Howdy, Stranger!

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

After the Veep debate Trump is now the favourite – politicalbetting.com

135

Comments

  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 845
    HYUFD said:

    Tugendhat speaking well so far, articulate and clear. His odds should shorten
    Lending votes...
    So given that Tugendhat or Cleverly is likely to be eliminated next, then it's the survivor of those 2 who is likely to be in a position to lend votes to determine whether they face Jenrick / Badenoch... surely?
    So it's a choice of who is more likely to shit the bed with the members and suddenly the total lunacy that the pair have been spouting makes sense tactically. They're competing to be selected as the easier opponent to be lent votes by Cleverly/Tugendhat.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196
    HYUFD said:

    Cleverly now on

    So far a bit dull, though his message is sound
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196
    Dopermean said:

    Lending votes...
    So given that Tugendhat or Cleverly is likely to be eliminated next, then it's the survivor of those 2 who is likely to be in a position to lend votes to determine whether they face Jenrick / Badenoch... surely?
    So it's a choice of who is more likely to shit the bed with the members and suddenly the total lunacy that the pair have been spouting makes sense tactically. They're competing to be selected as the easier opponent to be lent votes by Cleverly/Tugendhat.
    Jenrick is through, Badenoch will almost certainly come 3rd, it is between Cleverly and Tugendhat to be the One Nation centrist candidate to face Jenrick with the members
  • I really like the idea that incompetent people can become surgeons - often enough that standardising the euphemisms around it is a thing.
    It is the age-old joke: what do you call the person who came bottom in medical school? Doctor.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    Good speech from Cleverley
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,882
    Mishal Husain failed to sufficiently challenge guest over anti-semitic conspiracies, BBC admits

    Got to have some sympathy for the BBC over its reporting on the slaughter in the middle east here. Has a fine line to tread and both sides are calling bias. I think, by and large, it gets it right.

    License fee still needs to go though.

    https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/mishal-husain-failed-to-sufficiently-challenge-guest-over-anti-semitic-conspiracies-bbc-admits/ar-AA1rxmxX?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=6953cde3167f42dcb88fb2b1f8d3159a&ei=15
  • HYUFD said:

    Cleverly now on

    Now you are listening to a leader the party needs
  • StereodogStereodog Posts: 770
    HYUFD said:

    So far a bit dull, though his message is sound
    It was a very 'Thought for the Day' opening. This is a more traditional leaders conference speech than Tugenhadt's. Personally I prefer it as it comes across as more leader like but I can see why others might find it dull. Big points for the Warhammer figures quip though.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196
    Barnesian said:

    Good speech from Cleverley

    Robotic delivery, though content OK
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394

    That hammering sound you can hear behind me on the pb webcam is builders bringing us up to scratch after a fire assessment. New fire doors, alarms, and even illuminated signs to guide us down the stairs and out the front door as if it were physically possible to take any other route: no corridors off t-junctions here.

    In recent times I was connected with a leading ecommerce website that underwent regular performance tests. The problem was not that the tests were unrealistic but that the pass/fail thresholds were. 10 seconds' delay might be just about acceptable during payment, but not 30 seconds, and not 10 seconds for product search.
    Those delay thresholds are the bane of my life where ever I'm working. And most of the time my job is demonstrating that while the bits I do are customer / user facing the actual problem is in that system over there...
  • HYUFD said:

    Robotic delivery, though content OK
    He is a different league to the rest
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196

    He is a different league to the rest
    Not for me, I would vote for Jenrick over Cleverly I think but Tugendhat first
  • HYUFD said:

    Not for me, I would vote for Jenrick over Cleverly I think but Tugendhat first
    Of course you would because you are lost in the cause of the right-wing
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    "It's morning in Britain."
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196

    Of course you would because you are lost in the cause of the right-wing
    No, I would vote for Cleverly over Kemi.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    edited October 2024
    HYUFD said:

    Not for me, I would vote for Jenrick over Cleverly I think but Tugendhat first
    Cleverley is pitching a central positive position that could appeal to both Reform and LD voters and unite the party.
    So he's bound to lose.
    Though his odds are now shortening further.
  • StereodogStereodog Posts: 770

    He is a different league to the rest
    I agree. He comes across as a warm and serious person.
  • As someone who has read pretty much all of the source material. Including The Annotated Shopping Lists of JRR Tolkien, by Christopher Tolkien*, 2,564 pages.

    I can agree. A bit.

    But the soap opera plotting and setting just feels like the Warcraft film (had to sit through part of that one, when some friends of my youngest daughter were having a sleep over. The horror. The horror.)

    *Which includes a forward by Christopher Tolkien decrying the crass commercialisation of his father's work.
    That is a difference of personal taste. I don't agree but that does not make my opinion on taste any better or worse than yours of course. Just different. My main point is that the majority of criticisms seem to be on the 'its woke' level or criticisms of the content related to Lore. Both of which are way off the mark.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    edited October 2024
    Barnesian said:

    Cleverley is pitching a central positive position that could appeal to both Reform and LD voters and unite the party.
    So he's bound to lose.
    Though his odds are now shortening further.
    "No mergers, no deals with Reform".

    From a LD perspective I hope he loses.
    But If I were a Tory I'd vote for him.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394
    James Cleverly admits he’s a Warhammer collector.

    https://x.com/RalphBlackburn/status/1841422783483412891

    I don't know if that rules him in or out but it's better than making model buses from boxes.
  • HYUFD said:

    NEW POLL ~ Popularity of party leaders: September 2024 Yougov

    🟪 Nigel Farage: 39%
    🟦 Rishi Sunak: 28%
    🟥 Keir Starmer: 26%
    ⬜️ Jeremy Corbyn: 25%
    🟧 Ed Davey: 19%
    https://x.com/LeftieStats/status/1841151478104289284

    The YouGov "popularity" polls are dodgy as hell. The methodology is really unclear, and results are way out of line with conventional polls.

    My favourite feature is that the list misses out Britain's most "popular" politician - step forward Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Ms Laura Trott.

    And anyone who thinks any of YouGov's respondents are thinking of the highly decorated Olympian and smiling face of London 2012 are nasty, bitter h8ers who don't get how strong a grip the Sevenoaks MP has on the nation's heart. See also David Frost, to whom we would all give a warm, "hello, good morning and welcome" if we were lucky enough to meet him.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,247
    edited October 2024
    One adaptation from book to film that I loved was Villeneuve's Dune.

    I take @Foxy 's point about films about history. Perhaps, too much accuracy drives away too many viewers. There's a good example of this with Ride with the Devil, to my mind, an outstanding film set in the US civil war, about Confederate Irregular Cavalry in Missouri.

    They did the sort of things that Confederate Irregular Cavalry did, and made liberal use of the Forbidden Word, and the film flopped, accordingly. Whereas, something like North and South, which is mostly historical rubbish, performed fantastically.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,617

    Can't believe that almost 40% of UK voters think highly of Farage! 40% might have heard of him, of course.
    52% voted for Brexit, remember. There is a larger well of people with unfashionable opinions than people with fashionable opinions think.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196
    edited October 2024
    Barnesian said:

    Cleverley is pitching a central positive position that could appeal to both Reform and LD voters and unite the party.
    So he's bound to lose.
    Though his odds are now shortening further.
    I doubt his claiming he brought down immigration will convince Reform voters to switch from Farage and LD voters woud prefer Tugendhat to him. He is more likely to win over Tory to Labour switchers than voters the Tories have lost to Reform and the LDs.

    However he is doing OK but lacks energy in my view
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755

    I hardly ever watch box sets and/or serials, but I watched "Star Wars: Andor" last month, and was pleasantly surprised how good it was!
    It's very audience specific.

    ANDOR
    "Andor" is about middle-aged men trapped in a system of constant labour with no rest, where the lowest rung are automatically punished and the higher rung given only modest pleasures, with this system being imposed by the extraordinarily powerful. This appeals to the legacy audience of Star Wars, who are middle-aged men trapped in a...but you can finish this by yourself. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTAjkDICyu0

    THE ACOLYTE
    "The Acolyte" is about a young woman who is forced to be automatically good becoming aware of an identical twin who is free to be very bad at whim. This appeals to the new audience that Disney hopes to attract to Star Wars, which are young women...but you can finish this by yourself. See https://damiengwalter.medium.com/the-acolyte-is-good-20f775367c55
  • More that the studio didn't quite know what to do with a dark, anti-superhero story.

    Then came The Boys
    The Boys, Preacher, The Expanse. I find it hard to agree with this idea that we are not in a time of great TV.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 4,304
    Cookie said:

    52% voted for Brexit, remember. There is a larger well of people with unfashionable opinions than people with fashionable opinions think.
    52% voted for brexit in 2016..how many are not with us? How many are new voters since then?
  • HYUFD said:

    I doubt his claiming he brought down immigration will convince Reform voters to switch from Farage and LD voters woud prefer Tugendhat to him. He is more likely to win over Tory to Labour switchers than voters the Tories have lost to Reform and the LDs.

    However he is doing OK but lacks energy in my view
    He is far and away the best choice for the leadership
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    HYUFD said:

    I doubt his claiming he brought down immigration will convince Reform voters to switch from Farage and LD voters woud prefer Tugendhat to him. He is more likely to win over Tory to Labour switchers than voters the Tories have lost to Reform and the LDs.

    However he is doing OK but lacks energy in my view
    In the light of Labour's implosion, perhaps your earlier assessment that you need someone with oomph is wrong and all you need is a bit of quiet gravitas, which he seems to have more of than the other options.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Cleverly is obviously the best of a bad bunch, but needs to be a little less cocky, careful and smarter. Is good vibes enough?

    His current unfunded stamp duty abolition is an almost Trussite policy. His opponents might dine off that for some time.

    Are the Tory party ready for ‘normal’?
  • Taz said:

    Yeah, imagine how a debate like this would play out on Twitter or Gallifreybase ?

    Imagine Ian Levine with a firm view one way or the other involving himself in the debate :cold_sweat:
    Would The Rings of Power be better if John Nathan-Turner or Russell T. Davies was the writing the episodes.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    edited October 2024
    HYUFD said:

    I doubt his claiming he brought down immigration will convince Reform voters to switch from Farage and LD voters woud prefer Tugendhat to him. He is more likely to win over Tory to Labour switchers than voters the Tories have lost to Reform and the LDs.

    However he is doing OK but lacks energy in my view
    He's speaking s l o w l y and deliberately.
    The audience is listening to him, and lots of applause.
    Now 3.1 on Betfair.
    Now 2.8

    So it's going to be Jendrick versus Cleverley.
  • viewcode said:

    It's very audience specific.

    ANDOR
    "Andor" is about middle-aged men trapped in a system of constant labour with no rest, where the lowest rung are automatically punished and the higher rung given only modest pleasures, with this system being imposed by the extraordinarily powerful. This appeals to the legacy audience of Star Wars, who are middle-aged men trapped in a...but you can finish this by yourself. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTAjkDICyu0

    THE ACOLYTE
    "The Acolyte" is about a young woman who is forced to be automatically good becoming aware of an identical twin who is free to be very bad at whim. This appeals to the new audience that Disney hopes to attract to Star Wars, which are young women...but you can finish this by yourself. See https://damiengwalter.medium.com/the-acolyte-is-good-20f775367c55
    The Acolyte was rubbish, it was rightly cancelled.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755
    edited October 2024
    Nigelb said:

    Why do they even need pylons when they have direct energy transmission ... ?
    Canonically, the pylons need to have uninterrupted line-of-sight to each other. This is usually explained by a flow of energy between them, although my head canon says that the space between them is stressed by the warp process, causing metal fatigue, eventual sickness, etc. My head-canon is great and explains all things, only briefly interrupted by reality proving it wrong. :):)

    The Eight Star Fleet Ship Design Rules: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Au9UeLfI6TE
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Another unfunded commitment from Cleverly. He is really stacking them up.
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,296

    Would The Rings of Power be better if John Nathan-Turner or Russell T. Davies was the writing the episodes.
    Douglas Adams's Ring of Power is the show I want to see...
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021
    TOPPING said:

    Meanwhile Apple has come with a wet sail and its top three viewed series are Slow Horses (excellent), Ted Lasso (excellent), and Bad Monkey (very good indeed).

    They seem to be leading the pack atm.

    Slow Horses is possibly the best TV drama since Breaking Bad. It’s that good.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,667

    The Acolyte was rubbish, it was rightly cancelled.
    Yeah, truly awful. I couldn't make it to the end but read what happened in the final episodes and glad I gave up on it. I heard the viewing figures were so bad by the end that Disney are looking into doing a Willow and just taking it off the platform entirely and pretending it never happened.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,000
    edited October 2024
    Slowly making my way through the Book of Boba Fett amongst the 50,000 showings of the Hey Duggee Castle badge that seem to end up on our TV.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,658
    edited October 2024
    HYUFD said:

    NEW POLL ~ Popularity of party leaders: September 2024 Yougov

    🟪 Nigel Farage: 39%
    🟦 Rishi Sunak: 28%
    🟥 Keir Starmer: 26%
    ⬜️ Jeremy Corbyn: 25%
    🟧 Ed Davey: 19%
    https://x.com/LeftieStats/status/1841151478104289284

    OK, but what we really want from YouGov is a voting intention poll.

    By this point in the 2019 to 2024 parliament we'd had two VI polls from YouGov?
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,724
    Barnesian said:

    "No mergers, no deals with Reform".

    From a LD perspective I hope he loses.
    But If I were a Tory I'd vote for him.
    He's quite obviously the best choice for winning seats back at the next GE and has some interesting ideas like SDLT changes. Sense of humour and does not appear to be gratuitously malevolent or weird.

    Big opportunity for the Conservatives.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,430

    The Boys, Preacher, The Expanse. I find it hard to agree with this idea that we are not in a time of great TV.
    I find it hard to agree with the idea that i isn't possible to make great TV and films.

    I also find it hard to agree with the idea that tons of shit is being made. Said shit isn't shit because of woke. But because it is written by people rejected from Brazilian telenovela writing.
  • Standing ovation

    Madness if he is not the next leader
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755
    edited October 2024
    eek said:

    James Cleverly admits he’s a Warhammer collector.

    https://x.com/RalphBlackburn/status/1841422783483412891

    So is Henry Cavill, incidentally: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0Lrr2uS6t8

    Also incidentally, the Warhammer fan film "Astartes" is one of the best animated fan-fics ever. I'm not into the franchise, but even I can tell the fanfic is really good: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7hgjuFfn3A

    (I won't bother you with my decade-old Babylon 5 fanfic on alternatehistory.com... :) )

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196
    Barnesian said:

    He's speaking s l o w l y and deliberately.
    The audience is listening to him, and lots of applause.
    Now 3.1 on Betfair.
    Now 2.8

    So it's going to be Jendrick versus Cleverley.
    Probably but we will see, if that is the choice I would vote for Jenrick I think
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    Standing ovation
    2.78 on Betfair. Jendrick 2.04.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755

    The Acolyte was rubbish, it was rightly cancelled.
    Unless you are pulling off some epic sockpuppeting, you are not a twelve-year-old girl... :)
  • HYUFD said:

    Probably but we will see, if that is the choice I would vote for Jenrick I think
    Then you are being very foolish and haven't put the conservative party best interests first
  • londonpubmanlondonpubman Posts: 3,641
    It feels like the direction of travel is moving in favour of Cleverly
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,724
    Eabhal said:

    He's quite obviously the best choice for winning seats back at the next GE and has some interesting ideas like SDLT changes. Sense of humour and does not appear to be gratuitously malevolent or weird.

    Big opportunity for the Conservatives.
    Also he mentioned the bicycle as a great British invention (debatable). Very hard to not to like him tbh.

    "Let's be more normal"
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    Anyone who flies to England and is shocked by rainfall is deserving of as much sympathy as those who fly to the Dubai are are shocked that it's a bit hot.
    The weather’s slowly getting better. 36ºC today, first rain of the year in the mountains, and we could be down to 33ºC maximums by the weekend. Can’t wait for winter!
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196

    In the light of Labour's implosion, perhaps your earlier assessment that you need someone with oomph is wrong and all you need is a bit of quiet gravitas, which he seems to have more of than the other options.
    PMs going straight into the role need gravitas, Cleverly would be OK for that.

    Opposition leaders need charisma and oomph
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Getting very excited over a speech most voters in this election won't even see. He gives a good speech, but he's fundamentally out of step with the Conservative base, and claiming he was a success on migration is pure fantasy. Not willing to reckon with why they really lost.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,210
    Pleasantly surprised by Cleverly. Came across very well.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,196
    edited October 2024
    Jenrick now up, already smooth and articulate about his background in the Midlands
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,210
    Jenrick already cringe.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,972
    Slick as JD Vance's presentation might be, what he actually said was an inverted pyramid of piffle.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,882

    Would The Rings of Power be better if John Nathan-Turner or Russell T. Davies was the writing the episodes.
    Well it would certainly be flamboyant and Hawaiin shirts the order of the day.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    Cleverly has been Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary. On paper it's obvious that it should be his contest to lose.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 845
    HYUFD said:

    Jenrick is through, Badenoch will almost certainly come 3rd, it is between Cleverly and Tugendhat to be the One Nation centrist candidate to face Jenrick with the members
    Nobody is through until they've counted the round 4 votes.
    Assuming Stride's votes stay moderate, round 3 is Jenrick 33, Badenoch 28 and then either C or T.
    Potentially C or T then has 58 votes but only need 40, so can decide whether they face Jenrick or Badenoch, unless career minded Cleverly/Tugendhat supporters switch to Jenrick.
  • maaarsh said:

    Getting very excited over a speech most voters in this election won't even see. He gives a good speech, but he's fundamentally out of step with the Conservative base, and claiming he was a success on migration is pure fantasy. Not willing to reckon with why they really lost.

    He is the one the opposition fear most
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    Thought Cleverly laboured through that peroration. Not a great speaker. Jenrick hits an early 10 on the slick-o-cringe-o-meter.

  • HYUFD said:

    Jenrick now up, already smooth and articulate about his background in the Midlands

    Cringe for me
  • eekeek Posts: 29,394
    HYUFD said:

    PMs going straight into the role need gravitas, Cleverly would be OK for that.

    Opposition leaders need charisma and oomph
    Did you pay any attention when SKS was the leader of the opposition. Charisma and Oomph are not exactly words that you would use to describe him.
  • logical_songlogical_song Posts: 10,005
    It should be Tugendhat vs Cleverley.
    So, it will be the other two.
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592

    He is the one the opposition fear most
    Baseless platitude. The leader required is the one who gets back the voters who defected or stayed at home, often largely due to Cleverly's personal failure on immigration.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    edited October 2024

    Jenrick already cringe.

    He's also speaking s l o w l y but I don't think he is engaging the audience. Not much applause.
    Cliches.
    Not inspiring. I hope he wins.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 23,755

    Would The Rings of Power be better if John Nathan-Turner or Russell T. Davies was the writing the episodes.
    RTD (2005-2010) would have set-up series-long arcs with an epic ending where the companion saves the day
    JNT (1980-1987) would have paid far too much attention to the fans whilst attracting attention by stunt-casting that usually doesn't work
    RTD (2023-present) would be all over the place, with some bangers but a main character that's too passive and cries a lot.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,118
    maaarsh said:

    Baseless platitude. The leader required is the one who gets back the voters who defected or stayed at home, often largely due to Cleverly's personal failure on immigration.
    His personal failure? Wasn't it Badenoch who lobbied for immigration restrictions to be lifted?
  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Barnesian said:

    He's also speaking s l o w l y but I don't think he is engaging the audience. Not much applause.
    Moments when it feels like the speed is a function of the lack of notes rather than just coaching.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,952
    maaarsh said:

    Moments when it feels like the speed is a function of the lack of notes rather than just coaching.
    I caught a glimpse of a teleprompter at the back of the hall.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 53,972

    It feels like the direction of travel is moving in favour of Cleverly

    You mean the membership is FINALLY getting smacked upside the head by reality?

  • maaarshmaaarsh Posts: 3,592
    Barnesian said:

    I caught a glimpse of a teleprompter at the back of the hall.
    Even worse.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,118
    Stereodog said:

    It was a very 'Thought for the Day' opening. This is a more traditional leaders conference speech than Tugenhadt's. Personally I prefer it as it comes across as more leader like but I can see why others might find it dull. Big points for the Warhammer figures quip though.
    I need to see photos of some of his models and how fluffy his lists are.
  • Jonathan said:

    Another unfunded commitment from Cleverly. He is really stacking them up.

    Hmmm. Although I take your point (talk is cheap etc) I think it's a bit much to expect candidates in a leadership election, several years out from a General Election, to write a Budget. At this point, it's about setting out priorities for your leadership.

    It's fair to wade in if, having been elected LOTO, someone continues to rack up expensive promises and doesn't back it up with a broad fiscal plan within a year or so. But the work of an Opposition (as well as opposing, of course) is to develop a plan, not to come in with a complete plan on day one.

    When you become the new leader of a governing party, you of course have an existing plan on day one - it's not your plan, and you want to put your stamp on it, but you don't have a blank sheet of paper. One minor defence of Liz Truss is that her predecessor didn't have much of a plan and ran on bluster and guff, so she (and Sunak) did need to try to develop something in flight. She made a dreadful job of it, and he was only marginally better, but still.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 7,210
    This has the air of the quiet man turning up the volume.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,267
    edited October 2024

    You mean the membership is FINALLY getting smacked upside the head by reality?

    There's something about Jenrick which doesn't quite convince or sit right with me. Given his level of MP support he must have something.

    Cleverley was excellent. Tugendhat limp.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,247

    Would The Rings of Power be better if John Nathan-Turner or Russell T. Davies was the writing the episodes.
    They should have Joe Abercrombie writing the episodes.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    Apparently it was true. Why is it crass to talk about it when it wasn’t for, say, covid?
    Many countries in the world, including the one where I live at the moment, routinely screen for HIV and Hepatitis as a condition of a resident visa.

    You really, *really*, don’t want to be importing people with such diseases.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,267
    Cleverley shortens to 3.05 (bf)
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 9,724
    edited October 2024
    Magna Carta cringe

    That's the ULEZ bomber vote tied up
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,421
    I assume the Yougov leader ratings quoted up thread are gross favourability. That usually gives the highest scores to the most divisive but cultish figures and the lowest to the inoffensive triangulators. Corbyn used to do well on gross favourability.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,267
    Too long-term for me, but you can get Cleverley at 12 for next PM (bf)
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,181
    edited October 2024

    She's kind of right though. Now is not the time for detailed policy, which will only invite the question of why they did not try it when they ran the country less than six months ago. Now is the time for philosophy and broad direction of travel, for strategy and tactics, for aspiration and vision.

    But not getting cross is a key political skill that Kemi needs to work on. It is useful in real life too, especially for night time posting on PB.
    I don’t really agree. The Tories, including Kemi have only just left Government. They should absolutely be all over policy, and proposing solutions to issues affecting delivery, or changes to the broader policy direction, should be well within their capability. It's pretty daft for Kemi to expect to be elected on the basis of having no policies but 'here's my personality, isn't if great?'. It also feels dishonest - like she can do what the heck she likes when she gets in with no comeback. Frankly she could apply to rejoin the EU or make the UK into one huge asylum centre if she wanted to, but as long as she's doing it in that plucky Kemi way, we should all love it. It's like the Kemi version of a Ming vase strategy - and we all know how great that turned out.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,294
    Mr. F, Abercrombie's written some very good books (been a while since I read them, though). Ever read the Thorns books by Mark Lawrence? Rather liked them.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 50,400
    Eabhal said:

    Magna Carta cringe

    That's the ULEZ bomber vote tied up

    Magna Carta was the beginning of "the Blob".

    After that there has always been vested interests limiting what the executive could do.
  • I don't think Cleverly will make the final two. Jenrick has the numbers among MPs, and probably with sufficient comfort to enable him to pick his opponent through tactical voting. This conference has probably convinced his team that his opponent shouldn't be Cleverly.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,421
    Stocky said:

    There's something about Jenrick which doesn't quite convince or sit right with me. Given his level of MP support he must have something.

    Cleverley was excellent. Tugendhat limp.
    The vibe in Birmingham yesterday seemed cheery and relaxed. In that context I could imagine Mr Avuncular would go down much better than our Brandon Flowers lookalike trying to channel Ralph Fiennes
  • You mean the membership is FINALLY getting smacked upside the head by reality?

    He is supposed to be the one with the best judgment of the candidates and yet is the same person who at a Downing St reception thought it a good idea to talk about drugging his wife with Rohypnol, and thought if its only a little bit of the drug its not really illegal.

    Its not quite Maggie v Hezza.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,267
    edited October 2024

    I don't think Cleverly will make the final two. Jenrick has the numbers among MPs, and probably with sufficient comfort to enable him to pick his opponent through tactical voting. This conference has probably convinced his team that his opponent shouldn't be Cleverly.

    Yes - I see that - but does he have the numbers though?

    This team won't want Badenoch either (unless she balls up her speech) and they won't be able to engineer a Tugendhat path through to the final two, surely?
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,882
    viewcode said:

    RTD (2005-2010) would have set-up series-long arcs with an epic ending where the companion saves the day
    JNT (1980-1987) would have paid far too much attention to the fans whilst attracting attention by stunt-casting that usually doesn't work
    RTD (2023-present) would be all over the place, with some bangers but a main character that's too passive and cries a lot.
    :smile:

    Very good.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,247

    Mr. F, Abercrombie's written some very good books (been a while since I read them, though). Ever read the Thorns books by Mark Lawrence? Rather liked them.

    And, Abercrombie is a script writer. IMHO, the final seasons of Game of Thrones would have been far better had he written the scripts (it's plain that Benioff & Weiss are not good scriptwriters).

    I tried the first Thorns book, and even for me, it was too dark and depressing. When you have the protagonist recounting raping a farmer's daughter, before burning her alive with her family, it puts you off a character.
  • PhilPhil Posts: 2,505

    The Boys, Preacher, The Expanse. I find it hard to agree with this idea that we are not in a time of great TV.
    Unfortunately the most recent season of The Boys was /terrible/.

    On AppleTV - I did enjoy Severance. The next season is apparently going to be the most expensive TV Apple has ever made which worries me - Season 1 the writers did a lot within the constraints imposed by their premise & budget. I suspect without those constraints the writing might fall apart. We’ll find out in January...
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,118

    Cleverly has been Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary. On paper it's obvious that it should be his contest to lose.

    He wasn't very prominent in either role. I forget which job he had first.

    Jenrick strikes me as someone with more of a plan and the drive to implement that plan. Now, sure, it's doubtless a devious, underhand, baby-eating, evil Tory sort of plan, but as a lefty he's the option that I'm most worried about.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,267
    Is Jenrick getting longer than the other two or does it just feel like it?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,021

    "DON'T DIE OF IGNORANCE!"
    Fair play to Thatcher for that. Apparently she was sceptical of such an overt campaign at first, but was persuaded it was necessary and agreed to run it. Norman Fowler was the Health Secretary at the time. https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-55973726
  • Phil said:

    Unfortunately the most recent season of The Boys was /terrible/.

    On AppleTV - I did enjoy Severance. The next season is apparently going to be the most expensive TV Apple has ever made which worries me - Season 1 the writers did a lot within the constraints imposed by their premise & budget. I suspect without those constraints the writing might fall apart. We’ll find out in January...
    Most of the Severance season 1 was filmed in what looked like a Doctor Who set.
  • GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 22,658
    Jenrick has IDS vibes here...
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,294
    Mr. F, got to admit I'd forgotten about that. Fair enough. There was one book I stopped reading a while ago that had a lot of grim stuff in, to the extent it didn't seem to serve the story so much as just be there for shock value.

    What scripts has Abercrombie written? It's astonishing that Benioff and Weiss did such a poor job. They should've just handed over to someone else if they didn't care to actually finish the series properly. Better to hand over than ruin something that was so good.

    The irony is their buggering of the end of GoT is likely what cost them their Star Wars trilogy (although there are a ton of cancelled SW projects).
This discussion has been closed.