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Jenrick remains the strong favourite – politicalbetting.com

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  • Phil said:

    An integrated economy of productive assets, connected by a common currency is limited only by the actual real-world limits on the productive capacity of it’s people & infrastructure working on concert. At the level of a country, the £ is a collective fiction we all agree to use in order to make the economy run. At the level of the individual household, the £ is an iron rule that will bankrupt you if you fail to meet your obligations.

    These two things are not the same, no matter how tempting it is to see them that way.
    Well exactly. Otherwise I would be selling a series of big figure zero coupon cheques redeemable in 2071
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,271
    JohnO said:

    Tomorrow belongs to me.
    Looks like the German chancellor has potentially saved his job because of voters aged 70+.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243

    So you are saying the PB is basically Uni course? Not a bad anaolgy!
    But are the tips bad enough to leave us £50k in debt after three years? :open_mouth:
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,650
    AnneJGP said:

    Perhaps the current fractured state of political support might pave the way for a Lab/Con/maybe more coalition that will try to look further ahead. Well, one can dream.
    Lab/Con is a stretch but the next parliament could be interesting if this government proves unpopular.
  • TomWTomW Posts: 70
    JohnO said:

    Tomorrow belongs to me.
    Once again as in the uk the boomers blocking any sort of real change.
  • Taz said:

    So much for claims here of the freebies stories "not cutting through"

    Competent - 14%
    Trustworthy - 8%
    These are utterly horrific numbers. These werent the first hundred days we asked for, but the first hundred we got!
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687

    Here is an interesting view of the current state of the EV market:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zjuj1xB_Ze8

    In particular he cites the lack of resale value and worries about range. Improved batteries would seem to me to solve both those problems.
    Worries about range (and longevity) are why people aren't rushing to buy second hand cars. Add on the fact that range is improvingmeans that the starting point of depreciation wasn't the £40,000 you paid but the £30,000 a better car costs this year...

    It's like the early days of Android / iPhones where next years phone had such significant changes that the previous years model was almost worthless instantly. Nowadays an iphone has a 4-5 year almost straight line depreciation curve.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687

    These are utterly horrific numbers. These werent the first hundred days we asked for, but the first hundred we got!
    The best thing Rishi did for the Tory party was call an unexpected election in July. Which meant that a lot of the first 100 days was spent with Parliament being in recess so few things got done.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,519

    So in life you need three Universities. The early years 18-22, PB for middle-aged (men, mainly) and then the U3A for later life retirees.
    The U3a (and I'm an enthusiastic member) is like PB in that it has it's shore of irrelevant commentators.
  • Here is an interesting view of the current state of the EV market:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zjuj1xB_Ze8

    In particular he cites the lack of resale value and worries about range. Improved batteries would seem to me to solve both those problems.
    You need a solid 300 miles to cover most people most of the time. Being driving EV for three years, with a notional range of 250. But that rapidly diminishes in different circumstances. Rain, cold and speed *dramatically* reduce that range, with 250+ only really obtainable on nice sunny dry days at 45mph.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    eek said:

    That's a question of what does a university actually sell - because as I said before the value is in the stamp of authenticity attached to the name of the university as much as anything else
    What they’re primarily selling is scarcity and reputation, at a time when information is freely available.
  • mercatormercator Posts: 815
    edited September 2024

    These are utterly horrific numbers. These werent the first hundred days we asked for, but the first hundred we got!
    Moving of WFA vote to wednesday got booed

    Your reminder that at labour conference 1997 Blair issued a "no triumphalism" order. Not much danger of that today.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited September 2024
    Stereodog said:

    It's hard to see how her logic works. If you accept that the government has the right to restrict some types of arms then you're accepting that it can restrict all of them which is clearly against the second amendment. Of course any sensible country would have junked that amendment long ago.
    The second amendment, well that’s how the people hold the government to the first amendment. - Dave Chappelle.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,647
    Taz said:

    So much for claims here of the freebies stories "not cutting through"

    Competent - 14%
    Trustworthy - 8%
    At home with the extended family this week, political giftgiving came up several times, seriously and as jokes.

    Upcoming budget speculation not once.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,416

    Here is an interesting view of the current state of the EV market:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zjuj1xB_Ze8

    In particular he cites the lack of resale value and worries about range. Improved batteries would seem to me to solve both those problems.
    There is still the charging infrastructure needed to support as well as, over time, increasing the power generated as we move to Electric from ICE.

    The trend is away from ICE. Resisting it is pointless. Embrace it and plan for it.
  • Klebb doing triumphalism after all. Toe curling
  • Before Tesla, the standard belief was that

    1) EVs will have rubbish range, be terrible cars and take forever to recharge

    After the Roadster

    2) EVs must be expensive and take forever to recharge

    After Supercharging

    3) Supercharging will kill your battery in 10 recharges

    etc etc

    What was interesting was that that *none* of the above was not available as researched engineering solutions. Controlling the temperature of the battery with water cooling, for example - published papers with stats on the effects on battery life.
    People will hate it, because his twitter profile/ownership and excessive trolling, but Tesla broke the mould it got battery manufacturing scale that made vehicles feasible. Of course the Chinese now have the edge. Elon is both a visionary genius and an arse. It's no fluke he is doing to space travel exactly what he has done for EVs.
    He is one of the most impactful people for the advancement of humanity this century.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,200
    edited September 2024

    The U3a (and I'm an enthusiastic member) is like PB in that it has it's shore of irrelevant commentators.
    I aim for irreverent irrelevance.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,271
    edited September 2024
    Here's an interesting counterintuitive finding from YouGov.

    10% of 2019 LD voters switched to the Tories, whereas only 7% of 2019 Tory voters switched to the LDs.

    https://x.com/YouGov/status/1810342835364737321
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,434
    .
    Stereodog said:

    It's hard to see how her logic works. If you accept that the government has the right to restrict some types of arms then you're accepting that it can restrict all of them which is clearly against the second amendment. Of course any sensible country would have junked that amendment long ago.
    That's pretty well how all constitutional law works, though.
    Few constitutional rights can be upheld in such an absolutist manner without infringing competing rights. That's been understood for centuries.

    So no, it's not at all hard to see how the logic works. The law, even with the current nuts on the Supreme Court, accepts some restriction on what arms can be owned.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,754

    You need a solid 300 miles to cover most people most of the time. Being driving EV for three years, with a notional range of 250. But that rapidly diminishes in different circumstances. Rain, cold and speed *dramatically* reduce that range, with 250+ only really obtainable on nice sunny dry days at 45mph.
    I think the number of times a year when it would be useful to me to be able to drive 250 miles without stopping can be counted on the fingers of one hand.
  • People will hate it, because his twitter profile/ownership and excessive trolling, but Tesla broke the mould it got battery manufacturing scale that made vehicles feasible. Of course the Chinese now have the edge. Elon is both a visionary genius and an arse. It's no fluke he is doing to space travel exactly what he has done for EVs.
    He is one of the most impactful people for the advancement of humanity this century.
    He is one of the most impactful people for the destruction of humanity this century as well. Time may tell which outweighs the other.
  • Reeves listing all the female political role models of the past.

    Having said only the other day that growing up she had no political role models to follow.

    She was born a couple of months before Margaret Thatcher became PM.

  • eek said:

    Is the view special - nope, so build...

    Literally my objections when it comes to planning are

    1) does it directly impact someone?

    if No it can be built.
    What about indirect impacts?

    Supermarkets have killed a lot of town centres. If we had required out of town development to charge for parking maybe we wouldn’t have so many boarded up bistros?

    The freeport growth is going to bite us..,
  • Oh dear
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,434
    edited September 2024
    eek said:

    Worries about range (and longevity) are why people aren't rushing to buy second hand cars. Add on the fact that range is improvingmeans that the starting point of depreciation wasn't the £40,000 you paid but the £30,000 a better car costs this year...

    It's like the early days of Android / iPhones where next years phone had such significant changes that the previous years model was almost worthless instantly. Nowadays an iphone has a 4-5 year almost straight line depreciation curve.
    Second hand prices are starting to reflect that reality though.
    Look at how quickly Teslas now depreciate, compared to what was the case only a couple of years back.
  • Gaza protest kicks off.

    Tarquin is being dragged out of the hall.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,576

    You need a solid 300 miles to cover most people most of the time. Being driving EV for three years, with a notional range of 250. But that rapidly diminishes in different circumstances. Rain, cold and speed *dramatically* reduce that range, with 250+ only really obtainable on nice sunny dry days at 45mph.
    Do most people need 300 miles, most of the time? Most do no more than 25 -30 miles commutes. Its the weekend away that can be more challenging.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    Cookie said:

    I think the number of times a year when it would be useful to me to be able to drive 250 miles without stopping can be counted on the fingers of one hand.
    The issue is that in winter to drive 200 miles you need a car to with a supposed range of 300+ to cope with heating the car and other cold weather impacts...
  • TomWTomW Posts: 70

    Reeves listing all the female political role models of the past.

    Having said only the other day that growing up she had no political role models to follow.

    She was born a couple of months before Margaret Thatcher became PM.

    I do wish female politicians would stop doing this. Present yourself on your own merits please.
  • God this attack on Tories is ill judged
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Do most people need 300 miles, most of the time? Most do no more than 25 -30 miles commutes. Its the weekend away that can be more challenging.
    The issue is when those five days you want the extra range, are the same five days for everyone.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    edited September 2024

    What about indirect impacts?

    Supermarkets have killed a lot of town centres. If we had required out of town development to charge for parking maybe we wouldn’t have so many boarded up bistros?

    The freeport growth is going to bite us..,
    I would suggest you head to Durham where Silver street (which has been dying for the past 15 years) is now full of restaurants and cafes.

    The world moves on, add a bit of spare cash and town centres can thrive...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,106
    Stereodog said:

    It's hard to see how her logic works. If you accept that the government has the right to restrict some types of arms then you're accepting that it can restrict all of them which is clearly against the second amendment. Of course any sensible country would have junked that amendment long ago.
    There was an Assault weapon ban that survived a decade of legal challenges from 1994-2004.

    Harris leads polling on gun control.

    https://x.com/USA_Polling/status/1825039647816220780?t=eHhEXBBeX3mvGOt6XHLj5Q&s=19

    So while there is a strong US gun culture, there is also demand for the sort of policies she has, including constitutionally.
  • Do most people need 300 miles, most of the time? Most do no more than 25 -30 miles commutes. Its the weekend away that can be more challenging.
    "Most of the time" is not good enough. Visit a M5 or M6 service station the weekend before Christmas and observe the Teslanians. A four hour wait for a 90 minute partial charge is enough to spoil your whole year.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,650
    eek said:

    That's easier - the more right wing candidate wins....
    Which could be the way to go because Nigel Farage has come out and said that he does not want racist bigots. It didn't make banner headlines but to me this was a bit of a bombshell. What he's effectively announcing there is a massive pivot to the centre for RUK and he's prepared to sacrifice about half of their existing base (so what around 2m voters?) to achieve it. Those people have to go somewhere and it probably won't be to Lab, Green or the LDs.
  • TomW said:

    I do wish female politicians would stop doing this. Present yourself on your own merits please.
    I'm more concerned about the apparent inconsistency.

    There were role models. Thatcher was PM while she was growing up.

    She lists a load of Labour role models and yet only the other day she said had none growing up.
  • eek said:

    Worries about range (and longevity) are why people aren't rushing to buy second hand cars. Add on the fact that range is improvingmeans that the starting point of depreciation wasn't the £40,000 you paid but the £30,000 a better car costs this year...

    It's like the early days of Android / iPhones where next years phone had such significant changes that the previous years model was almost worthless instantly. Nowadays an iphone has a 4-5 year almost straight line depreciation curve.
    I'm currently driving an elderly diesel car and have long though that my next car will be electric: anybody got a recommendation for an EV that would be fine if bought second hand? I don't need a great range.
  • TomWTomW Posts: 70
    kinabalu said:

    Which could be the way to go because Nigel Farage has come out and said that he does not want racist bigots. It didn't make banner headlines but to me this was a bit of a bombshell. What he's effectively announcing there is a massive pivot to the centre for RUK and he's prepared to sacrifice about half of their existing base (so what around 2m voters?) to achieve it. Those people have to go somewhere and it probably won't be to Lab, Green or the LDs.
    For a lot of reform voters Farage is milquetoast. They want not just immigration ended but repatriation of illegals and perhaps others too. Tommy Robinson has furiously attacked Tice and Farage
  • Standing ovation for proposed COVID fraud commission
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,576
    mercator said:

    "Most of the time" is not good enough. Visit a M5 or M6 service station the weekend before Christmas and observe the Teslanians. A four hour wait for a 90 minute partial charge is enough to spoil your whole year.
    Perhaps those in the 4h queue might look to leave the motorway by a few miles to find a charger, as many do to avoid paying ludicrous petrol prices on the motorway?
  • Nunu3Nunu3 Posts: 264

    A country which wants a higher exchange rate needs to:

    1) Live within its means
    2) Increase its savings rate
    3) Improve its productivity
    4) Create more wealth

    Perhaps the main requirement for doing any of those is actually wanting to do so (as opposed to saying you want to).
    we as a country very clearly dont want to do so.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    edited September 2024
    mercator said:

    "Most of the time" is not good enough. Visit a M5 or M6 service station the weekend before Christmas and observe the Teslanians. A four hour wait for a 90 minute partial charge is enough to spoil your whole year.
    My worst case scenario is needing to drive 240 miles in a hurry to my parents. So I need a car that can do that without wasting 30 minutes at a services because there will be a traffic jam or 2 regardless of when I set off..

    That means I need a car with a range of say 340 miles - which the new EV3 does. So when I said earlier I was looking at the Renault 5 I can really rule it out.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,576
    Of course - cutting down on Tax avoidance and Tax evasion! Why did no one else think of that...
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,961
    Sandpit said:

    What they’re primarily selling is scarcity and reputation, at a time when information is freely available.
    What they are really dealing with is how to think ie what to do with all those masses of information.

    Gathering information and training in the accepted way of processing it is best left to technical colleges.
  • So this is now a budget of growth apparently!
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Nunu3 said:

    we as a country very clearly dont want to do so.
    Bingo - most people have absolutely no idea we are not a rich country anymore. Would be completely shocked to hear the USA is pushing 50% higher GDP per capita.

  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,576
    Fucks sake. Investment in infrastructure weeks after canning the A303 works at Stonehenge. Joined up thinking...
  • Fucks sake. Investment in infrastructure weeks after canning the A303 works at Stonehenge. Joined up thinking...

    HS2 to Euston also to be canned potentially.
  • This has the air of that phase in Gordon Browns leadership where he was told to try and smile and look cheerful…
  • Ooh, reference to business rates though. If Labour try and reform that, it would be excellent.
  • Of course - cutting down on Tax avoidance and Tax evasion! Why did no one else think of that...

    5,000 tax compliance offers to be recruited apparently.

  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    Sandpit said:

    It was hot and sweaty if you were in a racing car with no air conditioning, driving under megawatts of floodlights.

    If you were in the Paddock Club, on the other hand, it was lovely.

    I have actually been there for the GP, the heat and humidity isn’t that bad for punters, especially if you’re used to the sandpit in summer! It’s 35ºC during the day, same as the hottest days in the UK. Wear a hat and drink lots of water.

    The Harris campaign is toying with rises in CGT as well, so there could also be an exodus from the US. Most options are in Europe outside the EU, Middle East, or Asia
    35 is as rare as rocking horse shit in the uk
  • HS2 to Euston also to be canned potentially.
    Stupid, stupid, stupid.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    ClippP said:

    What they are really dealing with is how to think ie what to do with all those masses of information.

    Gathering information and training in the accepted way of processing it is best left to technical colleges.
    Outside of strict specialisms, very few people really learn more at University than they would with 3 years relevant job experience.

    What is being sold is a sorting exercise - a way to tell employers you're better than the other candidates. Sadly given how easily degrees are given out, 95% of the value is accomplished through admissions.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,650

    People will hate it, because his twitter profile/ownership and excessive trolling, but Tesla broke the mould it got battery manufacturing scale that made vehicles feasible. Of course the Chinese now have the edge. Elon is both a visionary genius and an arse. It's no fluke he is doing to space travel exactly what he has done for EVs.
    He is one of the most impactful people for the advancement of humanity this century.
    He probably only made a difference of a few years on the tech and given he's using the disproportionate wealth and power that accrued from it to become the world's biggest far right troll there's a strong case to say we'd have been better off without him, net net.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687

    Of course - cutting down on Tax avoidance and Tax evasion! Why did no one else think of that...

    Love to see the details on that - because all the easy things have already been done.

    What you are now left with are things that would make hiding harder - such as lowering VAT thresholds so that most companies need to report turnover...
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,400
    edited September 2024
    Industrial strategy to be published at same time as Budget.

    Edit: I wonder whether it will propose a national supercomputer for AI work?

  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,025
    GIN1138 said:

    Morning Macl! :D
    Hello gin
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    edited September 2024

    Stupid, stupid, stupid.
    Yep - were I younger I would be heading abroad - heck I'm tempted even now.

    the WCML needs a bypass, that needs a terminal in central London which is Euston...
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,106
    edited September 2024

    I'm currently driving an elderly diesel car and have long though that my next car will be electric: anybody got a recommendation for an EV that would be fine if bought second hand? I don't need a great range.
    I have a Kia e-niro, 4 years old and battery range is as good as new. 280 (genuine) miles when fully charged, 230 in winter with heating and lights on. Lovely to drive and great build quality.

    I charge at home and use public chargers about once per year, including regular trips to my folks in Hants and to the Isle of Wight without using one.

    Range anxiety quickly wears off when you have an EV. The EV3 looks better still and even longer range, but a used e-niro is good value, particularly as have a 7 year warranty.
  • TomWTomW Posts: 70
    maaarsh said:

    Bingo - most people have absolutely no idea we are not a rich country anymore. Would be completely shocked to hear the USA is pushing 50% higher GDP per capita.

    It hit me when i went to Poland this year. I imagined it as a run down former communist country instead i was in a modern country with infrastructure better than the uk and a much lower cost of living. Even Bucharest in Romania is now as rich as northern england
  • Foxy said:

    I have a Kia e-niro, 4 years old and battery range is as good as new. 280 (genuine) miles when fully charged, 230 in winter with heating and lights on. Lovely to drive and great build quality.

    I charge at home and use public chargers about once per year, including regular trips to my folks in Hants and to the Isle of Wight without using one.

    Range anxiety quickly wears off when you have an EV. The EV3 looks better still and even longer range, but a used e-niro is good value, particularly as have a 7 year warranty.
    Thanks: I'll give it a look.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,416
    Ed Miliband looking decidedly uninterested :smile:
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,426

    5,000 tax compliance offers to be recruited apparently.

    By the time they have been trained up, going to be years before that delivers a profit...
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,416

    Of course - cutting down on Tax avoidance and Tax evasion! Why did no one else think of that...

    She's a true innovator.
  • Taz said:

    Ed Miliband looking decidedly uninterested :smile:

    Onshore wind just mention so that should perk him up.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    mercator said:

    Standing ovation for proposed COVID fraud commission

    Hasn't enough Covid fraud been committed already, without commissioning more? :wink:
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    New polling from The NY Times/Siena is not good for Harris in the sun belt .

    Showing large drops especially in Arizona where Trump leads by 5 points compared to their last poll.

    It’s just one poll but perhaps a wake up call to those of us who want a Harris win .
  • Promising more jobs in the car industry.

    Hmmm. Chinese EV says 'hi'.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,426
    mercator said:

    Standing ovation for proposed COVID fraud commission

    Let's hope it looks into the contracts Labour were promoting too...
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,416
    edited September 2024
    eek said:

    I would suggest you head to Durham where Silver street (which has been dying for the past 15 years) is now full of restaurants and cafes.

    The world moves on, add a bit of spare cash and town centres can thrive...
    If only we had a local authority that wanted to do the same for many of the other parts of the county, aside from Seaham and Bishop.

    Silver Street may be finally improving but down by the bus station is still a tip. The new bus station wasn't even open this morning when people went to get their buses.

    Durham still has much to do.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    edited September 2024

    Industrial strategy to be published at same time as Budget.

    Edit: I wonder whether it will propose a national supercomputer for AI work?

    It would be useful if they could describe a benefit of AI - at the moment I'm seeing an industry spending $bns to generate decisions I can't trust as when you drill down you get hallucinations - even on a limited dataset.

    Being blunt I can't justify the prices I'm being asked to pay...
  • These are utterly horrific numbers. These werent the first hundred days we asked for, but the first hundred we got!
    They haven't even got to a hundred days yet.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,075
    The man is dodgy, and I doubt it would end well for the Tories.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    edited September 2024
    Taz said:

    If only we had a local authority that wanted to do the same for many of the other parts of the county, aside from Seaham and Bishop.

    It's not up to the local authority.

    Bishop is the story of 1 man approaching retirement and wanting to leave a legacy
    Seaham has the coast...
    Durham a lot of rich students and their parents...

    The reason nowhere else is similar is because there isn't enough people there with spare cash and/or time
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243

    Promising more jobs in the car industry.

    Hmmm. Chinese EV says 'hi'.

    Did she specify in which country those jobs would be?
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592

    Let's hope it looks into the contracts Labour were promoting too...
    https://x.com/HenryNewman/status/1837971500005024096

    Given this I wouldn't have much confidence our taxes will be paying for an impartial review.
  • Foxy said:

    I have a Kia e-niro, 4 years old and battery range is as good as new. 280 (genuine) miles when fully charged, 230 in winter with heating and lights on. Lovely to drive and great build quality.

    I charge at home and use public chargers about once per year, including regular trips to my folks in Hants and to the Isle of Wight without using one.

    Range anxiety quickly wears off when you have an EV. The EV3 looks better still and even longer range, but a used e-niro is good value, particularly as have a 7 year warranty.
    Leicester to Southampton 145 miles. Leicester to anywhere else in Hants less. You are like a 5'8" man saying he has no problem with 5'10" headroom doorways.
  • TomWTomW Posts: 70
    nico679 said:

    New polling from The NY Times/Siena is not good for Harris in the sun belt .

    Showing large drops especially in Arizona where Trump leads by 5 points compared to their last poll.

    It’s just one poll but perhaps a wake up call to those of us who want a Harris win .

    The election will end up coming down to about 100 votes in Pennsylvania. There will be multiple challenges and rechallenges as Trump alleges a big conspiracy.
  • 'Bring it on' is up there with "Hell yes, I am tough enough."

  • Selebian said:

    Did she specify in which country those jobs would be?
    West Midlands.
  • HS2 to Euston also to be canned potentially.
    They may as well down tools and walk away from the whole thing then.

    Is there anyone in government with a brain?
  • mercator said:

    God this attack on Tories is ill judged

    They're really struggling to cope with being in government so retreating to their safe space.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,687
    Horizon still has IT problems that impact post offices

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj6ez6p567do
  • mercator said:

    Leicester to Southampton 145 miles. Leicester to anywhere else in Hants less. You are like a 5'8" man saying he has no problem with 5'10" headroom doorways.
    My longest journey would normally be about 175 miles (at Christmas), so anything over 200 should be fine. Having said that, I would want to know about recharging points at my destination.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Am I watching glitchy coverage or does she keep slurring words together?
  • maaarsh said:

    https://x.com/HenryNewman/status/1837971500005024096

    Given this I wouldn't have much confidence our taxes will be paying for an impartial review.
    Yes, Labour's hypocrisy on this is massive.

    I fear if Covid had happened under SKS, we'd still be waiting for the PPE three years later.

    Except of course we wouldn't, because they'd have done similar to the Conservative government. Not exactly the same, but the same sort of choices. There was no magic bullet; and few good guys in the procurement chain.
  • Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    3m
    BREAKING: As Reeves talks about honouring public sector pay body recommendations, the Royal College of Nurses have rejected the government's pay award of a 5.5% rise
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,271

    HS2 to Euston also to be canned potentially.
    So much disruption has already been caused at Euston for this project.
  • Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    3m
    BREAKING: As Reeves talks about honouring public sector pay body recommendations, the Royal College of Nurses have rejected the government's pay award of a 5.5% rise

    Inevitable
  • Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    3m
    BREAKING: As Reeves talks about honouring public sector pay body recommendations, the Royal College of Nurses have rejected the government's pay award of a 5.5% rise

    Well of course. This was always coming when they saw what others were getting.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,057
    edited September 2024
    eek said:

    How is Paul Marshall different from Rupert Murdoch?
    He supports the Evangelical movement in the UK.
    He was a cuckoo in the LibDem nest and helped publish the Orange Book. I think, that without Marshall, the LibDem coalition agreement would have not been so right wing. He's very influential and has been operating under the radar.
  • They should get Sue Gray to head the Covid PPE inquiry.

    She's got a good record of being impartial and not bought.

    Or Shami Chakrabarti...
  • Inevitable
    Sky just highlighting it

    What a dose of cold water poured over Reeves
  • Fairly vacuous but I guess detail has to wait for Budget.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,277

    Here is an interesting view of the current state of the EV market:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zjuj1xB_Ze8

    In particular he cites the lack of resale value and worries about range. Improved batteries would seem to me to solve both those problems.
    The resale value problem isn't driven by battery quality or capacity. The root issue is uncertainty; it's very difficult to tell the extent to which a BEV's battery pack is degraded. The car's onboard systems are useless for this purpose as projected range is something between a formulation based on WLTP and a random number. So, if people don't know if they are buying a clapped out piece of shit or not, that naturally depresses the price.

    I can do it (for Porsche, BMW and Audi) but I am a Level 99 Car Wizard. Your average punter and plastic slip-on clad independent used dealer has no chance.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,828

    Beth Rigby
    @BethRigby
    ·
    3m
    BREAKING: As Reeves talks about honouring public sector pay body recommendations, the Royal College of Nurses have rejected the government's pay award of a 5.5% rise

    I mean 5.5% is pretty a decent pay rise, but given the crazy pay rises they've given to doctors and train drivers I say good on the nurses!
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,576

    Let's hope it looks into the contracts Labour were promoting too...
    Without being too obvious, surely dodgy contracts have already been looked at? If not, why not? There has been enough sound and fury about it.
This discussion has been closed.