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Not very clever from Cleverly – politicalbetting.com

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  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,716
    Taz said:

    Attention seeker demanding attention.
    I should have been more clear. Could the outcome of the Gina Miller case mean that this deal needs primary legislation and could be blocked in the Lords?
  • No, it won't.

    Th rate of sea level rise will be small, per actual year. Given the value of the base, it will be trivial to increase the height of atoll in the areas wanted. Indeed, this has already been done by the Americans on portions of the base, in the past.

    See the wholesale construction/raising of islands by China.

    The bit the Chagos islanders will live on - that's another matter. Why should the Mauritius bother? They will have the fishing rights.
    That bit will sort itself out naturally. Coral atolls grow and shrink to match sealevel changes. They have to otherwise there wouldn't be any left.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086

    Surely there must be technology out there that stabilises the toilet section on a train otherwise it feels like you’re peeing in an earthquake.

    It was like the Battle of Vimy Ridge.

    One idea that almost worked was suspending the cockpit of the TSR.2 on springs. Like many of ideas in that aircraft, it actually proved sub optimal.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,473

    The most obvious example of this is CO2 fire extinguishers. It is why you should never hold the metal cone on them when using them. You can see the ice form around the cone end.
    They're all plastic these days, for just that reason.
    Though you still shouldn't hold them.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443

    Construction PMIs

    UK 57.2
    Italy 47.8
    Germany 41.7
    France 37.9

    https://www.pmi.spglobal.com/Public/Release/PressReleases

    Dreadful numbers for France there. Not great for Germany either. The larger members of the EU really are in a bit of a slump
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,473
    HYUFD said:

    58% of Israelis would vote for Trump over Harris

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/poll-finds-58-of-israelis-would-vote-for-trump-if-they-could-take-part-in-us-election/
    66% of Brits would vote for Harris.
    Equally irrelevant.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    You *can* polish a turd....
    Mythbusters did this 15 years ago. You can absolutely polish a turd.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rax27_ZIVM
  • kenObikenObi Posts: 245
    Have I got this right ?

    We are going to spunk £22 billion on carbon capture (largely untried), and that carbon capture is basically the CO2 emissions from gas power stations, separating CO2 and pumping it underground when the gas is burnt.

    Wouldn't it therefore make economic sense and indeed environmental sense to get that gas from the north sea rather than shipping it from Qatar (or wherever) ?
  • HYUFD said:

    Putin and Netanyahu both want a Trump win. As Trump would effectively dump backing for Zelansky and push him to make a peace deal with Putin handing over much of Eastern Ukraine to Russia and then shift arms to Israel to support Netanyahu in a full on war with Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran
    I wonder if even Trump might hesitate on the brink, seeing the kind of nightmare that Netanyahu and Iran could unleash together if not checked.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086

    That bit will sort itself out naturally. Coral atolls grow and shrink to match sealevel changes. They have to otherwise there wouldn't be any left.
    That's assuming the reef is alive and growing. Uninhabited that might happen - human habitation tends to stop the process, pretty much.

    There's also the matter of pace - depends on the speed of sea level rise. Coral is sloooooooooow.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,473
    HYUFD said:

    Putin and Netanyahu both want a Trump win. As Trump would effectively dump backing for Zelansky and push him to make a peace deal with Putin handing over much of Eastern Ukraine to Russia and then shift arms to Israel to support Netanyahu in a full on war with Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran
    Or put more simply, the two crooks support the crook.
  • FossFoss Posts: 1,394

    You *can* polish a turd....
    The Lloyds Bank coprolite has a visible sheen from handling.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,492
    edited October 2024
    Compare and contrast:

    Has the French construction sector hit rock bottom? The French construction sector remains in deep crisis, as reflected in the HCOB PMI for September, which dropped to 37.9 points – the lowest level in nearly a decade, excluding the COVID-19 pandemic period. The index for civil engineering, in particular, saw a sharp decline compared to the previous month, with the steepest contraction in activity once again occurring in the residential property market. In light of this downturn, the question arises whether the sector has finally reached its lowest point.

    The French construction sector continues to suffer from rising prices. Although the pace of price increases slowed
    somewhat in September, input costs are still growing despite historically weak demand. A small silver lining is the decline in subcontractor prices, likely due to construction companies having sharply reduced their reliance on subcontractors by the end of the third quarter.

    The outlook for the French construction sector remains bleak. Order intake continues to shrink significantly, and forecasts for future activity are equally pessimistic. Many construction companies have expressed concerns about the weak demand environment, leading to a further wave of layoffs. A recovery in the sector seems likely only through substantial interest rate cuts in the Eurozone, but hopes for such action remain limited at present.


    https://www.pmi.spglobal.com/Public/Home/PressRelease/cbd48985551b452d90a11c4325386249

    UK construction companies indicated a decisive improvement in output growth momentum during September, driven by faster upturns across all three major categories of activity.

    A combination of lower interest rates, domestic economic stability and strong pipelines of infrastructure work have helped to boost order books in recent months.

    New project starts contributed to a moderate expansion of employment numbers and a faster rise in purchasing activity across the construction sector in September. However, greater demand for raw materials and the pass-through of higher wages by suppliers led to the steepest increase in input costs for 16 months.

    Business optimism edged down to the lowest since April, but remained much higher than the low point seen last October. Survey respondents cited rising sales enquires since the general election, as well as lower borrowing costs and the potential for stronger house building demand as factors supporting business activity expectations in September.


    https://www.pmi.spglobal.com/Public/Home/PressRelease/5082bac169384c5ca4f7d15bf3a63737
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    edited October 2024
    Taz said:

    The local elections next year in places like Durham may well be interesting as Labour would have, until recently, been expecting to gain control back from the rather hapless coalition.

    I have a good independent in my seat that will vote for. Not sure of the other vote at the moment.
    Visited Woodhorn mining museum (Much quieter/better day than Cragside :D) when we were up your way a few weeks back. Amazing to think Ed Miliband is leader energy sec. of the very same party synonymous with mining history.
  • Compare and contrast:

    Has the French construction sector hit rock bottom? The French construction sector remains in deep crisis, as reflected in the HCOB PMI for September, which dropped to 37.9 points – the lowest level in nearly a decade, excluding the COVID-19 pandemic period. The index for civil engineering, in particular, saw a sharp decline compared to the previous month, with the steepest contraction in activity once again occurring in the residential property market. In light of this downturn, the question arises whether the sector has finally reached its lowest point.

    The French construction sector continues to suffer from rising prices. Although the pace of price increases slowed
    somewhat in September, input costs are still growing despite historically weak demand. A small silver lining is the decline in subcontractor prices, likely due to construction companies having sharply reduced their reliance on subcontractors by the end of the third quarter.

    The outlook for the French construction sector remains bleak. Order intake continues to shrink significantly, and forecasts for future activity are equally pessimistic. Many construction companies have expressed concerns about the weak demand environment, leading to a further wave of layoffs. A recovery in the sector seems likely only through substantial interest rate cuts in the Eurozone, but hopes for such action remain limited at present.


    https://www.pmi.spglobal.com/Public/Home/PressRelease/cbd48985551b452d90a11c4325386249

    UK construction companies indicated a decisive improvement in output growth momentum during September, driven by faster upturns across all three major categories of activity.

    A combination of lower interest rates, domestic economic stability and strong pipelines of infrastructure work have helped to boost order books in recent months.

    New project starts contributed to a moderate expansion of employment numbers and a faster rise in purchasing activity across the construction sector in September. However, greater demand for raw materials and the pass-through of higher wages by suppliers led to the steepest increase in input costs for 16 months.

    Business optimism edged down to the lowest since April, but remained much higher than the low point seen last October. Survey respondents cited rising sales enquires since the general election, as well as lower borrowing costs and the potential for stronger house building demand as factors supporting business activity expectations in September.


    https://www.pmi.spglobal.com/Public/Home/PressRelease/5082bac169384c5ca4f7d15bf3a63737

    Do we give Sir Keir and Rachel credit for this or not?
  • kenObi said:

    Have I got this right ?

    We are going to spunk £22 billion on carbon capture (largely untried), and that carbon capture is basically the CO2 emissions from gas power stations, separating CO2 and pumping it underground when the gas is burnt.

    Wouldn't it therefore make economic sense and indeed environmental sense to get that gas from the north sea rather than shipping it from Qatar (or wherever) ?

    Short answer yes.

    But to be fair it is not just power stations. One of the reasons that some of the main targets for CO2 storage are off Humberside is because there is a concentration of insdustries around Immingham which produce large amounts of CO2. Humberside is the highest emmitting region in the UK.

    That said, killing the UK petrochemical and manufacturing industries as Labour seem determined to do might make that all redundant.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    Cicero said:

    This is not a matter of preference, it is a matter of law. The UN has determined that the UK broke international law. Either you accept the remedy or you don´t. There is no legal basis to do anything beyond returning the Chagos to Mauritius, in this case conditional on the maintenance of the base at DG which is why the US welcomed the deal. As for the comments re: Guyana, the fact is that the Cooperative Republic of Guyana has its territorial integrity legally recognised by the UN charter, and it is an attack by Venezuela that would be in breach of international law.

    It is a serious deal and by hypocritically attacking it, Cleverly has joined Jenrick and Badenoch in the dunces class.

    Seems like only Tom Tugendhat got the memo that the Tories need to start behaving like adults.
    It's very much a matter of preference, or at any rate politics.

    You know as well as the rest of us do that rulings of the UN are adhered to when States wish to adhere to them, and ignored when States wish to ignore them.

    With no means of enforcement, and no common standards, public international law is really an agreed-upon fiction.
  • I should have been more clear. Could the outcome of the Gina Miller case mean that this deal needs primary legislation and could be blocked in the Lords?
    An interesting point, but I think it's very doubtful.

    As I recall, the relevant Miller case (Miller I rather than Miller II) wasn't decided on the basis of whether the Government could exercise prerogative powers to make treaties generally. It rested on the fact that, specifically for entry into the EU, withdrawal would effectively repeal large parts of the European Communities Act 1972, and repealing legislation is not a prerogative power. I doubt there is an equivalent for the Chagos Islands.
  • Taz said:

    Dreadful numbers for France there. Not great for Germany either. The larger members of the EU really are in a bit of a slump
    Hence the doom-and-gloom statements from Draghi and Macron recently.
  • That's assuming the reef is alive and growing. Uninhabited that might happen - human habitation tends to stop the process, pretty much.

    There's also the matter of pace - depends on the speed of sea level rise. Coral is sloooooooooow.
    Not as slow as sea level rise. Indeed averages about 4x faster.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204

    Hence the doom-and-gloom statements from Draghi and Macron recently.
    One thing about France - it doesn't have the incredible pent up housing demand we do.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,855

    Oddly enough, your view might also be peterninent on the Venezuela / Guyana land grab border dispute. And not one in favour of the Guyanans.

    So other questions comes into it: how far back do such 'imperialist' problems have to go back before they can be ignored; what about self-determination; and is removing one imperialist power right if it just gets replaced with another imperialist power, or a power that will ignore the rights of the population in the new area?

    I suppose it also applies, in the minds of some at least, to Russia - Ukraine. In both directions:

    Whether it is a 'good deal' or not should not be said by people in the UK or Mauritius, or China. It should be said by the people who it most directly effects - the islanders themselves.
    Personally I am in favour of self determination but this is about bases in strategic islands and that's a different calculation. In general owners of these bases want their ownership to be underpinned by treaty and international law. Getting the Mauritius government to formally agree the long term presence of the base is a win for the Americans.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,007
    edited October 2024
    Stocky said:

    Has the detail of this Chagos Islands deal been debated in parliament?

    Next week

    I thought it was signed, sealed, and delivered judging by the comments last night but it seems it still has some way to go

    See @williamglenn at 9.35
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443
    Pulpstar said:

    Visited Woodhorn mining museum (Much quieter/better day than Cragside :D) when we were up your way a few weeks back. Amazing to think Ed Miliband is leader energy sec. of the very same party synonymous with mining history.
    It is a few years since we have been to Cragside, will have too look out for a day trip to Woodhorn. Had not heard of it before will look it up.

    Labour really has long since ceased to be the party of the working class. Labour used to fight for miners, mining jobs and the jobs of the working class. Now they seem to care more about the lanyard class in the public sector.

    I am not surprised in these areas Reform fills the gap for some. They are the only party who speak to these areas and listen to their concerns.
  • Hence the doom-and-gloom statements from Draghi and Macron recently.
    Some countries on the periphery are doing well. Greece, and I think the Baltics.

    Germany is fairly stuck.
  • Do we give Sir Keir and Rachel credit for this or not?
    Of course we don't.

    Meanwhile, in "other numbers that don't quite fit the narrative" news:

    Techne for this week:

    Labour: 31% (-1)
    Conservatives: 23% (+1)
    Lib Dems: 13% (=)
    Reform UK: 18% (=)
    Greens: 7% (=)
    SNP: 2% (=)
    Others: 6% (=)

    Public sentiment towards the government’s handling of national priorities, remains low with a net confidence of -22%

    Confident: 32%
    Not Confident: 54%


    https://www.techneuk.com/tracker/

    I think the TLDR is that the public are profuoundly unkeen on the government, but perhaps dislike them less than the alternatives.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443

    Do we give Sir Keir and Rachel credit for this or not?
    Does it matter, they will take it anyway and I would not blame them. It is politics.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,278

    Not as slow as sea level rise. Indeed averages about 4x faster.
    Why bring facts to this?

    But am I correct in saying that some coral atolls are being damaged not because of sea-level rise or climate change, but because of chemical composition of the water (or, more accurately, chemicals in the water)?
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    Cookie said:

    Labour failing to understand, again, that increased tax/regulation leads to increased costs.
    I don't understand how they can be that ignorant frankly.

    But actually it sort of makes sense if you consider that Starmer is a human rights lawyer, many of the MP's are activists with limited business experience, to a large degree the civil service is increasingly 'like them'; they are close to the trade unions who peddle simplistic notions about 'shareholder greed' along with demands for vast pay rises; along with a cumulative near religious belief in 'taxing the rich'.

    They are trying to govern with all the above baggage, and it is likely that they will just completely fail.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    Sandpit said:

    So how many geologists and physicists do you think Ed Miliband had spoken to, before his announcement?

    Or does he not give a sh!t about science, and makes decisions based on ideology?
    There's nothing ideological about the decision. It's only support comes from special interests.

    The most charitable interpretation is that Miliband hasn't kept up with the collapse in the cost of renewables since he was last energy secretary in 2010, but even then it would be a bad choice, if a slightly more understandable one.
  • An interesting point, but I think it's very doubtful.

    As I recall, the relevant Miller case (Miller I rather than Miller II) wasn't decided on the basis of whether the Government could exercise prerogative powers to make treaties generally. It rested on the fact that, specifically for entry into the EU, withdrawal would effectively repeal large parts of the European Communities Act 1972, and repealing legislation is not a prerogative power. I doubt there is an equivalent for the Chagos Islands.
    Besides, the most the Lords can do is delay things by a year.

    Remember, opposition is impotence and irrelevance. Which is why it's wise to avoid it.
  • Do we give Sir Keir and Rachel credit for this or not?
    Construction activity is based on longer timescales than, for example, the spending habits of oldies re garden centres or heating.

    Labour inherited a growing economy with lots of demand for new construction and interest rates on the downward trend.

    How things look in a year and more will be affected by government decisions.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    edited October 2024
    US oil prices at the pump continue to fall but for how long ?

    Even though the US produces most of its own oil and gas any further escalation in the Middle East could cause a global energy spike and this is why the Dems are nervous about what Israel might do .

    Trumps campaign needs to maintain its lead over Harris on the economy . Harris has closed that but still remains behind .

    The road to the WH still remains full of hurdles for the Dems as external factors could have an impact .

    There will be a huge relief though after the dockworkers suspended their strike , this could have had a disastrous effect on that economic argument and put Harris in an impossible position .

    Looking ahead , today we have the latest jobs report and then next week the inflation report , the latter is like to show a further fall which will help Harris . After this there’s only one more important report which will be the jobs report for October which comes out a few days before the election .

    This is where the suspension of the dockworkers strike is absolutely crucial. The knock on effect if the strike had dragged on would be job losses / temporary suspensions in connected industries . There’s already the impacts of the hurricane to deal with.

    In terms of early in person voting next week sees many more states starting including the key battleground state of Arizona . Georgia starts the following week.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086

    Why bring facts to this?

    But am I correct in saying that some coral atolls are being damaged not because of sea-level rise or climate change, but because of chemical composition of the water (or, more accurately, chemicals in the water)?
    Yes - among other things. Many corals seem to be very fragile to environmental disturbances.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,278
    FF43 said:

    Personally I am in favour of self determination but this is about bases in strategic islands and that's a different calculation. In general owners of these bases want their ownership to be underpinned by treaty and international law. Getting the Mauritius government to formally agree the long term presence of the base is a win for the Americans.
    The newly-found oil and gas in Guyana is very strategic, is it not? Which is precisely the reason why Venezuela is making so much noise about their 'ownership' of Esequibo.
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,100

    Spain are also asking to join the group chat.....
    Hiving off a geographical area and its natural resources to keep control, only to end up paying compensation to its rightful owners when it is restored? More ammunition for the Scotnat 'we wuz robbed' faction.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,872

    Of course we don't.

    Meanwhile, in "other numbers that don't quite fit the narrative" news:

    Techne for this week:

    Labour: 31% (-1)
    Conservatives: 23% (+1)
    Lib Dems: 13% (=)
    Reform UK: 18% (=)
    Greens: 7% (=)
    SNP: 2% (=)
    Others: 6% (=)

    Public sentiment towards the government’s handling of national priorities, remains low with a net confidence of -22%

    Confident: 32%
    Not Confident: 54%


    https://www.techneuk.com/tracker/

    I think the TLDR is that the public are profuoundly unkeen on the government, but perhaps dislike them less than the alternatives.
    Still, that is a 2% swing from Labour to the Tories and a 3.5% swing from Labour to Reform since the GE.

    Would see Labour lose 37 seats to the Tories and 3 seats to Reform
    https://www.electionpolling.co.uk/battleground/targets/conservative
    https://www.electionpolling.co.uk/battleground/targets/reform-uk
  • Why bring facts to this?

    But am I correct in saying that some coral atolls are being damaged not because of sea-level rise or climate change, but because of chemical composition of the water (or, more accurately, chemicals in the water)?
    That has been an issue but the most recent news is that it appears to be far more cyclical than was previously thought and a lot of previously damaged an bleached coral has recovered. As far as I can see the biggest threat to coral in the Chagos archipelago is the US airbase itself which both limits growth and pollutes the local waters.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,204
    Taz said:

    It is a few years since we have been to Cragside, will have too look out for a day trip to Woodhorn. Had not heard of it before will look it up.

    Labour really has long since ceased to be the party of the working class. Labour used to fight for miners, mining jobs and the jobs of the working class. Now they seem to care more about the lanyard class in the public sector.

    I am not surprised in these areas Reform fills the gap for some. They are the only party who speak to these areas and listen to their concerns.
    https://museumsnorthumberland.org.uk/woodhorn-museum/
  • Some countries on the periphery are doing well. Greece, and I think the Baltics.

    Germany is fairly stuck.
    Spain is also doing pretty well.

    One problem with the continuing economic problems in France and Germany is that it will increase the political instability there.

    Both countries could get trapped in a negative loop of economic problems leading to more political instability leading to inability to make economic reforms.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443
    darkage said:

    I don't understand how they can be that ignorant frankly.

    But actually it sort of makes sense if you consider that Starmer is a human rights lawyer, many of the MP's are activists with limited business experience, to a large degree the civil service is increasingly 'like them'; they are close to the trade unions who peddle simplistic notions about 'shareholder greed' along with demands for vast pay rises; along with a cumulative near religious belief in 'taxing the rich'.

    They are trying to govern with all the above baggage, and it is likely that they will just completely fail.
    One of the reasons I decided to vote labour after all was I thought Reeves did get it. She gave me confidence that in the Treasury she would be a stable influence and able to moderate the clowns as she has some real world experience.

    But you are right about the make up of labour and its backbenchers. They are there to manage it seems rather than just legislate and let business get on with it.

    You also have a business secretary with no experience of business who is influenced by academics with no experience of business on matters of policy. It may end in tears.
  • Why bring facts to this?

    But am I correct in saying that some coral atolls are being damaged not because of sea-level rise or climate change, but because of chemical composition of the water (or, more accurately, chemicals in the water)?
    Cleaning the ocean is the next big challenge, despite the hysteria by some, the west has done an incredible job of cleaning their inland rivers, their coastal regions and air quality. But we (all humans) are dumping with impunity the lowest grade and dirtiest of diesel going into the air and oils slipping into the seas.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450

    The newly-found oil and gas in Guyana is very strategic, is it not? Which is precisely the reason why Venezuela is making so much noise about their 'ownership' of Esequibo.
    International law being on the side of Guyana (or Ukraine) is …. nice to have.

    But, what counts is having the military muscle to repel predators.
  • Of course we don't.

    Meanwhile, in "other numbers that don't quite fit the narrative" news:

    Techne for this week:

    Labour: 31% (-1)
    Conservatives: 23% (+1)
    Lib Dems: 13% (=)
    Reform UK: 18% (=)
    Greens: 7% (=)
    SNP: 2% (=)
    Others: 6% (=)

    Public sentiment towards the government’s handling of national priorities, remains low with a net confidence of -22%

    Confident: 32%
    Not Confident: 54%


    https://www.techneuk.com/tracker/

    I think the TLDR is that the public are profuoundly unkeen on the government, but perhaps dislike them less than the alternatives.
    This isnt really unsurprising. People don't like to think they have made a bad choice. It takes time. But this is supposed to be the honeymoon. A government only a few months old looks like it is on the rocks. Utterly bizarre. It isnt just PBcrazies noticing that this isnt normal.

  • BurgessianBurgessian Posts: 2,959
    Taz said:

    The local elections next year in places like Durham may well be interesting as Labour would have, until recently, been expecting to gain control back from the rather hapless coalition.

    I have a good independent in my seat that will vote for. Not sure of the other vote at the moment.
    Ben Houchen's results in Teesside demonstrate that there is a definite appetite in some NE communities to vote against Labour. I think Co Durham could, indeed, be somewhat challenging for Sir Keir. Depends who the voters turn to. There are areas of strength for both Tories and LibDems in the county and a lot of potential for Reform too.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443
    nico679 said:

    US oil prices at the pump continue to fall but for how long ?

    Not for long if Israel goes after the Iranian oil assets. Even though that mostly affects oil to Russia and China it will mean their demand goes elsewhere although there is alot of supply in the world. it also depends if Iran responds by going after Saudi and others oil assets. I wonder if the risk of that is why the Saudis held out an olive branch to Iran recently.

    Joe Biden seems happy to let Israel do that. After all the US is a major oil producer. It won't harm any nation who produces oil. Just the consumer and the global economy in the short term.

  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,100
    HYUFD said:

    Still, that is a 2% swing from Labour to the Tories and a 3.5% swing from Labour to Reform since the GE.

    Would see Labour lose 37 seats to the Tories and 3 seats to Reform
    https://www.electionpolling.co.uk/battleground/targets/conservative
    https://www.electionpolling.co.uk/battleground/targets/reform-uk
    The general election is five years away. I’m not sure some people here have clocked that and are still in election mode.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443

    Ben Houchen's results in Teesside demonstrate that there is a definite appetite in some NE communities to vote against Labour. I think Co Durham could, indeed, be somewhat challenging for Sir Keir. Depends who the voters turn to. There are areas of strength for both Tories and LibDems in the county and a lot of potential for Reform too.
    The last locals here were definitely a vote against labour. You only have to look at the make up of the coalition. Tories, Lib Dems and a host of small independent groupings. Whoever was the closest challenger tended to benefit. People like Simon Henig only held on as the independent challenger to him was not very good.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,450
    Taz said:

    The last locals here were definitely a vote against labour. You only have to look at the make up of the coalition. Tories, Lib Dems and a host of small independent groupings. Whoever was the closest challenger tended to benefit. People like Simon Henig only held on as the independent challenger to him was not very good.
    I’ve no doubt Labour will go backwards in Durham in 2025.
  • Besides, the most the Lords can do is delay things by a year.

    Remember, opposition is impotence and irrelevance. Which is why it's wise to avoid it.
    They wouldn't even do that in practice. Despite the gassing on here, and the play into the Tory leadership contest, this really isn't that controversial a decision. Certainly not worth the Lords having a wrangle with a newly elected Government whose priority, at the moment, isn't to radically reform the Lords.
  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Taz said:

    Not for long if Israel goes after the Iranian oil assets. Even though that mostly affects oil to Russia and China it will mean their demand goes elsewhere although there is alot of supply in the world. it also depends if Iran responds by going after Saudi and others oil assets. I wonder if the risk of that is why the Saudis held out an olive branch to Iran recently.

    Joe Biden seems happy to let Israel do that. After all the US is a major oil producer. It won't harm any nation who produces oil. Just the consumer and the global economy in the short term.

    The Dems don’t want a spike in pump prices just a few weeks from the election . With such narrow margins in the polling it doesn’t need much to tip a swing state.
  • Diego Garcia blame game deepens as Liz Truss hits out at Boris Johnson for island ‘surrender’
    Exclusive: Labour said they had no choice but to sign the deal because of the legal mess left by the Tories

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/diego-garcia-airbase-liz-truss-boris-johnson-b2623626.html

  • Why bring facts to this?

    But am I correct in saying that some coral atolls are being damaged not because of sea-level rise or climate change, but because of chemical composition of the water (or, more accurately, chemicals in the water)?
    Here are some actual facts regarding the effect of climate change on coral reefs:

    https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/coralreef-climate.html

    "Climate change is the greatest global threat to coral reef ecosystems. Scientific evidence now clearly indicates that the Earth's atmosphere and ocean are warming, and that these changes are primarily due to greenhouse gases derived from human activities.

    As temperatures rise, mass coral bleaching events and infectious disease outbreaks are becoming more frequent. Additionally, carbon dioxide absorbed into the ocean from the atmosphere has already begun to reduce calcification rates in reef-building and reef-associated organisms by altering seawater chemistry through decreases in pH. This process is called ocean acidification.

    Climate change will affect coral reef ecosystems, through sea level rise, changes to the frequency and intensity of tropical storms, and altered ocean circulation patterns. When combined, all of these impacts dramatically alter ecosystem function, as well as the goods and services coral reef ecosystems provide to people around the globe."
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,278
    Taz said:

    Not for long if Israel goes after the Iranian oil assets. Even though that mostly affects oil to Russia and China it will mean their demand goes elsewhere although there is alot of supply in the world. it also depends if Iran responds by going after Saudi and others oil assets. I wonder if the risk of that is why the Saudis held out an olive branch to Iran recently.

    Joe Biden seems happy to let Israel do that. After all the US is a major oil producer. It won't harm any nation who produces oil. Just the consumer and the global economy in the short term.

    You might be right, but the oil and gas industry works in strange ways. Lots of idiots warned Ukraine from striking Russian refineries and storage facilities, because it would increase the price of gas in America.

    Ukraine ignored them, and prices went down.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,523
    eek said:

    Um the Blackwell Tunnel is implementing the same tolls that are on the Silvertown Tunnel so that people don't bypass the Silvertown tunnel when it's opened.

    Lower Thames tunnel is very much a Dartford tunnel extension...
    That's rational.

    The institutionalised discrimination built into the scheme is not rational, but here we are.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    Sorry but that is rubbish. The cancellation of projects and the shifting of investment away from the North Sea has turned from a trickle into a tidal wave since Milliband got into power. I had a number of potential contracts where the companies were absolutely clear that they had their plans on hold until they saw if Labour won (and followed through on their promises) and which have now been cancelled. Serica, Hartshead, Harbour, Ithaca and Dana are all reducing North Sea investment and reinvesting in exploration and development elsewhere - many of them in Norway.

    Prior to the election Labour had been claiming that increasing the windfall tax would push North Sea tax revenues up from the (OBR) predicted £8.6 billion a year in 2028 to something over £10 billion. The latest prediction based on what Labour has proposed/done since it came to power is that that revenue will fall to £2 billion a year at most by 2028. To be honest, the way companies are now fleeing the North Sea I think they will be lucky to make that.
    I have had 2 cases in Aberdeen recently and was staying in an hotel in the outskirts near the airport. The number of businesses and industrial estates there is remarkable, there is nothing even close to it in Scotland. Bristow helicopters were flying out from early in the morning (too early for my taste anyway). There were a lot of large jets as well.

    The glory days of Aberdeen and Union Street have long since past. John Lewis is gone and the shopping centres are half empty. But there is still a scarily long way to fall. The consequences for Scottish industrial output (along with the consequential loss of Grangemouth) are going to be catastrophic. Scotland needs time to find new jobs and new investment. They could also do with a government that has some idea of the implications this has for the Scottish tax base. This policy of preventing the granting of more licences for the North Sea is the sort of economic vandalism that Thatcher was rightly criticised for during the Howe monetarist period. It is criminally stupid and not a little vicious.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443

    You might be right, but the oil and gas industry works in strange ways. Lots of idiots warned Ukraine from striking Russian refineries and storage facilities, because it would increase the price of gas in America.

    Ukraine ignored them, and prices went down.
    Iran has threatened to target Emirati, Kuwaiti and Saudi oil assets in retribution. Let's see what happens.

    Welcome to 1973 all over again.
  • Taz said:

    Not for long if Israel goes after the Iranian oil assets. Even though that mostly affects oil to Russia and China it will mean their demand goes elsewhere although there is alot of supply in the world. it also depends if Iran responds by going after Saudi and others oil assets. I wonder if the risk of that is why the Saudis held out an olive branch to Iran recently.

    Joe Biden seems happy to let Israel do that. After all the US is a major oil producer. It won't harm any nation who produces oil. Just the consumer and the global economy in the short term.

    Not a great time, if you're an American politician, to be causing harm to consumers or the global economy - no matter how short term. Maybe avoid that for a month and a couple of days if possible.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045

    But again, Cleverley did not sign the deal.

    This government did.

    That's a rather important point that goes whizzing merrily over your head.
    It appears that the Cleverly deal got to the point of cross-Departmental circulation, which implies he did provisionally, at least, sign it off.
    A former Defence Secretary said he vetoed it at that point because it left the base in limbo (which implies that the Cleverly deal was, if anything, worse than the one finally signed). It then went back so that it was still in draft when Cameron came in.
    Cameron paused it (but did not end it) over the base situation (according to his testimony to a Select Committee).

    If the status of the base was agreed later, then the situation would have unfolded exactly as we saw, as the incoming FS and DS would have seen no grounds to veto it and send it back further.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,482

    This isnt really unsurprising. People don't like to think they have made a bad choice. It takes time. But this is supposed to be the honeymoon. A government only a few months old looks like it is on the rocks. Utterly bizarre. It isnt just PBcrazies noticing that this isnt normal.

    True and don't forget the polls generally overstate Labour vote share significantly as they did at the last GE. I think that they were about 6 points out then, so if that would be repeated at a hypothetical election tomorrow, the main parties are roughly equal.

    And if that 6 points went to Reform, we'd have the fascinating situation of the three main parties being roughly equal.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443
    nico679 said:

    The Dems don’t want a spike in pump prices just a few weeks from the election . With such narrow margins in the polling it doesn’t need much to tip a swing state.
    Biden doesn't seem to care either way from his response when questioned about it.

    If the Warmongers in Israel really do want a Trump presidency if this action precipitates one why wouldn't they do it anyway ?
  • sarissasarissa Posts: 2,100
    Leon said:

    Luton airport. 7.44am. Eesh

    The 'guess where Leon's going' weekly competition. Romania again?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    Jonathan said:

    The general election is five years away. I’m not sure some people here have clocked that and are still in election mode.
    Normally a government with a landslide majority would hold an election after four years, rather than five. The repeated mantra about the election being five years away (though May 2029 is now four years and seven months away) is an implicit confirmation that the new government is already struggling, and seeking to hang on to the bitter end.
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,010

    This isnt really unsurprising. People don't like to think they have made a bad choice. It takes time. But this is supposed to be the honeymoon. A government only a few months old looks like it is on the rocks. Utterly bizarre. It isnt just PBcrazies noticing that this isnt normal.

    I think it's right on people liking the alternative even less - or rather there being a critical mass of people who do.

    Labour started from an unusually pessimistic position, and one they haven't improved both with their strategy - get the doom and gloom in early - and missteps like the donations row.

    But...and it's an important but. The Tories terrible decade and the lack of a coherent oppositional narrative to the Big Two, means that the bar is relatively low to get to a position where could be fairly optimistic about re-election chances.

    Namely signs our economic position is improving and public services are improving and not getting worse- even if not by an awful lot. Get there and there's enough people who have become pretty staunchly anti-Tory, even those with little love for Labour and Starmer, to put in a strong electoral position.

  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    Here are some actual facts regarding the effect of climate change on coral reefs:

    https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/coralreef-climate.html

    "Climate change is the greatest global threat to coral reef ecosystems. Scientific evidence now clearly indicates that the Earth's atmosphere and ocean are warming, and that these changes are primarily due to greenhouse gases derived from human activities.

    As temperatures rise, mass coral bleaching events and infectious disease outbreaks are becoming more frequent. Additionally, carbon dioxide absorbed into the ocean from the atmosphere has already begun to reduce calcification rates in reef-building and reef-associated organisms by altering seawater chemistry through decreases in pH. This process is called ocean acidification.

    Climate change will affect coral reef ecosystems, through sea level rise, changes to the frequency and intensity of tropical storms, and altered ocean circulation patterns. When combined, all of these impacts dramatically alter ecosystem function, as well as the goods and services coral reef ecosystems provide to people around the globe."
    The record in respect of the Great Barrier Reef is more complicated: https://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2024/08/high-coral-cover-and-bleaching-gbr/

    We have had both record highs for coral and record lows in recent years. The position is undoubtedly more volatile but it remains a fact that corals are currently at record highs and there are something like 30% more corals than there was 5 years ago.
  • MJW said:

    I think it's right on people liking the alternative even less - or rather there being a critical mass of people who do.

    Labour started from an unusually pessimistic position, and one they haven't improved both with their strategy - get the doom and gloom in early - and missteps like the donations row.

    But...and it's an important but. The Tories terrible decade and the lack of a coherent oppositional narrative to the Big Two, means that the bar is relatively low to get to a position where could be fairly optimistic about re-election chances.

    Namely signs our economic position is improving and public services are improving and not getting worse- even if not by an awful lot. Get there and there's enough people who have become pretty staunchly anti-Tory, even those with little love for Labour and Starmer, to put in a strong electoral position.

    Spot on. If they do ok, they will be re-elected and deservedly so. If they don't, they'll get kicked out.

    Setting expectations low, and making harder decisions in years 1 is clearly the right strategy. We have become so used to being told what we want to hear by fantasist politicians that we have forgotten what a year 1 government should look like.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,872
    edited October 2024
    nico679 said:

    The Dems don’t want a spike in pump prices just a few weeks from the election . With such narrow margins in the polling it doesn’t need much to tip a swing state.
    If Saudi doesn't allow Israeli bombers to fly over and strike Iran that isn't happening anyway.

    Of equal significance will be Melania Trump's memoir on Monday which has already annoyed pro life evangelicals by saying she is staunchly pro choice some of whom may stay home now in swing states and is now saying she weakened his immigration policy too (which while maybe correct will hardly help him drive up white working class turnout either)

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/oct/03/melania-trump-donald-immigration-jacket-slogan-book
  • theProletheProle Posts: 1,300
    rcs1000 said:

    Carbon capture is useful in the very limited set of circumstances where there is lots of local demand for CO2.
    Also only relevant for climate purposes if the Co2 doesn't end up released anyway - e.g. Co2 used as shield gas for welding is used on a total loss basis.

    Industrial Co2 is dirt cheap anyway, presumably because when firms like BOC extract various industrial gasses from air to sell (e.g. oxygen) they end up with more Co2 as a byproduct than they can sell anyway.
  • Taz said:

    Biden doesn't seem to care either way from his response when questioned about it.

    If the Warmongers in Israel really do want a Trump presidency if this action precipitates one why wouldn't they do it anyway ?
    There's also a real question of how open-ended this Israeli operation. In Lebanon may turn out to be. His loony ministers are still using the same rhetoric as in Gaza, a "total victory" over Hezbollah.

    This clearly hasn't worked in Gasa - Hamas are still operating- , but it has killed tens of thousands of civilians in horrific circumstances. There's a real risk that the same kind of scenario could unfold in Lebanon, with added pan-Muslim unity against Israel, unless someone in the U.S. finally gets a grip of the situation. Netanyahu is about to embark on a sinilar sttategic and hunanitarian catastrophe as in Gaza, but the level of strategic leadership shown by the U S. so far has been woeful.
  • DavidL said:

    I have had 2 cases in Aberdeen recently and was staying in an hotel in the outskirts near the airport. The number of businesses and industrial estates there is remarkable, there is nothing even close to it in Scotland. Bristow helicopters were flying out from early in the morning (too early for my taste anyway). There were a lot of large jets as well.

    The glory days of Aberdeen and Union Street have long since past. John Lewis is gone and the shopping centres are half empty. But there is still a scarily long way to fall. The consequences for Scottish industrial output (along with the consequential loss of Grangemouth) are going to be catastrophic. Scotland needs time to find new jobs and new investment. They could also do with a government that has some idea of the implications this has for the Scottish tax base. This policy of preventing the granting of more licences for the North Sea is the sort of economic vandalism that Thatcher was rightly criticised for during the Howe monetarist period. It is criminally stupid and not a little vicious.
    Just wait till GB Energy (headquartered in Aberdeen) gets going.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,447
    Taz said:

    Not for long if Israel goes after the Iranian oil assets. Even though that mostly affects oil to Russia and China it will mean their demand goes elsewhere although there is alot of supply in the world. it also depends if Iran responds by going after Saudi and others oil assets. I wonder if the risk of that is why the Saudis held out an olive branch to Iran recently.

    Joe Biden seems happy to let Israel do that. After all the US is a major oil producer. It won't harm any nation who produces oil. Just the consumer and the global economy in the short term.

    Another month of planning - with the US providing Israel with its latest intel - would suit Biden. Heck, after the election, knock yourselves out. And Iran's hydrocarbons industry too.
  • Apologies for the typos and repetition issues below, as posting from a mobile, still on my way back from the Med.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,716
    Jonathan Powell on Chagos: “These are very tiny islands in the middle of the Indian Ocean where no one actually goes. So I don’t think we should be too worried about losing that bit of territory. We’re probably losing more to tidal erosion in the East Coast than that.”
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,447
    sarissa said:

    The 'guess where Leon's going' weekly competition. Romania again?
    Benidorm.
  • Fishing said:

    True and don't forget the polls generally overstate Labour vote share significantly as they did at the last GE. I think that they were about 6 points out then, so if that would be repeated at a hypothetical election tomorrow, the main parties are roughly equal.

    And if that 6 points went to Reform, we'd have the fascinating situation of the three main parties being roughly equal.
    The polls overstated Labour in 2024, got them about right in 2019, and understated them in 2017. You're suffering from the recency fallacy there.

    I'd also note, as an aside, that they also overstated RefUK a fair bit in 2024.
  • Benidorm.
    Monte Carlo.
  • Jonathan Powell on Chagos: “These are very tiny islands in the middle of the Indian Ocean where no one actually goes. So I don’t think we should be too worried about losing that bit of territory. We’re probably losing more to tidal erosion in the East Coast than that.”

    "A far off country of which we know little" ! doesn't bode well, does it ?
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    Just wait till GB Energy (headquartered in Aberdeen) gets going.
    If they were being given the budget of £22bn that is being wasted on carbon capture I would be more hopeful.

    There was a time which carbon capture could have been genuinely useful. It was a time when huge coal burning power stations were our major source of energy. But we closed down the last coal burning power station last week. Even our gas powered stations are playing a smaller role. This strikes me as a classic Westminster catastrophe. By the time they finally get it up and running the need for it has disappeared.

    Scotland, to me, is facing an economic tsunami. We need help to rebalance our economy away from plentiful North Sea oil. There is a moral obligation on the UK Treasury, who benefitted so substantially during the peak years, to help. I am genuinely concerned we have a government in Holyrood who are simply failing to recognise the consequences because they want to pretend that we are viable and should be independent on the one hand and a government overly influenced by a fool like Ed Miliband on the other. Neither are recognising the problem let alone seeking to address it. I am seriously pessimistic about Scotland's economic future.
  • sarissa said:

    The 'guess where Leon's going' weekly competition. Romania again?
    To show solidarity with the cruelly persecuted Tate brothers?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,447

    It appears that the Cleverly deal got to the point of cross-Departmental circulation, which implies he did provisionally, at least, sign it off.
    A former Defence Secretary said he vetoed it at that point because it left the base in limbo (which implies that the Cleverly deal was, if anything, worse than the one finally signed). It then went back so that it was still in draft when Cameron came in.
    Cameron paused it (but did not end it) over the base situation (according to his testimony to a Select Committee).

    If the status of the base was agreed later, then the situation would have unfolded exactly as we saw, as the incoming FS and DS would have seen no grounds to veto it and send it back further.
    So much for "no Government can bind its successors"...
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,001

    Jonathan Powell on Chagos: “These are very tiny islands in the middle of the Indian Ocean where no one actually goes. So I don’t think we should be too worried about losing that bit of territory. We’re probably losing more to tidal erosion in the East Coast than that.”

    He is intimately involved in this and this tweet demonstrates that he doesn't give a fig for either the geopolitical implications or the idea of restitution for the Chagossians

  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,148

    Benidorm.
    Clacton
  • DavidL said:

    If they were being given the budget of £22bn that is being wasted on carbon capture I would be more hopeful.

    There was a time which carbon capture could have been genuinely useful. It was a time when huge coal burning power stations were our major source of energy. But we closed down the last coal burning power station last week. Even our gas powered stations are playing a smaller role. This strikes me as a classic Westminster catastrophe. By the time they finally get it up and running the need for it has disappeared.

    Scotland, to me, is facing an economic tsunami. We need help to rebalance our economy away from plentiful North Sea oil. There is a moral obligation on the UK Treasury, who benefitted so substantially during the peak years, to help. I am genuinely concerned we have a government in Holyrood who are simply failing to recognise the consequences because they want to pretend that we are viable and should be independent on the one hand and a government overly influenced by a fool like Ed Miliband on the other. Neither are recognising the problem let alone seeking to address it. I am seriously pessimistic about Scotland's economic future.
    I’m struggling to recall those crazy, hazy days when you were anything other than seriously pessimistic..
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,582
    sarissa said:

    The 'guess where Leon's going' weekly competition. Romania again?
    Guess if anyone gives a rat's arse?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited October 2024
    LOL at the Daily Mail.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13923927/middle-east-conflict-dubai-flights-cancelled-brits-stranded.html

    The looming threat of all-out war exploding in the Middle East has thrown Dubai into chaos, with flights grounded or delayed as Brits prepare for a mass exodus from the ex-pat paradise

    Err, nope.

    Flights to war zones have indeed been cancelled, but most of the immigration to Dubai is incoming, from those fleeing the wars. There’s definitely not any signs of an exodus.

    Meanwhile, I’m off to the pub.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    geoffw said:

    He is intimately involved in this and this tweet demonstrates that he doesn't give a fig for either the geopolitical implications or the idea of restitution for the Chagossians

    I think that so far as the Foreign Office was concerned this was annoying because there were several decisions against us in international courts that they found embarrassing to ignore. They simply wanted it to go away and close the file. To hell with those who once lived there.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    DavidL said:

    If they were being given the budget of £22bn that is being wasted on carbon capture I would be more hopeful.

    There was a time which carbon capture could have been genuinely useful. It was a time when huge coal burning power stations were our major source of energy. But we closed down the last coal burning power station last week. Even our gas powered stations are playing a smaller role. This strikes me as a classic Westminster catastrophe. By the time they finally get it up and running the need for it has disappeared.

    Scotland, to me, is facing an economic tsunami. We need help to rebalance our economy away from plentiful North Sea oil. There is a moral obligation on the UK Treasury, who benefitted so substantially during the peak years, to help. I am genuinely concerned we have a government in Holyrood who are simply failing to recognise the consequences because they want to pretend that we are viable and should be independent on the one hand and a government overly influenced by a fool like Ed Miliband on the other. Neither are recognising the problem let alone seeking to address it. I am seriously pessimistic about Scotland's economic future.
    More than budget, are they putting people in charge who know anything about energy?

    I recall a comic moment when I asked someone (civil service) about BritVolt - their reply was something like "No, they are properly run. The technology and talent can just be bought in later".
  • Sandpit said:

    LOL at the Daily Mail.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13923927/middle-east-conflict-dubai-flights-cancelled-brits-stranded.html

    The looming threat of all-out war exploding in the Middle East has thrown Dubai into chaos, with flights grounded or delayed as Brits prepare for a mass exodus from the ex-pat paradise

    Err, nope.

    Flights to war zones have indeed been cancelled, but most of the immigration to Dubai is incoming, from those fleeing the wars. There’s definitely not any signs of an exodus.

    Daily Mail (written by cads for over a century) printing a pile of tosh designed to get people worried?

    Surely not.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    More than budget, are they putting people in charge who know anything about energy?

    I recall a comic moment when I asked someone (civil service) about BritVolt - their reply was something like "No, they are properly run. The technology and talent can just be bought in later".
    *weeps softly*
  • DavidL said:

    The record in respect of the Great Barrier Reef is more complicated: https://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2024/08/high-coral-cover-and-bleaching-gbr/

    We have had both record highs for coral and record lows in recent years. The position is undoubtedly more volatile but it remains a fact that corals are currently at record highs and there are something like 30% more corals than there was 5 years ago.
    From the article you cite:

    "What we should take from this is the reef – the world’s largest living structure – is currently still able to recover from repeated shocks. But these shocks are getting worse and arriving more often, and future recovery is not guaranteed.

    This is the rollercoaster ride the reef faces at just 1.1°C of warming. The pattern of disturbance and recovery is shifting – and not in the Reef’s favour."


  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    edited October 2024

    So much for "no Government can bind its successors"...
    Not exactly bound. They certainly had the option of saying "Nah, we don't like it," but it looks like they didn't see any reason to.

    EDIT: As could Cameron, of course, but he, for whatever reason, saw fit merely to pause it rather than close it down.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,086
    DavidL said:

    *weeps softly*
    Why cry - this is how it has always been.

    Consider. A loony South African demolished the Russian State Space program, Boeing and Lockheeds space programs and took a chunk out of ESA. We are talking about prestige projects backed by governments who back their currencies with plutonium*.

    How?

    Not through some secret sauce of genius. But hiring domain experts (enthusiastic ones at that) with a leavening of young, bright engineers - and giving them the structure to actually do something.

    We can see the same pattern in smaller, emerging companies, in the same field - such as Stoke (https://www.stokespace.com). Stoke just fired a FFSC rocket engine. A type of engine that, until recently, was judged impossible by the big, governmental programs. Stoke did it with a handful of engineers.

    Meanwhile, the giant governmental programs above were "properly run".

    *The ultimate hard currency. Gold is for slackers.
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 25,780
    Starmer talking shite as usual
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,443

    There's also a real question of how open-ended this Israeli operation. In Lebanon may turn out to be. His loony ministers are still using the same rhetoric as in Gaza, a "total victory" over Hezbollah.

    This clearly hasn't worked in Gasa - Hamas are still operating- , but it has killed tens of thousands of civilians in horrific circumstances. There's a real risk that the same kind of scenario could unfold in Lebanon, with added pan-Muslim unity against Israel, unless someone in the U.S. finally gets a grip of the situation. Netanyahu is about to embark on a sinilar sttategic and hunanitarian catastrophe as in Gaza, but the level of strategic leadership shown by the U S. so far has been woeful.
    It hasn't worked in Gaza, nearly a year on and there is no total victory.

    They are also firing into the West Bank as well.

    You're right about the US and its strategic leadership. The Israelis are happy to take their weapons and aid but their advice, well, they just treat with contempt and do what they want to.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,523
    edited October 2024
    On the carbon capture investment, are we about to see another festival of senior Conservative Politicians maundering on about a Labour Government doing something that was in the July 2024 Conservative Party Election Manifesto?

    Viz page 48:

    We are delivering record investment into UK renewables. But we need to go further, unlocking more investment to secure our energy supply in the future. In the next Parliament we will:
    ...
    - Build the first two carbon capture and storage clusters, based across North Wales and, the North West of England and Teesside and the Humber, cutting carbon and creating tens of thousands of jobs in these regions, and progress the second tranche of projects in Aberdeenshire and the Humber.

    https://public.conservatives.com/static/documents/GE2024/Conservative-Manifesto-GE2024.pdf

    Just asking.
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,010

    Spot on. If they do ok, they will be re-elected and deservedly so. If they don't, they'll get kicked out.

    Setting expectations low, and making harder decisions in years 1 is clearly the right strategy. We have become so used to being told what we want to hear by fantasist politicians that we have forgotten what a year 1 government should look like.
    The other point is that we're a much more divided country than have been in modern political history - with different groups having fairly staunchly opposed positions, but nonetheless sometimes coalescing together to stop those they see as more detrimental or dangerous to their interests.

    For example, among those who are potential Labour voters you have those who think they're too right-wing, are upset over Gaza and think Starmer is a red Tory, pro-Europeans upset at lack of repudiation of Brexit. Normies fed up with Tories. Younger people upset at how their generations have been treated, plus older traditional Labour voters and so on.

    On the right you have traditional Tories, traditionalist pro-Brexit voters, more radical anti-woke, and the anti-immigration Tories, radical tax cutters, and those who believe the Tories are part of an establishment conspiracy and love Reform - and so on.

    Each has their overlaps but are set against each other in other ways. Gluing as much of your 'side' together as possible probably doesn't mean engendering the most enthusiasm - as doing so scares the other side together and can break apart yours. But rather being seen as less threatening and serving enough of their interests to convince it's worth voting you in to keep out the awful other lot.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    I’m struggling to recall those crazy, hazy days when you were anything other than seriously pessimistic..
    We have been running a substantial trade deficit for well over 20 years. We got a lot of growth out of financial services, Edinburgh did particularly well, but that has been a lot more difficult since 2008. Our industrial base is continuing to decline. Our education system, which we once could be particularly proud of, is declining. Our public sector is too large and, frankly, too well paid sucking talent out of the economy. We need to do some seriously hard thinking about what our children and their children are going to do for a living.

    So, what can we do?

    We have some excellent Universities in St Andrews, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Strathclyde. We have some good ones in Dundee, Aberdeen and Stirling. They seem to me the obvious base for our future, just as Monasteries were in the middle ages .

    Not only do they bring a lot of money into Scotland through foreign students but they also spin off some businesses and generate significant investment such as the Wellcome Trust in Dundee and Microsoft in Edinburgh. We need to do all we can to generate more such businesses. That will include enterprise zones with lower taxes, close liaison between what the Universities teach and what these businesses of tomorrow want, tax and investment incentives and we need to encourage those trained here to stay and create their businesses here. They have the capacity to replace those industrial estates around Aberdeen.

    We still have strength in financial services but it is absolutely essential that that business remains closely tied with London to which it is back office and services.

    We need to try and get our tax rates competitive with the rest of the UK, to be focused on our economy and close the door on constitutional uncertainty, indeed every kind of uncertainty that we can control.

    But this is not likely to happen, hence my pessimism.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,148
    MattW said:

    On the carbon capture investment, are we about to see another festival of senior Conservative Politicians maundering on about a Labour Government doing something that was in the July 2024 Conservative Party Election Manifesto?

    One of the odd things about CCS is that British governments have been promising to spend £bns on it for years. Since at least 2007. There have been lots of announcements, but I think the big ten-digit money has never been spent.

    Perhaps this announcement is more of the same?
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