STFU and move on, not pick a fight with Johnson. He has however given himself a monkey on his back when he didnt need to and will have to carry it around.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644

    There are at least 20% of the population who agree with him though , just because this place is an echo chamber on the subject , not all think like PB "left/right of centre" geeks
    True.

    Last nite I was in a car with a couple of Reform voters who were 100% behind Nige.

    Some of you peeps need to get out more.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    Andy_JS said:

    Looks like an Aperol spritz.
    A hen night drink. Campari and soda or kir royale are the acceptable options
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited June 2024
    Leon said:

    Farage may still get that late surge as people forget the Ukraine stuff. Who knows. He only needs to take 2-3 more from the Tories and they are finished forever and he can take over
    I think in the end Reform will drop (not in polling) but in vote percentage as their vote farming operation on the day is not established . I think a good bet is the bands on them getting 10-14 % given the above , the fact they are not quite standing in all seats , UKIP standing in some seats will confuse some voters and Northern Island being counted within the percentage votes cast.Even with that I think they will win maybe 5 seats as I think their vote is actually pretty concentrated and not as uniform as seat calculators make out
  • DumbosaurusDumbosaurus Posts: 857

    You aint no reform voter mate. Get down to a rough pub in Blackpool for a pint with Farage and the lads.
    This is definitely how english people speak
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787

    To be analytical about it, Farage does seem to arrive in the same place as the MAGA crowd - Biden loves Ukraine, so we hate Ukraine - from a different Journey? Farage journey is EU hatred. He hates the concept of the EU superstate, so is tough on the expansion of the EU superstate. Farage is not selling Putin as good ol tough guy Conservative can’t do any harm, as MAGA leans toward, he is trying to say EU bad, EU expansion kicks someone’s apple cart over and disrupts the order of things.

    But kicking apple carts over and disrupting the world order is why EU fans love the EU project isn’t it? That’s its selling point, not weakness?
    All they have done is recreate the Austro Hungarian empire - with the Hungarians still being the people who like to mess things up.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821

    Unfortunately for Starmer its a mandate for conflicting things, many of which are effectively impossible to achieve in any case.
    He’s going to bring in some vile law forbidding Islamophobia which will be so widely and loosely drawn it will make it impossible to criticise a RELIGION

    Thus reversing the Enlightenment once and for all, and bringing back blasphemy laws. You could argue we are there already but starmer will make it formal. An enormous tragedy for the west. We will be no freer than the Chinese
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838

    He has fucked it. Appealing to a limited audience supporting a murderer and thief is not going to carry the country.
    This is not the States. Frankly I would see it as our job to face off to cnts like Mad Vlad I'd be disappointed in a PM who wouldnt.

    The evidence will be how he can convince voters they might like Marmite after all. He will have to reverse ferret pretty quickly.
    If you say so.
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,244

    But then Big G swings back, and look what happens. No wonder there's shy Tories

    BTW who on here is Leighton Vaughn Williams IRL?
    That sounds like an awesome mashup. Pastoral wistfulness with a hint of folktunes meets agonised discordant postmodern. I'd listen to that.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,325

    Unfortunately for Starmer its a mandate for conflicting things, many of which are effectively impossible to achieve in any case.
    You seem to be cheering on a Starmer Government failure. Firstly, they haven't won yet and let's hope assuming they do they succeed in part. We are currently going backwards, let us pray the decline can at least be arrested.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073

    Look at your own post. You had to exaggerate NF's words, because on their own, they're not sufficient to make your case. Everything to do with Ukraine is completely heightened and exaggerated - every bit of the political and media class is totally invested in pushing the 'Putin evil' message, and there is no room for even a little descent. That opens up what I will call a 'common sense gap' for Farage that he can step into, where he can say something fairly mild - something that Boris once said, something not entirely unsupported by the facts of the case; the entire political and media will mobilise against him, and people who are sick of being told what to think will rally to his side.
    But Farage is still wrong though. The point of the EU “is” to peel Slavonic states away from Russia allegiance to create a super bloc that abides by democracy, fair capitalism, better living standards, education and infrastructure for everyone.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644

    I havn't made many bad bets this election (those where odds have gone against me since betting) but I did a terrible one on the greens getting no seats a month ago
    Is that a goner, State?

    I'd have though anything from 0-5 would be possible. Personally I think more than two would be very surprising, but I'm not a Green expert.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Lol Rishi being Rishi had a pretty good outing on the Suns debate, which almost nobody will have watched
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787
    kinabalu said:

    It is. But that biggest loss ever could be a good majority. This is also the mathematics.
    It could be I dont exclude that.

    We all get to see just how good Starmer is,

    LOL
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529
    Leon said:

    Farage may still get that late surge as people forget the Ukraine stuff. Who knows. He only needs to take 2-3 more from the Tories and they are finished forever and he can take over
    Take over what ?

    Even he manages to become a more important loudmouth that's not equal to being in government.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,942
    Leon said:

    Farage may still get that late surge as people forget the Ukraine stuff. Who knows. He only needs to take 2-3 more from the Tories and they are finished forever and he can take over
    Important caveat for betting purposes.
    Reform have only 609 candidates to the Tories 631.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    You didn’t vote for that, though.
    I want to see the end of this incarnation of the Tories, and I’m torn. After seeing and hearing all our local candidates yesterday my heart says LibDem but my head says Labour.

    As you suggest, I’ll have a ‘hovering pen’ on Election Day.
    Heart always trumps head. It was a stock phrase of X Factor judges - "I'm going with my heart. I'm putting Julio through!"

    So I'm predicting LD for you, OKC.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Leon said:

    Farage may still get that late surge as people forget the Ukraine stuff. Who knows. He only needs to take 2-3 more from the Tories and they are finished forever and he can take over
    There's no evidence for any of this nonsense in the polls though is there?
  • sladeslade Posts: 2,162
    New record claim for posters - Witney Lib Dems 550.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,300

    I realise you know this already, but that could just as well be an artefact of Electoral Calculus as a genuine likely outcome.
    That's my worry. Baxtering is unprecedented at these levels
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    kinabalu said:

    Heart always trumps head. It was a stock phrase of X Factor judges - "I'm going with my heart. I'm putting Julio through!"

    So I'm predicting LD for you, OKC.
    Kinabalu = the sorting hat 😆
  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850

    Is that a goner, State?

    I'd have though anything from 0-5 would be possible. Personally I think more than two would be very surprising, but I'm not a Green expert.
    just wouldnt make that bet now I suppose and the odds have drifted to 9/1 from the 6/1 I put it on at
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821

    A hen night drink. Campari and soda or kir royale are the acceptable options
    I actually wanted a gin and tonic but they’re not allowed to serve hard liquor on the beach

    However I am partial to an aperol spritz. They are a great invention - refreshing on a warm evening and with enough alcohol to satisfy the proper drinker - and not too sweet or sour

    I remember when I first saw them. In bolzano in the Dolomites about 20-25 years ago. They actually called them “a Veneziano”.

    Hah! And I’m right. Just checked. Born in Germanic Italy

    https://www.mobilita.se/shop/cocktail-spritz-veneziano-1
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838

    But Farage is still wrong though. The point of the EU “is” to peel Slavonic states away from Russia allegiance to create a super bloc that abides by democracy, fair capitalism, better living standards, education and infrastructure for everyone.
    How does that point make him wrong?
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    That sounds like an awesome mashup. Pastoral wistfulness with a hint of folktunes meets agonised discordant postmodern. I'd listen to that.
    Google him, he's a Professor of Betology just been wheeled out on radio 4. Hasn't a clue. TSE's people should talk to Leon's agent about how to get talking head gigs in the media.

    Vaughan not Vaughn.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    It could be I dont exclude that.

    We all get to see just how good Starmer is,

    LOL
    Yes we will ... so, you know, open mind.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484

    From Deltapoll twitter
    🚨New Voting Intention🚨
    Labour lead by 24 points in our latest poll.
    Con 19% (-)
    Lab 43% (-3)
    Lib Dem 13% (+3)
    Reform 15% (-1)
    SNP 2% (-)
    Green 5% (-)
    Other 2% (+1)
    Fieldwork: 21st to 24th June 2024
    Sample: 1,568 GB adults
    (Changes from 14th - 17th June 2024)

    Well, that's an interesting poll to a point. Much better for the LDs but if we're seeing a tactical vote shift much worse for the Conservatives.

    Having a look at the More In Common data, it's fascinating to see the big Conservative leads among the two groups most likely to vote - the 65-74 group has the Conservatives ahead 38-25 and among those aged 75+ 43-25. Those two Conservative blocs combined are 48% of the total Conservative vote but these are the two age groups most likely to turn out (75-80% certain to vote) so what may hold up the Conservative vote are the old and the very old.

    The combined Conservative VI among those aged 65+ on MiC is 40.3%, R&W has 25% for its 65+ sub sample.

    There's your difference.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,787

    But Farage is still wrong though. The point of the EU “is” to peel Slavonic states away from Russia allegiance to create a super bloc that abides by democracy, fair capitalism, better living standards, education and infrastructure for everyone.
    And just because you dont like Micjel Barnier that's no reason not to support it.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,325

    Take over what ?

    Even he manages to become a more important loudmouth that's not equal to being in government.
    I think he means a reverse take over of what is left of the Conservative brand. Remember as Farage and Tommy Ten Names enter from the right a shedload of one nation Tories leave stage left.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    This is definitely how english people speak
    Too Irish (Irish stew - true) me old china.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644

    just wouldnt make that bet now I suppose and the odds have drifted to 9/1 from the 6/1 I put it on at
    Seen worse.

    Let's not mention my Potus bets, or the lays on a July GE. :(
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073

    From Deltapoll twitter
    🚨New Voting Intention🚨
    Labour lead by 24 points in our latest poll.
    Con 19% (-)
    Lab 43% (-3)
    Lib Dem 13% (+3)
    Reform 15% (-1)
    SNP 2% (-)
    Green 5% (-)
    Other 2% (+1)
    Fieldwork: 21st to 24th June 2024
    Sample: 1,568 GB adults
    (Changes from 14th - 17th June 2024)

    Good old Dutch Salute in that poll. 🫡
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    stodge said:

    Well, that's an interesting poll to a point. Much better for the LDs but if we're seeing a tactical vote shift much worse for the Conservatives.

    Having a look at the More In Common data, it's fascinating to see the big Conservative leads among the two groups most likely to vote - the 65-74 group has the Conservatives ahead 38-25 and among those aged 75+ 43-25. Those two Conservative blocs combined are 48% of the total Conservative vote but these are the two age groups most likely to turn out (75-80% certain to vote) so what may hold up the Conservative vote are the old and the very old.

    The combined Conservative VI among those aged 65+ on MiC is 40.3%, R&W has 25% for its 65+ sub sample.

    There's your difference.
    Indeed. R and W's age curve is very different and has been far some time, they are much less bullish (along with Techne) on the Tory over 65 vote to most of the others as has been the case since a few months ago, but who is right?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,757
    edited June 2024

    We typically use about 35GW of electricity nationwide.

    33 million cars on the road. Assume an average of 80 kWh battery in each.

    Equals 2,640 GWh. Or just over 3 days worth of 100% of our electricity.

    Unless I've screwed up my maths, in which case I'm sure somebody on pedanticbetting will spot it.
    You have.
    The average daily mileage is about 20m, which is about a tenth of a full charge.

    But yes, we’ll probably need a significant amount above our current generation capacity.

    (edit, I see I got the wrong end of this stick.)
  • El_CapitanoEl_Capitano Posts: 4,244
    slade said:

    New record claim for posters - Witney Lib Dems 550.

    Driving through Witney last week I can well believe it.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821
    Fucking terrible South American folk band ruining everyone’s evening

    So that’s why they’re all voting for le pen
  • All they have done is recreate the Austro Hungarian empire - with the Hungarians still being the people who like to mess things up.
    From within, and us being the ones who like to mess things up from without.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529

    You seem to be cheering on a Starmer Government failure. Firstly, they haven't won yet and let's hope assuming they do they succeed in part. We are currently going backwards, let us pray the decline can at least be arrested.
    Not cheering on failure but being grimly realistic.

    Whoever is in government will have difficult decisions and a electorate which IMO is growing ever more self-entitled.

    And its Labour who will be in government.

    Labour are going to win big.

    Which will allow them to accept some losses when in government.

    How many losses happen will depend on how well they do and what events they have to deal with.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073

    How does that point make him wrong?
    It’s so obvious why. Peeling them away from Russia to give them those things is so much better for the people living in those states.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,594
    Leon said:

    We are ignoring the possibility - which I suggested a couple of days ago - that Farageputinukrainegate HAS had an effect but it’s just not showing - because it has killed the reform surge so their vote is now stuck around 15-19

    Without his foolish words he might now be on 20+

    Maybe. I think there was going to natural ebb anyway, but perhaps it killed off longer term crossover.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948

    From Deltapoll twitter
    🚨New Voting Intention🚨
    Labour lead by 24 points in our latest poll.
    Con 19% (-)
    Lab 43% (-3)
    Lib Dem 13% (+3)
    Reform 15% (-1)
    SNP 2% (-)
    Green 5% (-)
    Other 2% (+1)
    Fieldwork: 21st to 24th June 2024
    Sample: 1,568 GB adults
    (Changes from 14th - 17th June 2024)

    Yep, Dutch salute KLAXON
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Leon said:

    He’s going to bring in some vile law forbidding Islamophobia which will be so widely and loosely drawn it will make it impossible to criticise a RELIGION

    Thus reversing the Enlightenment once and for all, and bringing back blasphemy laws. You could argue we are there already but starmer will make it formal. An enormous tragedy for the west. We will be no freer than the Chinese
    The Labour Government formally abolished the common law offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel in England and Wales in…erm…2008. I may be misremembering but I don’t remember many people getting burned at the stake in the late naughties. I’m also, as an employment lawyer paid to keep my clients abreast of such things, unaware of any proposal that would make sacrilegious speech a criminal or civil issue post election more than it is now. Also Starmer will keep us in the ECHR which has a robust stance on free speech at Article 10. Nice try though.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559
    edited June 2024
    Nigelb said:

    You have.
    The average daily mileage is about 20m, which is about a tenth of a full charge.

    But yes, we’ll probably need a significant amount above our current generation capacity.

    (edit, I see I got the wrong end of this stick.)
    If Labour is serious about tidal (as per their Manifesto), then we can get the nation's fleet of EVs recharged overnight from the tides by 2035.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    edited June 2024

    Not cheering on failure but being grimly realistic.

    Whoever is in government will have difficult decisions and a electorate which IMO is growing ever more self-entitled.

    And its Labour who will be in government.

    Labour are going to win big.

    Which will allow them to accept some losses when in government.

    How many losses happen will depend on how well they do and what events they have to deal with.
    Unlike you to be grim, Richard.
  • Leon said:

    He’s going to bring in some vile law forbidding Islamophobia which will be so widely and loosely drawn it will make it impossible to criticise a RELIGION

    Thus reversing the Enlightenment once and for all, and bringing back blasphemy laws. You could argue we are there already but starmer will make it formal. An enormous tragedy for the west. We will be no freer than the Chinese
    Is this something you've made up in your head, or is this something in their manifesto?

    Criticising any religion is free speech.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746
    Oooh - 12,000 posts. Every one a little classic.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838

    It’s so obvious why. Peeling them away from Russia to give them those things is so much better for the people living in those states.
    Yes, so how does that make what he said (that they gave him the excuse to invade Ukraine) wrong?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821
    Farooq said:

    Shrewd point. The EU is very much like the Austro-Hungarian empire. Apart from the geographic and temporal extent, the governance structure, the wider political context, the demographics, technology, provenance, economy, culture, and the rights of its peoples... it's basically identical.
    The austro-Hungarian empire is by far the best political analogy for the EU. It was essentially an attempt to entrench a specific elite in place, overseeing multiple European countries, with a fake democratic veneer, and their big excuse was “keeping the peace”

    And - they had a point. Given what came after the empire broke up it might have been better if it had endured

    As European multinational empires go it was relatively benign. Certainly better than the Russian or German versions and probably better than napoleons
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559
    slade said:

    New record claim for posters - Witney Lib Dems 550.

    You go down a dramatic street where 1 in 3 houses has a LibDem poster.

    Then think "how are the other 2/3rds voting?"
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,821
    DougSeal said:

    The Labour Government formally abolished the common law offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel in England and Wales in…erm…2008. I may be misremembering but I don’t remember many people getting burned at the stake in the late naughties. I’m also, as an employment lawyer paid to keep my clients abreast of such things, unaware of any proposal that would make sacrilegious speech a criminal or civil issue post election more than it is now. Also Starmer will keep us in the ECHR which has a robust stance on free speech at Article 10. Nice try though.
    See his recent interview with Sadiq khan. Its coming

    We already have a de facto blasphemy law. Go ask that teacher in batley. Oh wait. You can’t. He’s still in hiding. The ECHR not much help there, eh?
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529

    I think he means a reverse take over of what is left of the Conservative brand. Remember as Farage and Tommy Ten Names enter from the right a shedload of one nation Tories leave stage left.
    What happens if the Conservatives don't let him in ?

    There's no shortage of wannabe big shots among Conservative politicians who would not want to take orders from Farage and his rabble.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,692
    From Fuck-All Data:

    "only 3% separating Priti Patel (Witham) from her Labour challenger."

    That will be wiping the smirk off her face.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982

    Good old Dutch Salute in that poll. 🫡
    This poll must be worse for the Tories that a 27% labour lead?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,674
    Farooq said:

    ANME update: I posted the wife's ballot paper (no dog poo bins were harmed in the casting of this ballot).
    Mine remains resolutely unfilled in. I'm waiting for the maximum amount of evidence on who's likeliest to beat the Tories here but it's still looking likely to be the nationalists for me.
    Still no posters visible anywhere, and no new letters after the flurry that arrived about a week ago. The talk in the pub and the shops has been all football and how nice the weather is, but that might change now Scotland have limped out.

    Reject the division of the Nationalists and vote for the Lib Dems.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    DougSeal said:

    Oooh - 12,000 posts. Every one a little classic.

    I recall number 8127 where you called Leon a "pontificating poltroon".

    Downhill from there.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,559
    stodge said:

    Well, that's an interesting poll to a point. Much better for the LDs but if we're seeing a tactical vote shift much worse for the Conservatives.

    Having a look at the More In Common data, it's fascinating to see the big Conservative leads among the two groups most likely to vote - the 65-74 group has the Conservatives ahead 38-25 and among those aged 75+ 43-25. Those two Conservative blocs combined are 48% of the total Conservative vote but these are the two age groups most likely to turn out (75-80% certain to vote) so what may hold up the Conservative vote are the old and the very old.

    The combined Conservative VI among those aged 65+ on MiC is 40.3%, R&W has 25% for its 65+ sub sample.

    There's your difference.
    Been telling you - door-knocking shows the oldies and crumblies are still backing Team Tories.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982

    Is this something you've made up in your head, or is this something in their manifesto?

    Criticising any religion is free speech.
    I mean New Labour introduced a religious hatred law

    https://www.npr.org/2005/06/26/4719118/religious-hatred-law-in-britain-faces-backlash
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,772
    edited June 2024

    Not cheering on failure but being grimly realistic.

    Whoever is in government will have difficult decisions and a electorate which IMO is growing ever more self-entitled.

    And its Labour who will be in government.

    Labour are going to win big.

    Which will allow them to accept some losses when in government.

    How many losses happen will depend on how well they do and what events they have to deal with.
    Well we'll have to see what happens.

    But in crude terms a lot of people hate the Tories and just think that new Labour is going to be much nicer to them - which basically means give them some more money.

    When that money doesn't materialise they are not going to be happy.

    The point is that on here we debate all kinds of political issues that the average person isn't aware of - or should I say doesn't want to be aware of. In contrast the average person is just thinking in terms of "what will I get".
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405

    Seen worse.

    Let's not mention my Potus bets, or the lays on a July GE. :(
    I put my life savings on January 2025. Bound to be an opportunity to trade out.

    Except my pension which I staked on a draw Scotland Hungary last night.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    24,25,26,27,28,29,30,01,02,03,04 and result day 05 = 12 days
    I am getting flashbacks to arguments with my daughter about how to count steps.

    In 1 day it is the 25th, tomorrow not today, so it is 11 days until Friday evening, the day after the election.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529
    kinabalu said:

    Unlike you to be grim, Richard.
    Expect grim and you're likely to be surprised on the upside.

    Unless it involves politicians.
  • Nunu5 said:

    I mean New Labour introduced a religious hatred law

    https://www.npr.org/2005/06/26/4719118/religious-hatred-law-in-britain-faces-backlash
    Which does not cover criticising any religion, which is still legally protected free speech.

    I can say I dislike Islam, or the Catholic Church, or Christianity in general, or Judaism, or any other belief and it is free speech and not a crime.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    Leon said:

    Fucking terrible South American folk band ruining everyone’s evening

    So that’s why they’re all voting for le pen

    Nothing beats a bit of live music on the terrace.
  • .

    I am getting flashbacks to arguments with my daughter about how to count steps.

    In 1 day it is the 25th, tomorrow not today, so it is 11 days until Friday evening, the day after the election.
    Do you count today or not is always a matter of some debate.

    For me the debate is wrapped up by thinking its nearly 7pm and I've got a beer open, so no, today is done.

    Had you said this at 8am this morning, I'd have looked at needing to work today and said yes today has to be counted.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    edited June 2024
    MikeL said:

    Well we'll have to see what happens.

    But in crude terms a lot of people hate the Tories and just think that new Labour is going to be much nicer to them - which basically means give them some more money.

    When that money doesn't materialise they are not going to be happy.

    The point is that on here we debate all kinds of political issues that the average person isn't aware of - or should I say doesn't want to be aware of. In contrast the average person is just thinking in terms of "what will I get".
    IFS damning today. Labour going to have to hike taxes and cut services and fudge borrowing.
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 602
    I just put that new R&W large sample poll though electoral calculus.... wow.... that is catastrophic for the tories 🤯🤯🤯🤯

    The new polls do seem to suggest that reform have hit a roof.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982

    Which does not cover criticising any religion, which is still legally protected free speech.

    I can say I dislike Islam, or the Catholic Church, or Christianity in general, or Judaism, or any other belief and it is free speech and not a crime.
    But what is considered stirring up religious hatred? That seems quite broad and open to interpretation, also I remember at the time there was quite a backlash when it was being passed in parliament and they watered it down somewhat.

    With a gargantuan majority I don't think Leon's speculation is without merit, when Labour have such form.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484

    Been telling you - door-knocking shows the oldies and crumblies are still backing Team Tories.
    Not to the extent they did in 2019 and we only have your anecdotal evidence of what is going on in your part of the world.

    In 2019, the over 65s went 64% Conservative, 17% Labour - if it's now 40.5% Conservative, 25% Labour that's a 16% swing which isn't too shabby. Among younger age groups the swing will be much larger.

    We also have plenty of evidence older voters back Reform so some of your erstwhile Tories (whatever they may tell you on the doorstep) might support Farage.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    Nunu5 said:

    This poll must be worse for the Tories that a 27% labour lead?
    Yes. Because a lot of what PB has been doing is taking poll numbers and putting them into uniform swing models, that are unrealistic as no election in any region or seat is uniform. The biggest variable in this election is the size and precision of tactical voting.

    It’s Brexit. Brexit is really hurting the Tories, at least in this particular stretch of unknown length in British political history.
  • Harry Cole going very easy on SKS. The Sun will back Labour IMHO.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,061
    Had a trawl of Focaldata for Norfolk and its fairly reasonable. 2 x Norwich safely Labour, Tories hold NW Norfolk, SW Norfolk and Broadland and Fakenham and win the new Waveney Valley seat, Labour take Mid Norfolk and Great Yarmouth both highly marginal and LDs squeak N Norfolk again on a tight margin, Labour get a 10% majority and gain in South Norfolk
    5 Lab, 4 Con, 1 LD
    Quite likely
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    It could be I dont exclude that.

    We all get to see just how good Starmer is,

    LOL
    I'm trying to think of some impartial metrics to use to judge how well he does. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,757
    edited June 2024

    How does that point make him wrong?
    Because he’s an EU-phobe totally invested in pushing the EU is evil message.
    To borrow your hyperbolic language.

    (pro tip, Putin actually is pretty evil.)
  • Been telling you - door-knocking shows the oldies and crumblies are still backing Team Tories.
    The difference is that in 2019 you had the votes of the oldies and crumblies, but also had the votes of working 39 year olds onwards etc

    This time you don't. Oldies alone is quite a demographic, but insufficient when everyone who works for a living is against you.

    The Tories used to be the party of those who work for a living. That you're not anymore is a major problem and why you deserve what is coming to you.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,920
    Nunu5 said:

    But what is considered stirring up religious hatred? That seems quite broad and open to interpretation, also I remember at the time there was quite a backlash when it was being passed in parliament and they watered it down somewhat.

    With a gargantuan majority I don't think Leon's speculation is without merit, when Labour have such form.
    Have you thought about this?

    With a gargantuan majority, Labour could pass a law requiring all men to become women, and vice versa. They could pass a law forbidding people to eat apples. They're mad enough to do it. We know what Labour is like. So I would like to say that I think Leon is absolutely spot on this time.
  • AlsoLeiAlsoLei Posts: 1,522

    Harry Cole going very easy on SKS. The Sun will back Labour IMHO.

    Were you watching it?

    The consensus from others seems to be that both leaders did okay - succeeded in getting their key points across, didn't make any obvious errors. Is that your impression too?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812
    Farooq said:

    Shrewd point. The EU is very much like the Austro-Hungarian empire. Apart from the geographic and temporal extent, the governance structure, the wider political context, the demographics, technology, provenance, economy, culture, and the rights of its peoples... it's basically identical.
    Bit of vibrant pubtalk from Alan there, and here comes you with your sparkling water ...
  • mickydroymickydroy Posts: 316

    Harry Cole going very easy on SKS. The Sun will back Labour IMHO.

    Leaving it to the last minute
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,120

    Presumably, this would see the LibDems become the official opposition. Can you imagine it?

    The Tories would oppose most of it in principle, whereas with the LibDems that will only come into play when Labour’s authoritarian control freakery is on display. Otherwise the LDs will be urging Labour to be bolder and do more, which would certainly be a different type of opposition.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,674
    Farooq said:

    If the Lib Dems are likeliest to win here, I will. Same with Labour.

    I've made it clear for years now that my vote is going to be whatever I feel is best to shift the Tories out.
    I voted Lib Dem last time and I have no regrets even though they had no hope in that election in my seat. "Bollocks to Brexit" was the right message for me.

    But this time it's a punishment vote. Tories out. Show me evidence that puts one party ahead of the others, and I'll listen.
    The Tories are losing the general election bigly, whether ANME returns a Tory MP or not.

    So the SNP win your seat they will use as a trigger for Indyref2 and what Scotland and UK really doesn't need that.
  • IanB2 said:

    The Tories would oppose most of it in principle, whereas with the LibDems that will only come into play when Labour’s authoritarian control freakery is on display. Otherwise the LDs will be urging Labour to be bolder and do more, which would certainly be a different type of opposition.
    Not that different, its exactly how SKS treated being Opposition Leader during lockdown.

    Be bolder in locking down for longer, do more lockdowns etc
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,120

    ...

    Reform up despite Putingate.
    The wide range of Reform %ages from national VI polls taken at the same time suggests there is some gross error in at least some of the pollsters’ assumptions. Compare the narrrower ranges for pretty much everyone else.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,757

    There are at least 20% of the population who agree with him though , just because this place is an echo chamber on the subject , not all think like PB "left/right of centre" geeks

    True.

    Last nite I was in a car with a couple of Reform voters who were 100% behind Nige.

    Some of you peeps need to get out more.
    Is there any polling data that supports stategoaway’s “at least 20%” assertion ?

    The yougov polling would tend to suggest not more than 15%.
    https://yougov.co.uk/politics/articles/49523-the-yougov-big-survey-on-nato-and-war
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    .

    Do you count today or not is always a matter of some debate.

    For me the debate is wrapped up by thinking its nearly 7pm and I've got a beer open, so no, today is done.

    Had you said this at 8am this morning, I'd have looked at needing to work today and said yes today has to be counted.
    Bear in mind my daughter was five at the time, and I think you may want to reconsider your answer. In 1 day from 8am on a day it will then be 8am on the next day. Tomorrow.

    A flat floor is not a flight of stairs with 1 step.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Murdoch likes to back the winner in the hope that he can exert some control and take some credit for the win .

    I’m still dubious the Sun will though because of Starmers role in prosecuting some of those involved in the phone hacking .
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    kinabalu said:

    Nothing beats a bit of live music on the terrace.
    Manuel of the Mountains?
  • SKS gave a good answer on the NHS question and private schools. But Harry Cole barely even got out of bed and the audience weren't very...hostile?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,812

    .

    Do you count today or not is always a matter of some debate.

    For me the debate is wrapped up by thinking its nearly 7pm and I've got a beer open, so no, today is done.

    Had you said this at 8am this morning, I'd have looked at needing to work today and said yes today has to be counted.
    You shouldn't count both today and the day when the "it" is happening. So something happening on Thursday is happening in 3 days (not 4).

    That's definitive for me. It's not a matter of debate.
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    Nigelb said:

    Is there any polling data that supports stategoaway’s “at least 20%” assertion ?

    The yougov polling would tend to suggest not more than 15%.
    https://yougov.co.uk/politics/articles/49523-the-yougov-big-survey-on-nato-and-war
    It was 50% of the occupants of the car, but we were not BPC registered.
This discussion has been closed.