Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Are we set for the greatest polling failure in history? Sunak thinks so – politicalbetting.com

12357

Comments

  • peter_from_putneypeter_from_putney Posts: 6,956
    rcs1000 said:

    kle4 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Redfield final call
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/latest-gb-voti…

    Looks like a late Ref > Con switch is happening?
    I feel like Reform will drop to the mid teens, Tories between 20-25, away from the worst predictions of sub 20 but not by much.

    LDs seem rooted to 10-12, they have a low ceiling thesedays.
    I think the LDs will outperform slightly, getting 12-13% on the night.
    If the yellows do achieve 13%, then they're likely to finish close to Tories on say 20% aren't they?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 59,884
    Pulpstar said:

    mwadams said:

    viewcode said:

    HYUFD said:

    On UNS Sir John Curtice is forecasting a result closer to what Michael Howard got in 2005 for Sunak than what Major got in 1997 and Hague got in 2001. On an MRP forecast though Curtice says the Tory result could be even worse than 1997

    'Sir John Curtice projects 370 Labour seats, 191 Tory seats and 34 LD and 34 SNP seats, 2 Plaid, 1 Green and 0 Reform on universal national swing based on analysis of 8 recent polls.

    However on an MRP change the results look significantly different, with Curtice saying Labour could then get 447 seats, the Tories 98, the LDs 53, the SNP 21, Reform 8 and the Greens and Plaid 2 each'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cl7y2xj728do

    So he doesnt know.

    Here's my regular reminder that if one methodology gives one result and another gives another, the truth is not in splitting the difference, the truth is that one of them is wrong. We now have to decide whether polls+UNS is right, or MRP is right.
    Or neither, because something non-uniform is happening, but not based on the assumptions in the MRP model.
    Curtice, good as he is doesn't know, and he thought Labour was going to win in Rochdale !
    But at 10 PM he will know.
    Even more tantalising than that he will start to know during the day, and will probably have a good idea several hours earlier.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,727
    Goal!
  • No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 4,464

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    On your second point, Horizon is a Post Office issue, FA to do with the Royal Mail.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 56,701
    TimS said:

    rcs1000 said:

    kle4 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Redfield final call
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/latest-gb-voti…

    Looks like a late Ref > Con switch is happening?
    I feel like Reform will drop to the mid teens, Tories between 20-25, away from the worst predictions of sub 20 but not by much.

    LDs seem rooted to 10-12, they have a low ceiling thesedays.
    I think the LDs will outperform slightly, getting 12-13% on the night.
    Years of disappointments with Lib Dem performances have taught me to trust the polls rather than my wishcasting hunches. Or rather, trust them if they're going down, ignore them if they're going up.
    I suspect the LDs will outperform (slightly) in terms of votes, and underperform in seats. I think the Conservative vote share increase is very real, and they will end up on 25-27%, and will get 160 or so seats, while Reform drops back to vote share partity - or maybe slightly worse - with the LDs.)
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 17,018
    theakes said:

    Mr Sunak is having a laugh.
    IF 30,000 people vote Labour or Lib Dem and not Tory there will not be any Tory seats, that is how daft these suggestions are..
    All the recent polls are supported by local by election results. It is going to be a slaughter.

    The Liberal victory of 1906 was variously described at the time as an “avalanche”, a “wave”, a “landslide”, and a “deluge” – although George Whiteley, the Liberal Chief Whip, drew on the description of St Paul’s shipwreck in Acts 27:14 to describe it as “a veritable Euroclydon”, which isn’t a phrase you hear much these days from MPs talking to their constituents.

    https://www.politicshome.com/thehouse/article/electoral-disaster-metaphor-guide

    Conservatives currently seem to aiming to do about as well as the Light Brigade.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,121

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    Lab and Con haven't had a great campaign in Wales then lol?
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    lockhimup said:

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    Lib Dems to finish 2nd in seats without Labour has drifted out to 7.6 and I really like it on these poll showings. Seems like it really doesn’t need a huge amount to line up to come off, even if it looks slightly less likely than when the Tories were polling in the teens
    It's interesting that the LDs continue to have low numbers when all the signs are they're doing well in their targets.
    Their vote cratering in non-target seats may well make it easier for them to come 2nd in total seats.
    So counter-intuitively a reason to back them for 2nd W/O Labour
    I agree a lot. Everything is telling us that people are more intelligently sorting between Labour and the Lib Dems than ever. I agree with others above that it's hard to use Baxter or anything else with these conditions but I do think the fundamentals for the Lib Dems are good.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    Jonathan said:

    The Tories, as expected, are doing better as people move away from recording a protest to actually deciding who they will vote to lead the country for the next 5 years.

    That coupled with that Tories usually turnout, imo suggests going to be closer than we think.

    That is not difficult.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459
    Speaking of UK postal voting 2024, IF approx 15% of eventual actual voters go postal, and about 50% of requested have been returned, does that mean that 7.5% or thereabouts of the total votes, are already in the can?

    Am guessing that UK official & thus unofficial reporting on this is pretty hit-or-miss? Even more so than in US, where system is even more decentralized BUT most states & election jurisdictions (esp larger ones) have an established process for reporting absentee, early voting and/or vote-by-mail returns.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,786

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    If the Tories outpoll the LDs by 12% but only get 2 more seats I will, in the words of Paddy Ashdown, eat my hat.

    Baxter is pretty broken, IMHO.
    Not really, Lib Dem vote variation is really high. Remember the Lib Dems lose tonnes of deposits whereas the Conservatives will be getting lots of seats round 20%
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 5,848
    edited July 2

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    The Welsh Parliament may end up being an unexpected Reform base.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    GIN1138 said:

    Cicero said:

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    Lib Dems to finish 2nd in seats without Labour has drifted out to 7.6 and I really like it on these poll showings. Seems like it really doesn’t need a huge amount to line up to come off, even if it looks slightly less likely than when the Tories were polling in the teens
    Unless you Baxter with UNS:

    LAB 432
    CON 142
    LIB D 40
    Ref 0
    Green 1
    SNP 13
    Wouldn't it be funny if after all the sound and fury Ref got no seats?
    It would be very funny, though I feel like they will get at least a couple, which would be an interesting foot in the door.

    I started out thinking the Greens would get 0 seats, I do now think 1-2 is more likely.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    biggles said:

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    The Welsh Parliament may end up being an unexpected Reform base.
    It was the last holdout of UKIP I think?
  • bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 22,625

    Survation MRP today and their ‘final call’ MRP tomorrow will be interesting and informative hopefully

    Also when are we getting our final yougov?

    YG more important IMO

    Can see implied VI being a 10 to 12 point lead if so a super majority is off the cards.

    I think final Lab % will be 36% as predicted at the start of the campaign.

    Only 2 more sleeps till we find out.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,679
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    The Conservative campaign is really stepping up:

    https://x.com/conservatives/status/1808155567614992811

    still taller than Rishi
    You do realise that Rishi isn't that short don't you? And that a fair section of the population is by definition short? I'm not sure all these heightist jokes land quite as you want.
    You're saying I shouldn't be punching down?
    I don't really care about punching down. Just why the obsession with Rishi's height?

    If the average height for a man is 5"10, then being 5"7 is no more unusual than being 6"1. He's not even that short anyway!
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,598
    edited July 2

    ydoethur said:

    FPT

    Carnyx said:

    https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=rm&ogbl#inbox/WhctKLbFTwqSBgvjSkvrWfpjwJwXPSMMhcVkzrqVHGCLxsMsSsltFNTKJxJHbjrDdcLKzZq

    Speciallyt for @RochdalePioneers -

    "ANAS Sarwar has rejected calls for him to back the SNP campaign against outgoing Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross – despite Labour not standing a candidate in the constituency."

    Thanks for the heads up. Shows you how desperate the SNP are getting. My campaign is cutting through - I’m out-spending them talking about jobs, investment, public services and the cost of living. They’re putting out quotes from MSPs saying you have to vote SNP to stop the Tories.

    EDIT - posting this under a tree sheltering from a passing shower here in Fochabers!
    Any word on which water companies the SNP are allowing to dump sewage into our rivers, lochs and seas? It would be really good to know before I cast my vote. Perhaps you could do a bar chart showing the respective companies and their sewage dumping.


    Scottish Water have the lowest rate of outfall monitoring at just 4%, but by some measures are still the worst performing in the whole U.K.

    And they are, of course, publicly owned...
    A Scotch water expert as I live and breathe.
    I'd still trust my fishing pals who are out on the water week in, week out, who haven't once mentioned sewage but endlessly complain about salmon farming and agri run off, with a soupçon of overfishing in the Clyde estuary. Anyway on the arguable basis that Scottish Water (a corporation) is a company, this piece of classic LD election literature mentions companies(pl); which are the other ones?
    Presumably some of the lairdly estates which own islands 100%, ownership carefully converted to companies, with their own water supplies. And similar in the form of islander buyouts, SNH etc.

    Though whether any cause pollution and which they are is a further question.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 77,786

    Pulpstar said:

    mwadams said:

    viewcode said:

    HYUFD said:

    On UNS Sir John Curtice is forecasting a result closer to what Michael Howard got in 2005 for Sunak than what Major got in 1997 and Hague got in 2001. On an MRP forecast though Curtice says the Tory result could be even worse than 1997

    'Sir John Curtice projects 370 Labour seats, 191 Tory seats and 34 LD and 34 SNP seats, 2 Plaid, 1 Green and 0 Reform on universal national swing based on analysis of 8 recent polls.

    However on an MRP change the results look significantly different, with Curtice saying Labour could then get 447 seats, the Tories 98, the LDs 53, the SNP 21, Reform 8 and the Greens and Plaid 2 each'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cl7y2xj728do

    So he doesnt know.

    Here's my regular reminder that if one methodology gives one result and another gives another, the truth is not in splitting the difference, the truth is that one of them is wrong. We now have to decide whether polls+UNS is right, or MRP is right.
    Or neither, because something non-uniform is happening, but not based on the assumptions in the MRP model.
    Curtice, good as he is doesn't know, and he thought Labour was going to win in Rochdale !
    But at 10 PM he will know.
    Even more tantalising than that he will start to know during the day, and will probably have a good idea several hours earlier.
    Will he bet on it though :D
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    The Conservative campaign is really stepping up:

    https://x.com/conservatives/status/1808155567614992811

    still taller than Rishi
    You do realise that Rishi isn't that short don't you? And that a fair section of the population is by definition short? I'm not sure all these heightist jokes land quite as you want.
    You're saying I shouldn't be punching down?
    I don't really care about punching down. Just why the obsession with Rishi's height?

    If the average height for a man is 5"10, then being 5"7 is no more unusual than being 6"1. He's not even that short anyway!
    He looks shorter than he is, because he is so slender and wears skinny trousers.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,598

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    On your second point, Horizon is a Post Office issue, FA to do with the Royal Mail.
    But PO and RM were one and the same company for much of the Horizon era, and still are in the public mind.

    On SS's final point, I don't think the M1 delays are an issue so much as the sorting offices in some urban areas.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,527

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    Lib Dems to finish 2nd in seats without Labour has drifted out to 7.6 and I really like it on these poll showings. Seems like it really doesn’t need a huge amount to line up to come off, even if it looks slightly less likely than when the Tories were polling in the teens

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    Good analysis but I would not wear the proud badge of PB Pedant if I didn't point out that the Post Office Ltd ceased to be a subsidiary of Royal Mail Plc in 2012 and, generally speaking, I think the public is aware they are separate now.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 4,473
    Andrey Rublev (6th seed) knocked out in the first round in 4 sets by Francisco Comesana (87th ranked), playing in his first Grand Slam.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 6,687
    Pulpstar said:

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    If the Tories outpoll the LDs by 12% but only get 2 more seats I will, in the words of Paddy Ashdown, eat my hat.

    Baxter is pretty broken, IMHO.
    Not really, Lib Dem vote variation is really high. Remember the Lib Dems lose tonnes of deposits whereas the Conservatives will be getting lots of seats round 20%
    Yes, but I am far from convinced that the effect is magnified to anything like the extent Baxter is modelling right now.

  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    On your second point, Horizon is a Post Office issue, FA to do with the Royal Mail.
    From my distant vantage point, concede your point but do NOT appreciate difference PO v RM.

    AND am guessing that many Brits are in the same boat? Here in USA, plenty who do NOT know - let alone care - that USPS is NOT a federal government department, like the old US Post Office.

    My point (perhaps misguided) being that voter perception is different from administrative operation.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459
    NYT - Giuliani Disbarred From the Practice of Law in New York
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    edited July 2

    NYT - Giuliani Disbarred From the Practice of Law in New York

    At least one person is getting their comeuppance, even if it is just a pathetic old man.

    Sorry, a different pathetic old man.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,727
    edited July 2
    rcs1000 said:

    TimS said:

    rcs1000 said:

    kle4 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Redfield final call
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/latest-gb-voti…

    Looks like a late Ref > Con switch is happening?
    I feel like Reform will drop to the mid teens, Tories between 20-25, away from the worst predictions of sub 20 but not by much.

    LDs seem rooted to 10-12, they have a low ceiling thesedays.
    I think the LDs will outperform slightly, getting 12-13% on the night.
    Years of disappointments with Lib Dem performances have taught me to trust the polls rather than my wishcasting hunches. Or rather, trust them if they're going down, ignore them if they're going up.
    I suspect the LDs will outperform (slightly) in terms of votes, and underperform in seats. I think the Conservative vote share increase is very real, and they will end up on 25-27%, and will get 160 or so seats, while Reform drops back to vote share partity - or maybe slightly worse - with the LDs.)
    I’m inclined to agree with that. With Labour slated to win, the LibDems will probably pick up a few drifting back on the assumption that Labour will win anyway, but in the target seats they’re relying on people who said they would vote LibDem two weeks back sticking with it despite a fortnight of Sunak v Starmer all over the national media.

    You need a cracking ground campaign to counter that; I’ve helped the LibDems in some of these rural seats, and you can spend a whole day navigating around their country lanes working really hard, and by dinner time you’ve only contacted a handful of voters.

    I’ll be rooting for lots of Tory losses, but expect the LDs will chalk up a fair few near misses, I just hope they avoid the Swinson mistake and stay focused on their key targets.

    It makes the Tory seats >100 and >140 seat bets that I’ve been backing for some time, still good bets.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,374
    edited July 2

    theakes said:

    Mr Sunak is having a laugh.
    IF 30,000 people vote Labour or Lib Dem and not Tory there will not be any Tory seats, that is how daft these suggestions are..
    All the recent polls are supported by local by election results. It is going to be a slaughter.

    The Liberal victory of 1906 was variously described at the time as an “avalanche”, a “wave”, a “landslide”, and a “deluge” – although George Whiteley, the Liberal Chief Whip, drew on the description of St Paul’s shipwreck in Acts 27:14 to describe it as “a veritable Euroclydon”, which isn’t a phrase you hear much these days from MPs talking to their constituents.

    https://www.politicshome.com/thehouse/article/electoral-disaster-metaphor-guide

    Conservatives currently seem to aiming to do about as well as the Light Brigade.
    About half the Light Brigade returned, but that would probably be a good result for them.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,679
    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    The Conservative campaign is really stepping up:

    https://x.com/conservatives/status/1808155567614992811

    still taller than Rishi
    You do realise that Rishi isn't that short don't you? And that a fair section of the population is by definition short? I'm not sure all these heightist jokes land quite as you want.
    You're saying I shouldn't be punching down?
    I don't really care about punching down. Just why the obsession with Rishi's height?

    If the average height for a man is 5"10, then being 5"7 is no more unusual than being 6"1. He's not even that short anyway!
    I think that one went over your head
    Don't flatter yourself. I'm just not seeing the constant comic potential in Rishi's size.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 33,294
    biggles said:

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    The Welsh Parliament may end up being an unexpected Reform base.
    It’s all those English OAP’s moving to Wales.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,527
    edited July 2

    Speaking of UK postal voting 2024, IF approx 15% of eventual actual voters go postal, and about 50% of requested have been returned, does that mean that 7.5% or thereabouts of the total votes, are already in the can?

    Am guessing that UK official & thus unofficial reporting on this is pretty hit-or-miss? Even more so than in US, where system is even more decentralized BUT most states & election jurisdictions (esp larger ones) have an established process for reporting absentee, early voting and/or vote-by-mail returns.

    There are quite strict rules about what can and cannot be reported at this stage. The process involves putting your ballot paper in an envelope (Envelope A) and then putting that Envelope A into a pre-paid postal envelope (Envelope B ). The Envelope B is opened and a pile of Envelope As sits in various Town Halls/Civic Centres untouched until counting starts on Thursday. I think you can report on the number of Envelope B's that have arrived but that's about it...
  • LeonLeon Posts: 54,557
    biggles said:

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    The Welsh Parliament may end up being an unexpected Reform base.
    Reform beating the Tories in one of the four home nations on actual votes would be jolly symbolic
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    IanB2 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    TimS said:

    rcs1000 said:

    kle4 said:

    GIN1138 said:

    Redfield final call
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    redfieldandwiltonstrategies.com/latest-gb-voti…

    Looks like a late Ref > Con switch is happening?
    I feel like Reform will drop to the mid teens, Tories between 20-25, away from the worst predictions of sub 20 but not by much.

    LDs seem rooted to 10-12, they have a low ceiling thesedays.
    I think the LDs will outperform slightly, getting 12-13% on the night.
    Years of disappointments with Lib Dem performances have taught me to trust the polls rather than my wishcasting hunches. Or rather, trust them if they're going down, ignore them if they're going up.
    I suspect the LDs will outperform (slightly) in terms of votes, and underperform in seats. I think the Conservative vote share increase is very real, and they will end up on 25-27%, and will get 160 or so seats, while Reform drops back to vote share partity - or maybe slightly worse - with the LDs.)
    I’m inclined to agree with that. With Labour slated to win, the LibDems will probably pick up a few drifting back on the assumption that Labour will win anyway, but in the target seats they’re relying on people who said they would vote LibDem two weeks back sticking with it despite a fortnight of Sunak v Starmer all over the national media.

    You need a cracking ground campaign to counter that; I’ve helped the LibDems in some of these rural seats, and you can spend a whole day navigating around their country lanes working really hard, and by dinner time you’ve only contacted a handful of voters.

    I’ll be rooting for lots of Tory losses, but expect the LDs will chalk up a fair few near misses, I just hope they avoid the Swinson mistake and stay focused on their key targets.
    Predicting the LDs to fall short on seat expectations rarely goes wrong - it's just so hard for them to get over the line in most places. Their tipping point to pick up lots of seats is probably in the 20s, beyond that they have to rely on being really efficient in their targeting.
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 9,679

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    I dislike postal voting because I think people should be forced to vote in private unless there is good reason not to.
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050
    The London Grammar and PJ were the best at Glasto. Available with rest on BBC I Player.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 21,471
    Should there be a swear jar penalty for anyone who Baxter’s a poll and adds to the hype?
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    edited July 2
    Anabobazina said:
    » show previous quotes
    Indeed. By the way, I owe you an apology. Thanks for your explanation – I do remember @Paul_Bedfordshire and the cap fits. Sorry about the accusation you were @MrEd – a very odd poster who was a Trumpian shill and hated buses. I've enjoyed many of your posts today in particular.

    Apologies.

    Apology Graciously Accepted :-)
  • No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 4,464

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    If the Tories outpoll the LDs by 12% but only get 2 more seats I will, in the words of Paddy Ashdown, eat my hat.

    Baxter is pretty broken, IMHO.
    The votes have to add up to national totals and they have to go somewhere, though.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 21,727
    .
    Leon said:

    biggles said:

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    The Welsh Parliament may end up being an unexpected Reform base.
    Reform beating the Tories in one of the four home nations on actual votes would be jolly symbolic
    Symbolic of what exactly?

    The Tories have come third in the Senedd elections a few times before. Not unprecedented.
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    Benpointer said:
    » show previous quotes [about letter from Tories dated 2044]
    That's totally ridiculous - no way will the Conservatives be still going in 2044; 2030 will be a stretch.

    Was it signed "Nigel Farage - Leader"?
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050
    The polls. The Torture is nearly over. 395 Labour. 160 Tories. 65 Lib Dems and the rest of them. Friday all will be revealed thank God.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    Likely

    I don't know if Trump is going to be reelected in 2024. But I know that, if he is, he's going to preface every blatantly illegal thing he does by saying, "Official act, this is an official act.
    https://nitter.poast.org/OrinKerr/status/1807789782983913927#m
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459
    Carnyx said:

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    On your second point, Horizon is a Post Office issue, FA to do with the Royal Mail.
    But PO and RM were one and the same company for much of the Horizon era, and still are in the public mind.

    On SS's final point, I don't think the M1 delays are an issue so much as the sorting offices in some urban areas.
    In US major postal sorting centers can also be major bottlenecks for absentee and vote-by-mail ballots; this is exacerbated by fact that many 2nd-tier sorting centers on deliver mail every other day or suchlike. Including deliveries of outgoing & incoming ballots.

    Here in WA State you can see this reflected in daily returned ballot statistics, where some counties - including some of the biggest - will have next to no returns one day, then thousands the next, then squat the day after that, then . . .
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    Pulpstar said:
    Good Lord, look at what's in the pipeline for VI come the 2030s !

    16/17 yr old

    Males:

    REF: 35%
    LAB: 35%
    LDEM: 11%
    CON: 11%
    GRN: 2%

    Females:

    LAB: 43%
    GRN: 33%
    REF: 12%
    LDEM: 8%
    CON: 0%

    Anecdotally this feels correct to me.


    I recall the kids coming home from (Comprehensive) the day after Trump had been elected. Reported Girls and Teachers generally mortified about it. Meanwhile groups of boys gone all Nelly the Elephant (chanting "Trump, Trump, Trump")
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,257
    rcs1000 said:
    Assuming its accuracy, it seems entirely deserved.
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    MattW said:
    » show previous quotes
    it isn't suddenly anything ... the Jewish observance is public and known for years.

    I think that a strong commitment to maintaining family life as a sane foundation to keep politics in context is great.

    I expect most of our PMs have done the samr in some way.

    I think the takeaway is the measure of Tory poor judgement and desperation. Just the latest pratfall.

    The sabbath has started on Friday at Sundown for about the last five thousand years.

    Yours a member of Reformed Judaism (ie Roman Catholicism).

    (There were many Christians who also observed Jewish rituals and Traditions until Constantine (I think) went all Henry V111 and ordered them to drop it or else)
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050

    The London Grammar and PJ were the best at Glasto. Available with rest on BBC I Player.

    PJ Harvey.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 41,917
    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    mwadams said:

    viewcode said:

    HYUFD said:

    On UNS Sir John Curtice is forecasting a result closer to what Michael Howard got in 2005 for Sunak than what Major got in 1997 and Hague got in 2001. On an MRP forecast though Curtice says the Tory result could be even worse than 1997

    'Sir John Curtice projects 370 Labour seats, 191 Tory seats and 34 LD and 34 SNP seats, 2 Plaid, 1 Green and 0 Reform on universal national swing based on analysis of 8 recent polls.

    However on an MRP change the results look significantly different, with Curtice saying Labour could then get 447 seats, the Tories 98, the LDs 53, the SNP 21, Reform 8 and the Greens and Plaid 2 each'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cl7y2xj728do

    So he doesnt know.

    Here's my regular reminder that if one methodology gives one result and another gives another, the truth is not in splitting the difference, the truth is that one of them is wrong. We now have to decide whether polls+UNS is right, or MRP is right.
    Or neither, because something non-uniform is happening, but not based on the assumptions in the MRP model.
    Curtice, good as he is doesn't know, and he thought Labour was going to win in Rochdale !
    But at 10 PM he will know.
    Even more tantalising than that he will start to know during the day, and will probably have a good idea several hours earlier.
    Will he bet on it though :D
    God what a sickener that would be if Sir John Curtice turns out to have millions offshore from insider betting off his exit poll info over the years.

    It'd be like discovering your dad had another family in the next door town.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459
    kle4 said:

    NYT - Giuliani Disbarred From the Practice of Law in New York

    At least one person is getting their comeuppance, even if it is just a pathetic old man.

    Sorry, a different pathetic old man.
    Being disbarred from practice of law is comeuppance indeed for a former US Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

    Perhaps unprecedented.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,727

    Speaking of UK postal voting 2024, IF approx 15% of eventual actual voters go postal, and about 50% of requested have been returned, does that mean that 7.5% or thereabouts of the total votes, are already in the can?

    Am guessing that UK official & thus unofficial reporting on this is pretty hit-or-miss? Even more so than in US, where system is even more decentralized BUT most states & election jurisdictions (esp larger ones) have an established process for reporting absentee, early voting and/or vote-by-mail returns.

    20% of the final vote tally will be postal and >10% of total votes are already in the can. But, despite the nonsense that usually circulates at this time in the campaign, no-one has seen them.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,257
    Presumably, this would be an "official act".
    After yesterday's decision, a re-elected Trump arranging the judicial murder of his opponents doesn't seem quite so farfetched as it ought to.

    Donald Trump reposted an image calling Liz Cheney “guilty of treason” and for her to be prosecuted in “televised military tribunals.”
    https://x.com/MeidasTouch/status/1807564601711870448
  • LeonLeon Posts: 54,557
    People that constantly cough should be thrown in the Solent

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,727
    kinabalu said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    mwadams said:

    viewcode said:

    HYUFD said:

    On UNS Sir John Curtice is forecasting a result closer to what Michael Howard got in 2005 for Sunak than what Major got in 1997 and Hague got in 2001. On an MRP forecast though Curtice says the Tory result could be even worse than 1997

    'Sir John Curtice projects 370 Labour seats, 191 Tory seats and 34 LD and 34 SNP seats, 2 Plaid, 1 Green and 0 Reform on universal national swing based on analysis of 8 recent polls.

    However on an MRP change the results look significantly different, with Curtice saying Labour could then get 447 seats, the Tories 98, the LDs 53, the SNP 21, Reform 8 and the Greens and Plaid 2 each'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cl7y2xj728do

    So he doesnt know.

    Here's my regular reminder that if one methodology gives one result and another gives another, the truth is not in splitting the difference, the truth is that one of them is wrong. We now have to decide whether polls+UNS is right, or MRP is right.
    Or neither, because something non-uniform is happening, but not based on the assumptions in the MRP model.
    Curtice, good as he is doesn't know, and he thought Labour was going to win in Rochdale !
    But at 10 PM he will know.
    Even more tantalising than that he will start to know during the day, and will probably have a good idea several hours earlier.
    Will he bet on it though :D
    God what a sickener that would be if Sir John Curtice turns out to have millions offshore from insider betting off his exit poll info over the years.

    It'd be like discovering your dad had another family in the next door town.
    Looking at the state of him, he’d be well advised to go cash in some time very soon.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,257
    Leon said:

    People that constantly cough should be thrown in the Solent

    For their insolents ?
  • LeonLeon Posts: 54,557
    Christ now there’s some old c*nt sneezing
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 70,257
    Pelosi on MSNBC re: Biden: "I think it's a legitimate question to say: Is this an episode or is this a condition?"

    She says it's "legitimate" to ask of Biden & Trump. "Both candidates owe whatever test you want to put them to, in terms of their mental acuity and their health."

    https://x.com/sahilkapur/status/1808178608244248851
  • Nunu5Nunu5 Posts: 962
    Anymore polls tonight?
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,705

    Pulpstar said:
    Good Lord, look at what's in the pipeline for VI come the 2030s !

    16/17 yr old

    Males:

    REF: 35%
    LAB: 35%
    LDEM: 11%
    CON: 11%
    GRN: 2%

    Females:

    LAB: 43%
    GRN: 33%
    REF: 12%
    LDEM: 8%
    CON: 0%

    Anecdotally this feels correct to me.


    I recall the kids coming home from (Comprehensive) the day after Trump had been elected. Reported Girls and Teachers generally mortified about it. Meanwhile groups of boys gone all Nelly the Elephant (chanting "Trump, Trump, Trump")
    Quite funny that if you average the two, we get Labour where the polls place it today, RefUK where they place the Tories, the LDs where they're placed today, and the Tories nowhere.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,727

    Carnyx said:

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    On your second point, Horizon is a Post Office issue, FA to do with the Royal Mail.
    But PO and RM were one and the same company for much of the Horizon era, and still are in the public mind.

    On SS's final point, I don't think the M1 delays are an issue so much as the sorting offices in some urban areas.
    In US major postal sorting centers can also be major bottlenecks for absentee and vote-by-mail ballots; this is exacerbated by fact that many 2nd-tier sorting centers on deliver mail every other day or suchlike. Including deliveries of outgoing & incoming ballots.

    Here in WA State you can see this reflected in daily returned ballot statistics, where some counties - including some of the biggest - will have next to no returns one day, then thousands the next, then squat the day after that, then . . .
    Yes, but in the UK, standard envelopes are all machine sorted and the office is configured to be clear of first class mail after every evening despatch. If there’s a problem in RM it’s with staffing shortages in delivery offices - but this affects delivery of PVs to punters and not their return to the council.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,527

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    Lib Dems to finish 2nd in seats without Labour has drifted out to 7.6 and I really like it on these poll showings. Seems like it really doesn’t need a huge amount to line up to come off, even if it looks slightly less likely than when the Tories were polling in the teens
    The importance of the Opposition in the system of parliamentary government has long received practical recognition in the procedure of Parliament. In 1937 statutory recognition was accorded through the grant of a salary to the Leader of the Opposition. The prevalence (on the whole) of the two-party system has usually obviated any uncertainty as to which party has the right to be called the ‘Official Opposition’: it is the largest minority party which is prepared, in the event of the resignation of the government, to assume office [and in a footnote: The Speaker’s decision on the identity of the Leader of the Opposition is final (Ministerial and other Salaries Act 1975 (c27) s2 (2)).

    - Erskine May, Parliamentary Practice, 23rd edition, pp247-48

    If we ended up with the above results the Greens and LDs should state to the Speaker that they're prepared to form a coalition minority administration should the Government resign. That would give him a headache.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 95,583
    The SDP have a policy that all staff and pupils at schools must run, jog, or walk one mile per day 'except where extenuating circumstances permit'. Maybe we should have a similar thing for voting, beat the obesity epidemic for those physically able.
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,324

    The London Grammar and PJ were the best at Glasto. Available with rest on BBC I Player.

    Orbital were superb.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 22,514
    DougSeal said:

    Redfield Baxtered

    LAB 468 (41%)
    CON 69 (22%)
    LIB DEM 67 (10%)
    REFUK 6 (16%)
    GREEN 3 (6%)
    SNP 15

    Labour Majority 286

    Lib Dems to finish 2nd in seats without Labour has drifted out to 7.6 and I really like it on these poll showings. Seems like it really doesn’t need a huge amount to line up to come off, even if it looks slightly less likely than when the Tories were polling in the teens
    The importance of the Opposition in the system of parliamentary government has long received practical recognition in the procedure of Parliament. In 1937 statutory recognition was accorded through the grant of a salary to the Leader of the Opposition. The prevalence (on the whole) of the two-party system has usually obviated any uncertainty as to which party has the right to be called the ‘Official Opposition’: it is the largest minority party which is prepared, in the event of the resignation of the government, to assume office [and in a footnote: The Speaker’s decision on the identity of the Leader of the Opposition is final (Ministerial and other Salaries Act 1975 (c27) s2 (2)).

    - Erskine May, Parliamentary Practice, 23rd edition, pp247-48

    If we ended up with the above results the Greens and LDs should state to the Speaker that they're prepared to form a coalition minority administration should the Government resign. That would give him a headache.
    Do the Greens and LDs have much in common at the moment? Both are imo certainly closer to Labour than they are each other.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 17,989
    IanB2 said:

    @RedfieldWilton
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1808168755731878026

    So some swingback, as anticipated.
    It's the smallest Labour lead form Redfield & Wilton since the 18pp lead on 10th March (42 - 24).
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    edited July 2

    The London Grammar and PJ were the best at Glasto. Available with rest on BBC I Player.

    PJ Harvey.
    I like Peej. But whenever I watch her I can't help lament that she is not what she was. Not 'worse' - but oh how I loved her original incarnation. She now does thoughtful and interesting where once she did raw and primal.

    See this, for example.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFYsVoQH32U

    And this for - well, just, see this:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dg39hJIhzAk
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 41,917
    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    The Conservative campaign is really stepping up:

    https://x.com/conservatives/status/1808155567614992811

    still taller than Rishi
    You do realise that Rishi isn't that short don't you? And that a fair section of the population is by definition short? I'm not sure all these heightist jokes land quite as you want.
    You're saying I shouldn't be punching down?
    I don't really care about punching down. Just why the obsession with Rishi's height?

    If the average height for a man is 5"10, then being 5"7 is no more unusual than being 6"1. He's not even that short anyway!
    He looks shorter than he is, because he is so slender and wears skinny trousers.
    Yes it's not the height that's unusual it's the all round tininess.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,598
    Nigelb said:

    Leon said:

    People that constantly cough should be thrown in the Solent

    For their insolents ?
    And Spithead roads if they do progress to ... ?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 22,514
    Nigelb said:

    Presumably, this would be an "official act".
    After yesterday's decision, a re-elected Trump arranging the judicial murder of his opponents doesn't seem quite so farfetched as it ought to.

    Donald Trump reposted an image calling Liz Cheney “guilty of treason” and for her to be prosecuted in “televised military tribunals.”
    https://x.com/MeidasTouch/status/1807564601711870448

    Some of these people should be moving to Europe or even somewhere without US extradition.
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    pigeon said:

    Little bit of a Tory uptick, but nothing to set the world on fire.

    Unless the Reform vote implodes in the privacy of the polling booth, the Conservatives will be well short of 30% of the popular vote. Easily their worst ever result at a GE.

    Probably a swingback in seats where the Reform minded tories know Reform don't have a hope.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,727
    edited July 2
    DougSeal said:

    Speaking of UK postal voting 2024, IF approx 15% of eventual actual voters go postal, and about 50% of requested have been returned, does that mean that 7.5% or thereabouts of the total votes, are already in the can?

    Am guessing that UK official & thus unofficial reporting on this is pretty hit-or-miss? Even more so than in US, where system is even more decentralized BUT most states & election jurisdictions (esp larger ones) have an established process for reporting absentee, early voting and/or vote-by-mail returns.

    There are quite strict rules about what can and cannot be reported at this stage. The process involves putting your ballot paper in an envelope (Envelope A) and then putting that Envelope A into a pre-paid postal envelope (Envelope B ). The Envelope B is opened and a pile of Envelope As sits in various Town Halls/Civic Centres untouched until counting starts on Thursday. I think you can report on the number of Envelope B's that have arrived but that's about it...
    Close, but not right. The A envelopes have to be opened to check the serial number of the returned ballot matches that sent to the voter. But the ballot paper should be kept face down at all times. Once verified they then get put into a ballot box, sealed, and ready to be mixed in with the polling station ballots at the main count.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    edited July 2
    Nunu5 said:

    Anymore polls tonight?

    @survation
    As @chrishanretty has now closed his MRP laptop, we're finalising materials and will have our MRP update out at around 6.30pm, based on 34,558 interviews, fieldwork ending July 1st.

    If you are signed up to receive our press releases we'll be emailing you the full data and commentary from Chris, and the Survation team. The sign up form is here if not: eepurl.com/mOK8P

    Also follow @VasilSurvation and @JackSurvation
    for insights later on. Complaints about seats forecasts you don't like can be sent directly to @DamianSurvation as he is a scarred veteran of election prediction.

  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459
    DougSeal said:

    Speaking of UK postal voting 2024, IF approx 15% of eventual actual voters go postal, and about 50% of requested have been returned, does that mean that 7.5% or thereabouts of the total votes, are already in the can?

    Am guessing that UK official & thus unofficial reporting on this is pretty hit-or-miss? Even more so than in US, where system is even more decentralized BUT most states & election jurisdictions (esp larger ones) have an established process for reporting absentee, early voting and/or vote-by-mail returns.

    There are quite strict rules about what can and cannot be reported at this stage. The process involves putting your ballot paper in an envelope (Envelope A) and then putting that Envelope A into a pre-paid postal envelope (Envelope B ). The Envelope B is opened and a pile of Envelope As sits in various Town Halls/Civic Centres untouched until counting starts on Thursday. I think you can report on the number of Envelope B's that have arrived but that's about it...
    The number of envelopes, AND the voter ID numbers on those envelopes, is exactly the kind of ballot returns reporting I'm taking about.

    In King Co WA, after ballots are verified for counting, they are then separated from return envelope, and given visual examination by workers to see if there are any weird makings or other issues that would interfere with their tabulation. At that time observers can see what's on ballots being stacked in totally random piles (NOT by voting decisions). BUT there are thousands of ballots with votes for many different offices from many different voting precincts, so getting more than a vague impression of voting patterns is impossible
  • MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,602
    edited July 2

    IanB2 said:

    @RedfieldWilton
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1808168755731878026

    So some swingback, as anticipated.
    It's the smallest Labour lead form Redfield & Wilton since the 18pp lead on 10th March (42 - 24).
    But all agree that Con has had a far worse campaign than Lab.

    Implication is that none of it - not even D-Day - will make any difference at all when people actually cast their votes.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    @kinabalu - you may be interested in this article, which touches on what we were discussing earlier quite perceptively, I think:
    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/nigel-farage-is-not-the-future/

    TLDR: Farage <> Le Pen, Reform <> RN

    "So it’s hardly surprising that Nigel Farage isn’t keen on Marine Le Pen and the RN. Rather than ‘far right’, he is really a malcontent of boomer liberalism, railing against the social outcomes of the post-1980s consensus while wishing to maintain the economic conditions that create them. He is ideologically hostile to the populist, nationalist and common good economics practised and advocated elsewhere in Europe by leaders and thinkers whom his followers and opponents would consider his natural allies. His natural ally is fellow boomer-whisperer Donald Trump.

    When the liberal left casts Farage as a 20-a-day Oswald Mosley, it commits a cardinal sin of politics: misunderstanding the enemy. Farage flirts now and then with incendiary rhetoric but if he is the apogee of national populism in Britain, we will be very lucky indeed. I suspect, however, that he won’t be. A few years back, New York Times columnist Ross Douthat observed: ‘If you dislike the religious right, wait till you meet the post-religious right.’ I’d suggest to progressives that the same applies to Reform’s leader: if you dislike Farage, will till you see who comes after him."
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    kinabalu said:

    kle4 said:

    Farooq said:

    Farooq said:

    The Conservative campaign is really stepping up:

    https://x.com/conservatives/status/1808155567614992811

    still taller than Rishi
    You do realise that Rishi isn't that short don't you? And that a fair section of the population is by definition short? I'm not sure all these heightist jokes land quite as you want.
    You're saying I shouldn't be punching down?
    I don't really care about punching down. Just why the obsession with Rishi's height?

    If the average height for a man is 5"10, then being 5"7 is no more unusual than being 6"1. He's not even that short anyway!
    He looks shorter than he is, because he is so slender and wears skinny trousers.
    Yes it's not the height that's unusual it's the all round tininess.
    Though the height too - 5'7''? Really? I think there's some stretching of the truth going on there.

    I have, I should point out, nothing against the tragically undersized. But he is remarkably small.
  • MisterBedfordshireMisterBedfordshire Posts: 2,252
    Leon said:

    People that constantly cough should be thrown in the Solent

    Only after the sniffers have walked the gangplank
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 28,763
    Comedy update on the campaign trail in ANME

    @Carnyx flagged that the SNP (Flynn) had written to Labour demanding that they cede votes to the SNP "to beat the Tories".

    I've now seen targeted letters sent by the SNP (again, Flynn) to LD supporters to switch to the SNP "to beat the Tories".

    And Ross is putting out campaign stuff addressed to named voters imploring people to "make my vote count" by voting Ross "to stop the SNP". Kind of him to write to me personally (its my name on the leaflet).

    There is an air of desperation. The Tories have been desperate since day 1 as they can see what is coming. But now the SNP punting for business? Clearly plenty of people have told them to go forth and multiply on the doors as I witnessed at the start of the campaign a street away from Alex Salmond's house.

    I know that @Farooq mentioned polls. What polls? The closest we have had is MRP extrapolation, and we can all cite examples of how daft some of those have been.

    And it isn't just in ANME. The response we're getting across the shire is good. Don't take my word for it, look at the increasingly desperate tactics being deployed by the supposed big 2...
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    kle4 said:

    The SDP have a policy that all staff and pupils at schools must run, jog, or walk one mile per day 'except where extenuating circumstances permit'. Maybe we should have a similar thing for voting, beat the obesity epidemic for those physically able.

    That's a classic old school third party policy, that.

    Actually, it's a good idea. My local primary school has such a scheme, though it appears to have fallen away a bit in recent years. I fully support it. But it doesn't really strike me as something a national government need get involved in.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 41,917
    Nigelb said:

    Presumably, this would be an "official act".
    After yesterday's decision, a re-elected Trump arranging the judicial murder of his opponents doesn't seem quite so farfetched as it ought to.

    Donald Trump reposted an image calling Liz Cheney “guilty of treason” and for her to be prosecuted in “televised military tribunals.”
    https://x.com/MeidasTouch/status/1807564601711870448

    There's a risk that fear of Trump2 makes it more likely. People are scared of his vindictiveness therefore loath to stand in his way. It's a gangster dynamic.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    MikeL said:

    IanB2 said:

    @RedfieldWilton
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1808168755731878026

    So some swingback, as anticipated.
    It's the smallest Labour lead form Redfield & Wilton since the 18pp lead on 10th March (42 - 24).
    But all agree that Con has had a far worse campaign than Lab.

    Implication is that none of it - not even D-Day - will make any difference at all when people actually cast their votes.
    What a furore that was. I bet most people have already forgotten about DDay gate.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,121
    edited July 2
    MikeL said:

    Did anyone see Curtice on Newsnight last night?

    BBC use him as a numbers man. But seems to me he is just as good as a political commentator - ie analysing why the numbers move as they do.

    Made a very telling remark about the next Govt having to conduct a spending review by October which will flush out where the cuts are going to have to be made. Implication was why aren't journalists challenging politicians on this. Can't be kicked into long grass - decisions will have to be made imminently.

    Yes, Sir John was very bullish when speaking to Lady Harman. Have a feeling this may be his final election calculating the numbers and he'll be retiring to become a general political commentator soon?
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050
    MikeL said:

    Did anyone see Curtice on Newsnight last night?

    BBC use him as a numbers man. But seems to me he is just as good as a political commentator - ie analysing why the numbers move as they do.

    Made a very telling remark about the next Govt having to conduct a spending review by October which will flush out where the cuts are going to have to be made. Implication was why aren't journalists challenging politicians on this. Can't be kicked into long grass - decisions will have to be made imminently.

    Did Curtice screw up the numbers on the 2015 exit poll. Can someone clarify this. Thanks.
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,302
    Leon said:

    Christ now there’s some old c*nt sneezing

    Have a lemsip.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    edited July 2
    kle4 said:

    The SDP have a policy that all staff and pupils at schools must run, jog, or walk one mile per day 'except where extenuating circumstances permit'. Maybe we should have a similar thing for voting, beat the obesity epidemic for those physically able.

    I'm actually feeling moderately well-disposed towards the SDP in the run up to Thursday. I don't necessarily agree with them, but of all the parties they are the one who has treated me most like an adult in their communications with me and offered reasons to vote for them rather than against their opponents. And their candidate has actually been seen locally in the flesh.

    EDIT by which I mean 'in person' of course, rather than 'naked'.
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050
    IanB2 said:

    kinabalu said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    mwadams said:

    viewcode said:

    HYUFD said:

    On UNS Sir John Curtice is forecasting a result closer to what Michael Howard got in 2005 for Sunak than what Major got in 1997 and Hague got in 2001. On an MRP forecast though Curtice says the Tory result could be even worse than 1997

    'Sir John Curtice projects 370 Labour seats, 191 Tory seats and 34 LD and 34 SNP seats, 2 Plaid, 1 Green and 0 Reform on universal national swing based on analysis of 8 recent polls.

    However on an MRP change the results look significantly different, with Curtice saying Labour could then get 447 seats, the Tories 98, the LDs 53, the SNP 21, Reform 8 and the Greens and Plaid 2 each'
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cl7y2xj728do

    So he doesnt know.

    Here's my regular reminder that if one methodology gives one result and another gives another, the truth is not in splitting the difference, the truth is that one of them is wrong. We now have to decide whether polls+UNS is right, or MRP is right.
    Or neither, because something non-uniform is happening, but not based on the assumptions in the MRP model.
    Curtice, good as he is doesn't know, and he thought Labour was going to win in Rochdale !
    But at 10 PM he will know.
    Even more tantalising than that he will start to know during the day, and will probably have a good idea several hours earlier.
    Will he bet on it though :D
    God what a sickener that would be if Sir John Curtice turns out to have millions offshore from insider betting off his exit poll info over the years.

    It'd be like discovering your dad had another family in the next door town.
    Looking at the state of him, he’d be well advised to go cash in some time very soon.
    Something about him I do like. I do find him trustworthy.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 41,917

    MikeL said:

    Did anyone see Curtice on Newsnight last night?

    BBC use him as a numbers man. But seems to me he is just as good as a political commentator - ie analysing why the numbers move as they do.

    Made a very telling remark about the next Govt having to conduct a spending review by October which will flush out where the cuts are going to have to be made. Implication was why aren't journalists challenging politicians on this. Can't be kicked into long grass - decisions will have to be made imminently.

    Did Curtice screw up the numbers on the 2015 exit poll. Can someone clarify this. Thanks.
    No it was close, just that the 'error' was the difference between hung parliament and Con majority.
  • PedestrianRockPedestrianRock Posts: 578
    Cookie said:

    MikeL said:

    IanB2 said:

    @RedfieldWilton
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1808168755731878026

    So some swingback, as anticipated.
    It's the smallest Labour lead form Redfield & Wilton since the 18pp lead on 10th March (42 - 24).
    But all agree that Con has had a far worse campaign than Lab.

    Implication is that none of it - not even D-Day - will make any difference at all when people actually cast their votes.
    What a furore that was. I bet most people have already forgotten about DDay gate.
    Well, somewhere between 1 in 4 and 1 in 5 people have already voted. D-Day gate might have been fresher in a lot of their minds.

    I’m wondering if the early postal vote might be less pro Tory than those who turn up on polling day.

    I’m also wondering whether many who were undecided, but would lean Tory - may just not vote at all in the end.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 13,511
    Leon said:

    Christ now there’s some old c*nt sneezing

    Classic bit of pb disproportionate fury there. Well done.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 28,017
    ..

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    Is that a stand alone poll or a sub sample?
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050

    Cookie said:

    MikeL said:

    IanB2 said:

    @RedfieldWilton
    Labour leads the Conservatives by 19% in our final poll.

    🇬🇧 Westminster Voting Intention (28 June - 2 July):

    Labour 41% (-1)
    Conservative 22% (+3)
    Reform UK 16% (-2)
    Liberal Democrat 10% (-1)
    Green 6% (+1)
    SNP 3% (+1)
    Other 2% (–)

    Changes +/- 26-27 Jun

    https://x.com/RedfieldWilton/status/1808168755731878026

    So some swingback, as anticipated.
    It's the smallest Labour lead form Redfield & Wilton since the 18pp lead on 10th March (42 - 24).
    But all agree that Con has had a far worse campaign than Lab.

    Implication is that none of it - not even D-Day - will make any difference at all when people actually cast their votes.
    What a furore that was. I bet most people have already forgotten about DDay gate.
    Well, somewhere between 1 in 4 and 1 in 5 people have already voted. D-Day gate might have been fresher in a lot of their minds.

    I’m wondering if the early postal vote might be less pro Tory than those who turn up on polling day.

    I’m also wondering whether many who were undecided, but would lean Tory - may just not vote at all in the end.
    1 in 5.
  • SeaShantyIrish2SeaShantyIrish2 Posts: 17,459
    IanB2 said:

    Carnyx said:

    Current flap re: UK postal voting in the light of USA vote-by-mail:

    > In USA prior to 2020 general election, lots of coverage in American media concerning problems with United States Postal Service (USPS) which is a quasi-government whatever-you-call-it. Problems both long-term AND exacerbated by Trump administration screw-ups (some accidental, others deliberate).

    > In UK prior to 2024 general, sudden spike (if not frenzy) in media coverage of Royal Mail's Horizon scandal, along with other issues concerning deterioration (if PB's any indication) of basic postal service.

    > In USA attacks by growing numbers of Republican politicos, pundits, activists on absentee and vote-by-mail as alleged conduits of electoral corruption (amplified by ramping & related disinformation) with effect of making many GOP voters reluctant to vote via the mail, and also making many Dems concerned whether Trump-inspired sabotage of USPS could disenfranchise them; in turn this led lost of Republicans to wait until Election Day to vote AND Democrats to either vote earlier via mail OR use ballot boxes and early in-person voting. My own guess is that Dems benefited more than Reps from this dynamic.

    > In WA State where all elections are conducted via vote-by-mail, the Secretary of State and local county auditors have close & frequent contacts with USPS managers, in order to respond to problems that arise in mail ballots out to voters, and with voters mailing them back to election authorities. AND even better, to plan and prepare for massive numbers of individual postal ballots moving both directions through the system - ballots that need to be properly processed, indeed expedited, in order to enfranchise voters, guard against error AND tampering, and (lest we forget) move all that mail down the line so that BlancheLivermore & etc. can get it where it needs to go.

    > In UK, there is relative absence (I think) of MAGA-GOP anti-postalism (though maybe NOT on PB) so that's not much of a factor. But appears to be growing angst about postal votes NOT getting counted because they're stuck on a truck somewhere on the M1.

    On your second point, Horizon is a Post Office issue, FA to do with the Royal Mail.
    But PO and RM were one and the same company for much of the Horizon era, and still are in the public mind.

    On SS's final point, I don't think the M1 delays are an issue so much as the sorting offices in some urban areas.
    In US major postal sorting centers can also be major bottlenecks for absentee and vote-by-mail ballots; this is exacerbated by fact that many 2nd-tier sorting centers on deliver mail every other day or suchlike. Including deliveries of outgoing & incoming ballots.

    Here in WA State you can see this reflected in daily returned ballot statistics, where some counties - including some of the biggest - will have next to no returns one day, then thousands the next, then squat the day after that, then . . .
    Yes, but in the UK, standard envelopes are all machine sorted and the office is configured to be clear of first class mail after every evening despatch. If there’s a problem in RM it’s with staffing shortages in delivery offices - but this affects delivery of PVs to punters and not their return to the council.
    Not sure what differences are between UK vs US postal sorting offices. Except the one just south of Seattle serving much of western Washington is HUMONGOUS the size of a smallish Death Star.

    As for delivery of postal ballots to voters, in WA State the lion's share are mailed out three weeks before primary & general elections; military & overseas ballots go even sooner. Voters who didn't receive a ballot (never arrived OR they weren't previously registered) can request one afterwards, but in final days before Election Day, you're best bet is to show up at the election office in person, to get your ballot and vote it then and there.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 54,557
    edited July 2

    Leon said:

    Christ now there’s some old c*nt sneezing

    Have a lemsip.
    Touche. One day this will be me

    But right now it isn’t and I want to chuck him in Portsmouth harbour. I hate ferries
  • highwayparadise306highwayparadise306 Posts: 1,050
    kinabalu said:

    MikeL said:

    Did anyone see Curtice on Newsnight last night?

    BBC use him as a numbers man. But seems to me he is just as good as a political commentator - ie analysing why the numbers move as they do.

    Made a very telling remark about the next Govt having to conduct a spending review by October which will flush out where the cuts are going to have to be made. Implication was why aren't journalists challenging politicians on this. Can't be kicked into long grass - decisions will have to be made imminently.

    Did Curtice screw up the numbers on the 2015 exit poll. Can someone clarify this. Thanks.
    No it was close, just that the 'error' was the difference between hung parliament and Con majority.
    Yes. That's it. Thanks.
  • Penddu2Penddu2 Posts: 685
    My favourite prediction so far....

    ITV Wales poll saying that Tories will get -4.7% in Rhondda (that is minus 4.7%)

    If only......
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 10,037

    ..

    WELSH KLAXON
    Welsh Westminster Voting Intention:

    LAB: 40% (-5)
    RFM: 16% (+3)
    CON: 16% (-2)
    PLC: 14% (+2)
    LDM: 7% (+2)
    GRN: 5% (+1)

    Via @YouGov, 27 Jun - 1 Jul.
    Changes w/ 30 May - 3 Jun.

    Is that a stand alone poll or a sub sample?
    Stand alone Welsh poll
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,183
    Evening all - just a test from a different machine.
This discussion has been closed.