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Only 37% of 2024 Tories think Badenoch would make the best PM – politicalbetting.com
Only 37% of 2024 Tories think Badenoch would make the best PM – politicalbetting.com
Farage (narrowly) takes lead over Starmer on our preferred PM question too for first time. Though none of the above beats them both and Badenoch. Starmer is still the preferred choice (of them + none) by 55% of Labour 2024 voters however.
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https://x.com/peston/status/1884609503829909879
Up to December Halifax customers were not able to bank in Lloyd’s and viceversa but that’s recently been resolved
And, as you noted, disapproval of government is a leading indicator. Expect Labour to sink further
But politics is very fragmented at the moment; and I think it’s just as likely that people really won’t want to endorse Starmer for a second term, and/or that Farage comes unstuck in the next four years. So it’s just so very difficult to say right now.
There is a time for the Tories to panic. I don’t think it’s quite yet. I’m not sure I see anyone else doing better.
I wonder how this differs from all the other times this has been talked about over the last twenty years?
I also note, from (1): "an upgrade on the A428 between Milton Keynes and Cambridge". Which, unless I am very much mistaken, I passed the roadworks for as I drove to the pool at lunch. The upgrade is well under way, started by the last government.
This is different from the Oxford-Cambridge expressway (2), cancelled four years ago. If you want to link the two cities, something needs to be done by the mudtracks between Zebedeeland and the muddy spires of Oxford. We're going to have nice dual carriageway all the way from Cambridge to MK, and crummy roads the rest of the way.
On the other hand, it's good to see the new Fens Reservoir is going to be built (3) to provide water for all the new homes and businesses. This is actually a big issue locally.
JFDI.
(1): https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjw49q9zgepo
(2): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford–Cambridge_Expressway
(3): https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cm2e8gkj2yro
Dramatisation of the infamous 1989 interview between journalist Brian Walden and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, which triggered the downfall of the Iron Lady. With Steve Coogan and Harriet Walter.
Technically, you can downstream the programme now but best wait till 9.
As per his narrow lead on the best PM poll though Farage would be the big winner with Reform winning 107 MPs and overtaking the LDs on 72 for third.
Labour on 246 MPs would lose its majority but likely stay in power, just
https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/fcgi-bin/usercode.py?scotcontrol=N&CON=24&LAB=25&LIB=13&Reform=25&Green=7&UKIP=&TVCON=&TVLAB=&TVLIB=&TVReform=&TVGreen=&TVUKIP=&SCOTCON=&SCOTLAB=&SCOTLIB=&SCOTReform=&SCOTGreen=&SCOTUKIP=&SCOTNAT=&display=AllChanged&regorseat=(none)&boundary=2024
For contrast, can any pb-ers give us an unsually high score?
I love this kind of shit.
So a mean score of 24.5
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByoXJidOs3Q
JFDI and train people up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUMu0s-Y3UE (4mins)
I consider that a shellacking.
He blames the fraught time in Politics and Brexit deadlock.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/lord-mandelson-i-was-wrong-to-call-trump-a-danger-to-the-world/ar-AA1y39re?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=9bbd76b8c58c459a8c93bf099ebaf401&ei=15
*RBS, not HBOS, to be fair.
I appreciate I'm a bit thick, but that question appeared hugely longwinded and not particularly focused. More like an essay question.
I have a client who doesn't do 'digital'. They take cheques and cash. They have no card machine.
Until five years ago, the local bank was still in our town (Crosby), but then closed. So all banking was via the post office. That's now closed and the only options are Waterloo (about a five-ten minute drive) or Liverpool City Centre.
I expect the problem will only get worse and worse for my client. [1]
[1] Yes, yes; they need to move into the 20th Century, let alone the 21st and get a bank card reader setup; but they won't.
Hence you Lloyd’s staff member provides advice in Bishop on Monday, Stanhope Tuesday, Peterlee Wednesday….
Thank God for the free market.
Whitworth wasn’t far behind.
Conversely, the nearest I've ever lived to the centre of a city (ten minutes' walk) was a 26.
He used the sordid term, which refers to three-way sex, about his BBC colleague Janette Manrara. It’s about as crude and offensive a suggestion as you can make.
I can think of at least 100 more crude and offensive suggestions than that.
The only 90 I know is Manchester Airport. Which presumably wasn't your address.
Hm. A bit of research also allows Worksop, Solihull and somewhere in Glasgow as possibilities
There was a similar poll in the UK that showed that Conservatives mostly thought the United Kingdom was a good country, while about half of Labour supporters did not.
Those findings explained much, I thought, about the politics in both nations.
Have you seen any similar poll findings for the UK recently?
Could a change in those attitudes help explain why so many leaders have trouble getting positive ratings in the UK?
(For the record: I think the US is still mostly a good nation, but less so in recent decades with the decline in family strength.)
https://x.com/politlcsuk/status/1884600760899367105
https://www.thetimes.com/uk/law/article/majority-britons-support-death-penalty-poll-scw7glncg
But he's our toad.
He'd be great on the economy.
As Eagles notes, Manchester is a bit different because Manchester and Salford always shared postcodes - before postcodes were made nationwide, you had Manchester 1 (where the post office was), and then they alternated: Manchester 2, Salford 3, Manchester 4, Salford 5... Uniformity petered out after a bit and in any case there have been reorders since, and everything's been given an 'M'.
His core competence was starting bank runs based on a limited understanding of how finance works.
On London postcodes, I've lived in: SW1, W2, E1, W1, NW1, NW3 and now WC2.
The funny bit is that my WC2 is about 200 meters from Cambridge Circus, so by any measure is the closest to the centre of London.
An infamous allegation.
Pesto has a vast, *negative* understanding of how finance works.
(apols if list is wrong but I did it from memory)
[Edit: I missed out Darling and Zahawi]
I'm not doing well am I?!
Edit: ha, no it isn’t, I too lived there and had it wrong all that time!
1981-1996 apparently, although definitions vary.
AKA the non-house-owning avocado-on-toast brigade.
N7 is next door to Nottingham Castle, in the middle of the city.
"Of all the toads I have ever possessed, he is not one of them"
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/06/25/one-murder-a-week-committed-by-offenders-probation-service/
More than 750 killings since 2010 carried out by criminals on probation
In London I was SE11, N19, N1 and SE10 so nothing to write home about there either. I am postcode declasse.
'Generation Z, who are aged between 18 and 26, are the most conflicted over the return of the death penalty, with 45 per cent in favour, 42 per cent against and 14 per cent unsure.
Most of the baby boomer generation — aged 60-74 — are in favour by a margin of 58 to 34 per cent, while 50 per cent of the over-75s are supportive and 37 per cent against.'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0fdoOxkN4o
Also a review from Rory the Tory on the impact of Trump freezing everything worldwide via Executive Order. This is one of his subject areas.
An example is that USA Aid (all of whose programmes have now been frozen in mid-contract) funds the Jordanian education system via the ministry, which has will now stop in its tracks.
One thesis is that this behaviour will liquidate the USA's soft power worldwide for a generation, which has been a key influencer for them - since after 80 years of being a trustworthy ally, they are demonstrating that they have potential to be unpredictable backstabbers out of the blue at zero notice.
"Fool me once ..". Deep link to this:
https://youtu.be/U0fdoOxkN4o?t=1071