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This bodes ill for the Tories & Reform – politicalbetting.com

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  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,766
    HYUFD said:

    Only if Redfield is right and the Tories get 19% and Reform 18%.

    If however JL Partners is right and the Tories are back up to 25%, then 33-34% for Labour could mean a hung parliament
    I do admire your chutzpah. There is no straw too thin for you not to clutch.

    Though seriously, I think you know that your party is doomed this time round and, unlike some on here, you take it with good grace and dignity.
  • Either YouGov have uncovered something or their methodology is whack.
  • Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 752
    I have just watched the best analysis of UK General Election made for US audience... John Oliver 'Last Week Tonight'. Look it up on YouTube...
  • The Canadian Liberals are a far more mellow bunch than the UK Tories. If a PM was getting those kinds of results and polling at Trudeau levels they’d be long gone by now. In fact, if Rishi hadn’t called his GE I have a strong suspicion we might actually have had that summer leadership contest…
    The Russian Liberal Democrats are much more entertaining than our lot.

    Signed.

    Bored at a bus stop.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,698
    kyf_100 said:

    Yep, I would be looking at leaving on April 6th 2025 for precisely that reason.
    I would be looking to leave well before April 6th - to make sure everything was in place on April 6th..
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 923

    YouGov and Electoral Calculus aren't based on an actual poll on the streets of Bicester (etc), though.

    What is intriguing me more is the weighting from raw numbers of 160/64/130 to percentages of 31%/31%/30% (LAB/LD/CON).

    I've looked harder at the data tables now and I can't see what has caused it. But in table 13, 95/95/93 is the weighted base - the unweighted figures are 160/64/130. My question is, on what criteria has the weighting been done ie if they only found 64 people actually saying they would vote LD, what caused them to up-weight that number (and down-weight the others)?
    Presumably it's weighted by demographics, so in their sample of 350 they think middle-class middle aged sandal wearers are seriously under-represented compared to the general Bicester electorate (or something similar). It does seem a rather extreme re-weighting though and potentially it will drive voter behaviour.
  • TweedledeeTweedledee Posts: 1,405
    kyf_100 said:

    Yep, I would be looking at leaving on April 6th 2025 for precisely that reason.
    You need to leave by April 4 latest, and sell on the 6th. And best of luck but I greatly fear ms reeves will interfere with your plans. It's not just the rate of CGT she can alter, it's everything about it.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,745

    Totally unsurprisingly. Cameron assessment of UKIP / Reform was spot on.

    I was thinking however, given many paper candidates are going to win Labour seats. I wonder what the under / over line on the time before a Labour MP suspended for previous comments or actions.
    I believe Reform (certainly previous iterations) has a blanket ban on all former BNP members being candidates. The Tory Party did not have a similar ban at the time I was familiar with the issue.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,758
    Farage’s ‘Sheffield Rally’ is this weekend at the NEC:

    https://x.com/nigel_farage/status/1806367143564280056
  • Either YouGov have uncovered something or their methodology is whack.

    To be fair, with what is going on with votung preferences, everyones methodology is going to be a bit whack.

    Treat the exit poll with caution, at least until who got what percentage at Sunderland South an hour later
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,455

    But in table 13, 95/95/93 is the weighted base - the unweighted figures are 160/64/130. My question is, on what criteria has the weighting been done ie if they only found 64 people actually saying they would vote LD, what caused them to up-weight that number (and down-weight the others)?
    They use "rake weighting" as quoted:

    We use rake weighting to make our sample representative of the constituency. In particular we weight our data to match ONS targets on the following variables: age, gender, highest qualification, plus 2019 general election vote and likelihood to vote in this upcoming general election.

    It's widely used in opinion surveys.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795
    eek said:

    41% - so hardly hung Parliament terrority


    ·
    Jun 25
    Wesminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 41% (+1)
    CON: 25% (+2)
    RFM: 15% (-3)
    LDM: 11% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (=)
    SNP: 3% (-1)

    Via
    @JLPartnersPolls
    , 21-24 Jun.
    So are we now cherrypicking separate party scores from different pollsters?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    While on the subject of Glasto, I came across this paper when looking for something else recently:

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0013935121013566

    "Highlights



    Illicit drugs were found in the river running through the Glastonbury Festival.


    MDMA was found at environmentally damaging levels in the local aquatic ecosystem.


    [...]

    Levels of cocaine were high enough to disrupt the lifecyle of the European eel.


    Use of treatment wetlands and preventing public urination could reduce the issue."
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,290

    Perhaps understandably, there’s not much chat on here about the French elections.

    As it stands, Le Pen’s mob (RN) are close to getting an absolute majority in the National Assembly.

    If they DON’T get an absolute majority, which I still suspect is the most likely outcome, then we can expect some fragile minority coalition of Macron’s party and the rump centre-right.

    But if they DO get a majority, not only are the promising to do a Truss (ie ballooning the deficit), they are also promising a complete about-turn in the French position on Ukraine. Le Pen has reminded voters that it is the PM not the President that controls the military budget, and Bardella has signalled that France wouldn’t supply Ukraine with long-range missiles. Several RN candidates have proven financial links with Moscow.

    This election is a major European event, with significant implications for the UK.

    Yes, in the sense that a lot of people are going to prefer to live in the UK than France if the far-right wins.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,440

    You need to leave by April 4 latest, and sell on the 6th. And best of luck but I greatly fear ms reeves will interfere with your plans. It's not just the rate of CGT she can alter, it's everything about it.
    "The top destinations for millionaires leaving the UK include Paris" ???

    Surely some mistake there? They will be fleeing France soon enough as chaos comes.
  • Farage’s ‘Sheffield Rally’ is this weekend at the NEC:

    https://x.com/nigel_farage/status/1806367143564280056

    Kiss of death surely.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,034
    IanB2 said:

    Spotting early results that point to flaws in the exit poll’s ‘votes into seats’ algorithm could also be profitable,
    Expectations are for a Labour landslide so I think that in safe Labour seats there will be a drift towards Greens, Galloway's mob and assorted leftwing fringe candidates, and I can see the Labour percentage actually declining in a number of seats. The poll in Starmer's own seat suggested exactly that.

    As many of the early seat announcements will be in these types of seats some of our more excitable posters (Leon, I'm looking at you!) will be telling us the polls are all wrong and Rishi's going to do it.

    Be like May when some idiot (can't remember who) was posting "Susan Hall! Susan Hall! Susan Hall!" early on.

    I'll be waiting for the swing in the first marginals, ie any Tory seat with a majority of less than 20k.
    I'm also expecting the individual results to be all over the place but with Labour ending up with 375-400 seats.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924
    viewcode said:

    How the hell do you do a MRP for a named individual??? Did they just poll Islington North?
    The MRP has Corbyn doing 8pts better than the constituency poll conducted at the same time. This isn't a huge difference given margin of error.

    Notable difference is that the constituency poll suggests Tories are voting for Labour to beat Corbyn, something MRPs cannot pick up.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,917
    Penddu2 said:

    I have just watched the best analysis of UK General Election made for US audience... John Oliver 'Last Week Tonight'. Look it up on YouTube...

    Do you have a link? YouTube search doesn't seem to find it for me.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,766
    Sad though I am to read that hundreds of thousands of Tory-voting millionaires are going to leave the country once Labour is elected and raises their taxes, it does mean that Labour's path to victory in 2029 will be easier (provided the ex-pats don't get organised and vote from overseas).
  • eekeek Posts: 29,698

    So are we now cherrypicking separate party scores from different pollsters?
    HYUFD is just clutching at any straw he can find...
  • God Taunton is grim. This bit of it anyway.

    Any party got a policy to annexe it and make it part of Minehead in their manifesto?

    They would know how to deal with eel poisoning Glastonbury Drug Abusers. Oh Yes.
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,924

    The MRP has Corbyn doing 8pts better than the constituency poll conducted at the same time. This isn't a huge difference given margin of error.

    Notable difference is that the constituency poll suggests Tories are voting for Labour to beat Corbyn, something MRPs cannot pick up.
    On the evidence I have seen I think Jezza is going to lose narrowly but DYOR
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,433
    Penddu2 said:

    I have just watched the best analysis of UK General Election made for US audience... John Oliver 'Last Week Tonight'. Look it up on YouTube...

    That would make for a surprise. I think John Oliver is hilarious but when he gets onto British politics or topics he often gets very lazy, possibly because his audience is not likely to be as interested or aware of any subtleties as he is.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,904

    The Canadian Liberals are a far more mellow bunch than the UK Tories. If a PM was getting those kinds of results and polling at Trudeau levels they’d be long gone by now. In fact, if Rishi hadn’t called his GE I have a strong suspicion we might actually have had that summer leadership contest…
    Even now the Liberals are still projected to win more seats than they had in 2011 when Trudeau took over the leadership however
  • Andy_JS said:

    Yes, in the sense that a lot of people are going to prefer to live in the UK than France if the far-right wins.
    Thats how we ended up with Farage in the first place.
  • OnboardG1OnboardG1 Posts: 1,589

    Either YouGov have uncovered something or their methodology is whack.

    If that YG poll were borne out it would be apocalyptically bad for the Tories due to the Lib Dems picking up share. At this level of support though the EC model isn't very stable so it tends to have a normal one from time to time.

    CON 56
    LAB 440
    LIB 82
    Reform 22
    Green 4 (lol)
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,440

    Kiss of death surely.
    If becomes like Earl's Court certainly.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,904
    edited June 2024
    eek said:

    41% - so hardly hung Parliament terrority


    ·
    Jun 25
    Wesminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 41% (+1)
    CON: 25% (+2)
    RFM: 15% (-3)
    LDM: 11% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (=)
    SNP: 3% (-1)

    Via
    @JLPartnersPolls
    , 21-24 Jun.
    No but if Reform and the Greens ate into the Labour vote more and the SNP vote held up it could be, certainly if the Tories also got to 30%+. Though yes that is unlikely
  • Sad though I am to read that hundreds of thousands of Tory-voting millionaires are going to leave the country once Labour is elected and raises their taxes, it does mean that Labour's path to victory in 2029 will be easier (provided the ex-pats don't get organised and vote from overseas).

    It would certainly sort out the housing crisis
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,795

    To be fair, with what is going on with votung preferences, everyones methodology is going to be a bit whack.

    Treat the exit poll with caution, at least until who got what percentage at Sunderland South an hour later
    People say this every time. Yet only a fool backs against Sir John Curtice. He's been within a few seats every time I think.
  • novanova Posts: 754

    So are we now cherrypicking separate party scores from different pollsters?
    It gives, "I'll waiting for Survation" a whole new dimension.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,433

    On the evidence I have seen I think Jezza is going to lose narrowly but DYOR
    I still hope he wins. Genuinely.

    Yes, it would be hilarious, but if he has so much local support it'd be nice to see that rewarded.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,280

    God Taunton is grim. This bit of it anyway.

    Any party got a policy to annexe it and make it part of Minehead in their manifesto?

    They would know how to deal with eel poisoning Glastonbury Drug Abusers. Oh Yes.

    You should try Salisbury. Great cathedral.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982

    Farage’s ‘Sheffield Rally’ is this weekend at the NEC:

    https://x.com/nigel_farage/status/1806367143564280056

    Well alright!
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,766

    It would certainly sort out the housing crisis
    And reduce the pressure on state schools as all those millionaires priced out of the private sector would now be sending their little darlings to international schools in Dubai or wherever.
    Several birds killed with one stone.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,904
    edited June 2024

    Look what Find out now have found out now

    MRP projection for Islington North:

    ⚪️ Corbyn 37% (+37)
    🔴 LAB 33% (-31)
    🔵 CON 12% (+2)
    🟢 GRN 8% (-)

    Via
    @ElectCalculus
    /
    @FindoutnowUK
    , 14-24 June

    It would be good if Corbyn and Farage got elected in my view, adds to the diversity of views in the Commons. Just as long as they don't become PM and Corbyn is at least a hardworking constituency MP.

    Islington N could also be the only swing from Labour to Conservatives in the UK
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited June 2024

    Sad though I am to read that hundreds of thousands of Tory-voting millionaires are going to leave the country once Labour is elected and raises their taxes, it does mean that Labour's path to victory in 2029 will be easier (provided the ex-pats don't get organised and vote from overseas).

    What a grown up take....if we want to get back to growth we need to attract wealth generators to come to the UK and stay in the UK. Its is what Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson got and why we had continued good growth when they took over. They got the balance about right.

    The opposite has been happening at record rates.

    If we don't sort growth and productivity, the millionaires will be fine (the world is easy for them to move about and plenty of countries want them*), it you and the majority of the public that won't be. Ever higher taxes, ever worse services.

    Its why the Tories have be so bad over the past few years.

    * even socialist leaning countries like Portugal have realised this.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    Looking at the data tables for this (available from here), the raw numbers are:
    LAB 160
    LDM 64
    CON 130
    GRN 20
    RFM 26

    So there's some hefty weighting going on to arrive at the percentages above. Can anybody who understands these things take a look at the supplementary questions asked, and work out what has motivated the weighting? (It's not just "likelihood to vote" - I looked at that myself.)
    Past-vote weighting does a lot of the heavy lifting.
    25 2019 Lib Dems voters in the sample, weighted up to 78.
    81 2019 Labour voters, weighted down to 49.

    I would not be very confident in the results from this poll. The degree of weighting applied makes a mockery of the quoted margin of error.

    I'm sure that the weighted results will be more accurate than if they'd published the unweighted results, but, still.
  • rcs1000 said:

    You should try Salisbury. Great cathedral.
    It was before it was illegally occupied in 1536.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,536
    kyf_100 said:

    Yep, I would be looking at leaving on April 6th 2025 for precisely that reason.
    It’s a good thing according to this Guardian talking head

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jun/21/britain-millionaires-leave-tax-havens-uk
  • If you are going to counter argue at least not substitute (presumably deliberate) extreme for racist bigots - you dont fool anyone with trying to match the two like that - many people are extreme (do we really want everybody to have the same establishment led position on things?) ,far less is what one poster on here hysterically refers to as racist bigots
    It's not hysterical to refer to a party that has numerous candidates linked to the BNP, and is led by the notorious racist Nigel Farage as racist bigots.

    It's the plain speaking truth.

    I'm sorry if you find racism acceptable, or find yourself so sensitive you dislike hearing racists called out for what they are, but I for one believe in free speech and honesty.

    So I will use my free speech and honesty to call out the nasty, bigoted racists for what they actually are.

    Nigel Farage is a nasty, bigoted racist.

    Do you actually disagree with that? Or are you just so fragile the term racist offends your sensitive eyes?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,745

    Kiss of death surely.
    That's falling in the sea.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,745

    That's falling in the sea.
    And don't call me Shirley.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,128

    Maybe you shouldn't have shouted "Oi, garçon, beer!" as you walked in?
    The rendition of the whole of the St Crispian
    speech from Henry V was possibly a tad over the top.
  • Oh well. I've got front seat on the top deck now and its sunny.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,581
    edited June 2024

    Agreed - Diamond Age wonderful. I'm a massive Stephenson fan (my favourite is Anathem - profound things to say about deep time, knowledge and what lasts even if it goes a bit batshit at the end). I've also read 'Fall, or Dodge in Hell' (profound things to say about what might happen when we actually get to to upload consciousness into the cloud and essentially achieve immortality - although Greg Bear and dozens of others were there first - Cory Doctorow good on this in 'walkaway') and in both those books there is the moment around page 300 where you know you are in for 'the slog'...

    In his book 'Reamde' I never made it past page 300 even though the set-up was brilliant.
    Reamde was a tediously predictable potboiler. Avoid.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,674

    God Taunton is grim. This bit of it anyway.

    Any party got a policy to annexe it and make it part of Minehead in their manifesto?

    They would know how to deal with eel poisoning Glastonbury Drug Abusers. Oh Yes.

    Market towns have been hollowed out by the motor car. A hundred years ago the middle class solicitor, teacher, doctor would have lived in town. Now they've pissed off to the villages.

    Decent cheap breakfast or tea & cake at the indoor market if you're still there tomorrow.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,433

    Indeed. The biggest threat to the LibDems' ambitions in the South of England is people voting Labour in non-Labour targets.

    Yes, I can see a lot of areas having Labour in a still distant second, surging past LDs who have a lot of local strength, off the back of national vote surging.

    In fairness those areas of relative LD strength are often not trying at all either, since their activists are focusing on target seats.

    Which is a sound strategy, but in a Tory collapse scenario it may mean the LDs have ignored a number of areas that were possibilities for them after all.
  • stodge said:

    They use "rake weighting" as quoted:

    We use rake weighting to make our sample representative of the constituency. In particular we weight our data to match ONS targets on the following variables: age, gender, highest qualification, plus 2019 general election vote and likelihood to vote in this upcoming general election.

    It's widely used in opinion surveys.
    Yes, but looking at the tables, most of those criteria wouldn't cause much change in the weighting. @Pulpstar has found the one that is making the difference: the recalled vote from the 2019 GE. In their sample, only 10% of those who voted last time say they voted LD, but the estimated true 2029 LD vote in the bits making up the new constituency is 27%.

    I wonder why they had such trouble finding LD voters. Maybe they concentrated too much on Bicester, and not enough on Kidlington (which was in Layla Moran's seat)?
  • kyf_100kyf_100 Posts: 4,954
    Taz said:

    It’s a good thing according to this Guardian talking head

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jun/21/britain-millionaires-leave-tax-havens-uk
    Since the top 1% of taxpayers shoulder about 30% of the UK's tax burden, I wish such commentators the best of luck paying for their socialist utopia out of their own pockets.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,766

    What a grown up take....if we want to get back to growth we need to attract wealth generators to come to the UK and stay in the UK. Its is what Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson got and why we had continued good growth when they took over. They got the balance about right.

    The opposite has been happening at record rates.

    If we don't sort growth and productivity, the millionaires will be fine (the world is easy for them to move about), it you and the majority of the public that won't be. Ever higher taxes, ever worse services.

    Its why the Tories have be so bad over the past few years.
    Thanks. I'm less convinced than you are that the sort of people who bugger off to low-tax regimes at the first whiff of a Labour government are wealth generators - they're just rich, greedy and selfish. Under the current tax regime, and any envisaged by Labour, they would still be extremely rich and want for nothing. It's just greed, an unpopular and rather under-used word these days.
  • Thats how we ended up with Farage in the first place.
    We didn't end up with Farage.

    He's a nobody, failed loser who has never yet been elected to Parliament and only got his name well known by claiming credit for a eurosceptic movement that preexisted him (for non-racist reasons) since Maastricht and that so recognised he was toxic he got excluded from the Leave campaign in the referendum.

    He'll hopefully be defeated for the eighth time in a row this year, but if he's not he'll still be leading a party with fewer MPs than the Lib Dems or SNP. Until he pisses off to America once more and good riddance when he does.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Heathener said:

    This ICC T20 World Cup has been a shambles hasn’t it?

    Yes. No reserve day for the semi-final, when the final is three days away, is unforgivable.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,745
    ...

    Yes, but looking at the tables, most of those criteria wouldn't cause much change in the weighting. @Pulpstar has found the one that is making the difference: the recalled vote from the 2019 GE. In their sample, only 10% of those who voted last time say they voted LD, but the estimated true 2029 LD vote in the bits making up the new constituency is 27%.

    I wonder why they had such trouble finding LD voters. Maybe they concentrated too much on Bicester, and not enough on Kidlington (which was in Layla Moran's seat)?
    Perhaps the culprits were just deeply ashamed.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,766

    It's not hysterical to refer to a party that has numerous candidates linked to the BNP, and is led by the notorious racist Nigel Farage as racist bigots.

    It's the plain speaking truth.

    I'm sorry if you find racism acceptable, or find yourself so sensitive you dislike hearing racists called out for what they are, but I for one believe in free speech and honesty.

    So I will use my free speech and honesty to call out the nasty, bigoted racists for what they actually are.

    Nigel Farage is a nasty, bigoted racist.

    Do you actually disagree with that? Or are you just so fragile the term racist offends your sensitive eyes?
    Unusually for me, I agree with Bart.
    What is it about Mr Farage that attracts the significant number of racist bigots still around in this country (sadly) to vote Reform?
  • Sandpit said:

    Yes. No reserve day for the semi-final, when the final is three days away, is unforgivable.
    Especially considering the other semi final has got a reserve day.

    And the rules specified that India plays in this one, no draw for them.

    It's just not cricket.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    https://fulldisclosure.whotargets.me/p/6c8f38f9-71d3-43f5-b3ea-f8d101a7009a

    A few people have mentioned how they’ve been targeted irrelevantly by political ads on social media. This piece here is fascinating and nerdy (and yet more evidence that the CCHQ team have suffered a monumental brain drain) - but includes nuggets like the fact that the Tories’ ads on Meta have had no geotargeting beyond blanket ‘England & Wales’.

    But well worth a read. Apologies if already shared.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,483

    Kiss of death surely.
    Ein bloke, Ein Pint, Ein Moron!!!
  • carnforth said:

    Market towns have been hollowed out by the motor car. A hundred years ago the middle class solicitor, teacher, doctor would have lived in town. Now they've pissed off to the villages.

    Decent cheap breakfast or tea & cake at the indoor market if you're still there tomorrow.
    It is sad how many empty shops and tat shops there are in what is one of Englands nicer county towns.

    Sadly the small villages that were home as recently as the 1970s to many farm workers and labours etc. are just commuter dwellings now and contractors drive tens of miles to work farms.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155
    Selebian said:

    Don't know Brookmyre, will have to look him up. Haven't read any Stephenson for ages, either. Funny how some quotes stay with you though.
    I read Termination Shock recently. Not as good as Diamond Age/Anathem/Cryptonomicon, but still enjoyable to read.

    Interesting how wrong he was about Covid though. (Thank fuck)
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,128

    You need to leave by April 4 latest, and sell on the 6th. And best of luck but I greatly fear ms reeves will interfere with your plans. It's not just the rate of CGT she can alter, it's everything about it.
    Mrs Reeves is probably spending the whole week practising her “shocked” face for when she sees the books and realises major tax increases are urgently needed after all.
  • We didn't end up with Farage.

    He's a nobody, failed loser who has never yet been elected to Parliament and only got his name well known by claiming credit for a eurosceptic movement that preexisted him (for non-racist reasons) since Maastricht and that so recognised he was toxic he got excluded from the Leave campaign in the referendum.

    He'll hopefully be defeated for the eighth time in a row this year, but if he's not he'll still be leading a party with fewer MPs than the Lib Dems or SNP. Until he pisses off to America once more and good riddance when he does.
    I was referring to his Hugenot origins you muppet.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    edited June 2024

    That was the aim!

    Less boring than either Englands football team or a Snake v Sir Starmer Smith debate at any rate.

    Why can't Bill Mclaren do the Labour debates?
    That age old avoidance tactic when you’re found out being a bit nasty to claim it was all a joke. Leon does that a lot.

    The Right have also made a habit of being vicious and nasty these past five years and finding it all ‘funny’. Well your Day of Judgement is upon you. The Electorate strikes back.

    I hope you do get back alright.
  • berberian_knowsberberian_knows Posts: 70
    edited June 2024
    O/T (completely bonkers more like) Would it be possible to introduce a higher employer's national insurance rate for immigrant workers. It'd make no immediate difference to the sainted NHS (receipts out=receipts in), but would encourage "British Jobs for British Workers". The NHS would also see they could optimize their budget if they went domestic. We have a higher tax rate for graduates (although it's not called that) so it's not completely off the wall? You'd want a nice 5 year tapered introduction so employers could train up domestic staff obviously. A Brexit benefit?
  • It is sad how many empty shops and tat shops there are in what is one of Englands nicer county towns.

    Sadly the small villages that were home as recently as the 1970s to many farm workers and labours etc. are just commuter dwellings now and contractors drive tens of miles to work farms.
    Why's it sad?

    Its free choice and people moving on.

    So pathetic to see people bemoaning a century old technology.

    What next, ban the Internet so people go shopping in the stores instead of Amazon.

    We have cars and the Internet, that's progress. If we don't want shops, that's no big deal, that land can be repurposed for other more valuable use.
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 982
    Keir Starmer has been given such an easy ride. by the media.

    because they love him- human rights lawyer, economic moderate and mass migration lover.
  • EPGEPG Posts: 6,729
    Nunu5 said:

    Keir Starmer has been given such an easy ride. by the media.

    because they love him- human rights lawyer, economic moderate and mass migration lover.

    Evidence or vibes? Because your vibe is giving anti-human rights.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,593

    NEW THREAD AND IT BASED ON A SUB-SAMPLE

  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited June 2024

    Thanks. I'm less convinced than you are that the sort of people who bugger off to low-tax regimes at the first whiff of a Labour government are wealth generators - they're just rich, greedy and selfish. Under the current tax regime, and any envisaged by Labour, they would still be extremely rich and want for nothing. It's just greed, an unpopular and rather under-used word these days.
    This isn't a Labour thing. Many wealth creators already have and far less are coming, this was the discussion. Brexit, high taxes, shitty levels of crime in London to name a few things.

    Record levels of people are leaving the UK across the board. Large numbers are highly educated and / or wealthy.

    Its Labour job to turn that trend around.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,433

    Why's it sad?

    Its free choice and people moving on.

    So pathetic to see people bemoaning a century old technology.

    What next, ban the Internet so people go shopping in the stores instead of Amazon.

    We have cars and the Internet, that's progress. If we don't want shops, that's no big deal, that land can be repurposed for other more valuable use.
    I don't celebrate the hollowing out of small towns. I live in a small town. But times have moved on, and I don't see what could possibly restore it. People's habits are different, and what measures people do suggest don't seem like they would massively impact things.

    Town centres will presumably be mostly for living in and eating out.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,228

    O/T (completely bonkers more like) Would it be possible to introduce a higher employer's national insurance rate for immigrant workers. It'd make no immediate difference to the sainted NHS (receipts out=receipts in), but would encourage "British Jobs for British Workers". The NHS would also see they could optimize their budget if they went domestic. We have a higher tax rate for graduates (although it's not called that) so it's not completely off the wall? You'd want a nice 5 year tapered introduction so employers could train up domestic staff obviously. A Brexit benefit?

    https://www.gov.uk/uk-visa-sponsorship-employers/immigration-skills-charge

    There already is an additional surcharge, not part of employer NI but to the same effect.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,089
    Carnyx said:

    What impresses me was this random guy knew what nondoms were, and c ould instantly name an admittedly prominent example of the species.
    Quite obviously, a made up anecdote designed as a worm to spread its way across social media.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,772
    HYUFD said:

    Macron to be fair to him is quite regal in style and gets on well with King Charles and Camilla.

    If you wanted a leader who would be manning the barricades and leading a storm of the Bastille it would be Le Pen or Melenchon, Macron would be an aristocrat trying to avoid the guillotine.

    Culturally London has more in common with Paris than the provincial UK and vice versa
    Yes because londoners are c**ts and so are parisians
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,371
    edited June 2024
    Nunu5 said:

    Keir Starmer has been given such an easy ride. by the media.

    because they love him- human rights lawyer, economic moderate and mass migration lover.

    Because his tack to the centre much closer aligns to the centre of the world view of much of the media. For all the Telegraph right wing, Guardian left wing, a lot of these people are actually friends, married to one another etc. There are journa lists who freelance and job-in at across the board. Its a very small world.

    Blair, same with Cameron, even Boris (for mayor) got fair easy rides. Those that are further away from that e.g. Corbyn or Truss, get a really hard time.

    Also, if you know who is going to win, you don't want to be left on the naughty step from day one. No exclusives, no interviews with important people, no jollies on the foreign trips etc.

    Whenever a government targets income earners at about £100k or sole traders, the media go mental...no idea why.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    dixiedean said:

    Do you have a link? YouTube search doesn't seem to find it for me.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkAqwHiAR-g
  • Past-vote weighting does a lot of the heavy lifting.
    25 2019 Lib Dems voters in the sample, weighted up to 78.
    81 2019 Labour voters, weighted down to 49.

    I would not be very confident in the results from this poll. The degree of weighting applied makes a mockery of the quoted margin of error.

    I'm sure that the weighted results will be more accurate than if they'd published the unweighted results, but, still.
    Yes, thank you to you and Pulpstar for finding the source of the weighting. I agree that it makes the poll less reliable - a bit of a shame really.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,089

    Still little sign of herding the polling. It somewhere between absolute terrible and wipe out for the Tories.

    As I said yesterday, if the election was close and we had this level of polling disparity, people would be screaming to know what the pollsters are playing at.
  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,969

    . . . in case you missed this story from the Great White North . . .

    CBC News - Conservatives win longtime Liberal stronghold Toronto-St. Paul's in shock byelection result
    Stunning result raises questions about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's future

    Conservative candidate Don Stewart has won the longtime federal Liberal stronghold of Toronto-St. Paul's, a stunning result that raises questions about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's future.

    Stewart's victory is shocking because the seat has been held by the Liberals for more than 30 years — even through the party's past low points, such as the 2011 federal election that returned just 34 Liberal MPs to Parliament.

    Before Monday's vote, a Conservative candidate hadn't been competitive in Toronto–St. Paul's since the 1980s. The party hadn't won a seat in urban Toronto since the 2011 federal election. . . .

    . . . Stewart, a consultant, claimed victory with about 42 per cent of the vote against Church, a former Parliament Hill staffer and lawyer, who took roughly 40 per cent of the ballots cast.

    The Liberals' poor showing in a stronghold like this could prompt some soul-searching for Trudeau, who has seen his popularity plummet as inflation, the cost of living crisis, high home prices and surging immigration levels drive voter discontent.

    This Conservative upset is likely to lead to some anxiety in the Liberal caucus because such a dramatic vote swing could put other supposedly "safe" seats in play for the Conservatives in the next general election. . . .

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/byelection-polls-liberal-conservative-ballot-vote-1.7243748

    This is not a good time to be in government! (As Sir Keir may fairly soon find out). So far as I can see only Meloni seems to be bucking trend in the major countries - apart from Biden who has Trump to thank for that.
  • Beibheirli_CBeibheirli_C Posts: 8,192
    Farooq said:

    Python is accessible both in terms of syntax and in terms of resources. It's not just a good programming language, it's a great one.

    People sneer at it because it's not a formula 1 car, but most people need a Ford Transit, not some 220mph bastard where the steering wheel alone costs £40,000
    Actually I sneer at it because I find the way some features have been implemented looks incredibly kludgy like a poor afterthought. Abstract classes would be an obvious example.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,211
    edited June 2024

    Farage’s ‘Sheffield Rally’ is this weekend at the NEC:

    https://x.com/nigel_farage/status/1806367143564280056

    Begun, the Farage Rally has... :)
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,983

    Feelings can be helpful. They can also betray you. It’s trying to sort them out into the right camps that’s the tricky part.

    The other thing to say is that precedent is not always a bad thing to rely on. Much has been written here about how maybe too much reliance is being placed on the fact that some of the forecast results are just so bonkers off-the-charts that they simply can’t happen. I agree with the sentiment, but it is good to remind ourselves from time to time that (a) polls can be wrong and (b) it is hard to model for elections that are producing these kinds of swings and change in sentiment. You only need look at the variance in the polls to see that at the moment (unless we get some rapid herding next week) someone is going to be professionally embarrassed.

    So, I have a feeling that the gap between Labour and the Tories is going to be a little closer than suggested when the actual vote comes around. And from a seat perspective, I think they’ll cling on in at least 100, perhaps even get up to a 1997 seat count though I think that’s at the very top end of my expectations. But I have been revising my view downward all campaign. I could change my mind.
    IIRC John Curtice has said within the last 24 hours or so that any Tory result between 50-150 can be justified from the current data; also that the issue is going to be (gosh) how the huge shift in voting patterns plays out in different places. As there isn't really data on what happens with this sort of volatility our own best guesses are going to be in play.

    In 1997 Labour got a 179 seat majority with a 12.5 % point lead. Next week (in 6 or perhaps 9 days time, anyway 7 sleeps till exit poll) the Labour lead (over the Tories) will, I suppose be between 12 and 25 points. That span - enormous - plus geographical variability will keep us awake for some time after 10pm Thursday, just 6, 7 or 8 days away.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,480
    edited June 2024
    kyf_100 said:

    Since the top 1% of taxpayers shoulder about 30% of the UK's tax burden, I wish such commentators the best of luck paying for their socialist utopia out of their own pockets.
    The incoming Labour government will have two familiar problems:

    1. It will load far too much taxation on the private sector to fund the public sector, at the cost of private sector jobs and growth

    2 "wealth" will be a word spat out with venom by several hundred back-benchers, each trying to appear the most vitriolic in condemnation of those who have it. They will be happy to wave wealth off at the airport.

    Then they will wonder why they are having to close hospital wards.

    If there was ever a good election to lose, then this is one of them. The total domination of Parliament by Labour over the next five years means they will wholly own everything that fucks up. "It was the fault of the Tories!" What Tories?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155
    edited June 2024

    Yes, but looking at the tables, most of those criteria wouldn't cause much change in the weighting. @Pulpstar has found the one that is making the difference: the recalled vote from the 2019 GE. In their sample, only 10% of those who voted last time say they voted LD, but the estimated true 2029 LD vote in the bits making up the new constituency is 27%.

    I wonder why they had such trouble finding LD voters. Maybe they concentrated too much on Bicester, and not enough on Kidlington (which was in Layla Moran's seat)?
    Part of the challenge for Lib Dems has always been voter churn in their (target) seats. People who voted for them last time, moving out, replaced by voters not previously in a Lib Dem target seat, and so have to be persuaded from scratch.

    So you'd expect voter churn to reduce the number of 2019 Lib Dems in a seat that had a Lib Dem share more than twice their national average. But not, perhaps, by that much.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,654

    Your anecdote is backed up with the video I linked down below. Rise in rich people leaving UK, fall in rich people relocating to UK.
    And what is @kinabalu’s reaction?

    Exactly as I predicted. “Let them go”. This is a “pain drain”

    It’s exactly the same as “why don’t you fuck off and join the Tories”

    Britain is doomed
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,536
    kyf_100 said:

    Since the top 1% of taxpayers shoulder about 30% of the UK's tax burden, I wish such commentators the best of luck paying for their socialist utopia out of their own pockets.
    I agree. For people like him it really is be careful what you wish for.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,559

    This is not a good time to be in government! (As Sir Keir may fairly soon find out). So far as I can see only Meloni seems to be bucking trend in the major countries - apart from Biden who has Trump to thank for that.
    Has something to do with Trudeau the Younger's problem, as with Sunak.

    HOWEVER think two other factors are at play in the Great White North:

    > Justin Trudeau has been PM since 2015, thus significant fatigue with him AND his Liberal Party; similar to UK voter fatigue with CUP.

    > Pierre Poilievre, Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, is WAY more of an electoral asset than his predecessor who lost last election to JT; similar to Starmer compared to Corbyn.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,983

    The incoming Labour government will have two familiar problems:

    1. It will load far too much taxation on the private sector to fund the public sector, at the cost of private sector jobs and growth

    2 "wealth" will be a word spat out with venom by several hundred back-benchers, each trying to appear the most vitriolic in condemnation of those who have it. They will be happy to wave wealth off at the airport.

    Then they will wonder why they are having to close hospital wards.

    If there was ever a good election to lose, then this is one of them. The total domination of Parliament by Labour over the next five years means they will wholly own everything that fucks up. "It was the fault of the Tories!" What Tories?
    This could be unpicked at length, but to take it briefly, 2 points:

    WRT policy (ignore rhetoric for a moment) Labour replacing Tory will for almost all relevant purposes replace one set of high spending social democrats with another.

    That this is a good election to lose: can only mean that the Tories have laid the field waste, which is hardly a recommendation.
  • 6 6 W W

    What an over!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,654

    Thanks. I'm less convinced than you are that the sort of people who bugger off to low-tax regimes at the first whiff of a Labour government are wealth generators - they're just rich, greedy and selfish. Under the current tax regime, and any envisaged by Labour, they would still be extremely rich and want for nothing. It's just greed, an unpopular and rather under-used word these days.
    You’re an absolute idiot and people like you will ruin the country
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 600
    edited June 2024
    Last week it was pro russia appeasement and groveling for Putin, this week it is full on hard nazi style racism and homophobia from main people within reform caught on C4 news hidden camera. I was very disturbed by plans to turn the police into paramilitary, hoping for attacks on Bradford, whating for soldiers to shoot at boats in the channel, references to gassing ethnic minorities... reform is what you get when nazism rebrands itself and puts on a suit. Dear me.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2024/06/27/general-election-live-sunak-starmer-farage/
This discussion has been closed.