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The challenge for… the Liberal Democrats – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 12,567
edited July 11 in General
The challenge for… the Liberal Democrats – politicalbetting.com

This is the midpoint in a series looking at the challenges and opportunities for the 7 main Great Britain parties. Today we will look at the Liberal Democrats and see if they can continue their recent triumphs.

Read the full story here

«1345

Comments

  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451
    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,731
    Good morning, everyone.

    The Lib Dems risk being like Eumenes of Pergamon. Yes, highly successful. Yes, a winner. But only a regional player, always in the shadow of a greater empire.

    Unless they're willing to venture out of their cosy, well-meaning, WASPI-supporting, rocket sandwich-eating comfort zone, their chief aspiration will be that of a junior partner in government.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,192
    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,192
    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451
    edited July 11

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    Genuine question. What radical shifts would you like to see the Lib Dems propose?
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,695
    As ever an excellent thread - detailed, thoughtful, incisive and evidence-backed - which shows PB at its best.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874
    edited July 11

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    Excellent header!

    Sky did not couch it like that. They squarely put the blame at Rachel Reeves's door.

    I have found my hotel TV also has CNN, so I can dispense with the mindless presenting style of Sky and enjoy a proper Communist station. I haven't seen CNN for a while, and yes they are very critical of Trump, but there would appear to be a World outside Washington ( or in our case Westminster). Apparently there is a continent out there called Africa and wholesale humanitarian atrocities in a place called Sudan have been going on. I thought the only news was that Starmer is a bastard! We live and learn if we can access CNN.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451
    edited July 11

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    Sky did not couch it like that. They squarely put the blame at Rachel Reeves.

    I have found my hotel TV also has CNN, so I can dispense with the mindless presenting style of Sky and enjoy a proper Communist station. I haven't seen CNN for a while, and yes they are very critical of Trump, but there would appear to be a World outside Washington ( or in our case Westminster). Apparently there is a continent out there called Africa and wholesale humanitarian atrocities in a place called Sudan have been going on. I thought the only news was that Starmer is a bastard! We live and learn if we can access CNN.
    Is that because you are watching CNN International, rather than US CNN? I don't think I have ever heard US CNN declare they know of places outside of the US with out looking very worried they might get the wrong continent when talking about it.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 66,132
    Good morning

    There is a lot I agree with @Garethofthevale and to be fair I would consider the Lib Dems but for their stance on the EU which I do not want to rejoin.

    I did query their policies a few days ago and received a response that they had a policy of a 6% digital tax and taxing oil companies

    Given the first would cause fury from Trump, and the second is already heavily taxed, then I do not know where they would find the money especially with their desire to deal with social care

    I also do not agree with their support for WASPI women

    I remain one of the dwindling band of conservative supporters but here in Wales at the Senedd election next year and the GE I am likely to vote Plaid to oust labour
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,695
    edited July 11

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    No, we need to rediscover Liberalism from the century before. Free trade, free enterprise, low taxation, personal responsibility and individualism. More Gladstone, less Lloyd George.

    When the Whiggish Liberals left to join the Conservatives as Liberal Imperialists, so the remainder of the party started to embrace statist solutions, our relative decline started.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 46,192
    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Many of the big-hitters in the 'liberal' wing of the Conservative Party were against Boris. Hence he got rid of them.

    IMV this is a significant causal factor in the party's current woes.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,627
    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    Unless she's hoping to get a Presidential Citizenship Award by brown-nosing Trump.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    Sky did not couch it like that. They squarely put the blame at Rachel Reeves.

    I have found my hotel TV also has CNN, so I can dispense with the mindless presenting style of Sky and enjoy a proper Communist station. I haven't seen CNN for a while, and yes they are very critical of Trump, but there would appear to be a World outside Washington ( or in our case Westminster). Apparently there is a continent out there called Africa and wholesale humanitarian atrocities in a place called Sudan have been going on. I thought the only news was that Starmer is a bastard! We live and learn if we can access CNN.
    Is that because you are watching CNN International, rather than US CNN?
    Yes, but there does seem to be overlap. Anderson Cooper, Richard Quest and Christine Amanpour all over the place. Lots of Trump bastardry, but really well crafted reports from places I've not heard of on a diet of the BBC and Sky. Places like Africa, Asia and South America.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 46,192
    "Russian air defense opened fire on passenger plane "Minsk - Moscow", — Nevzorov

    The plane could be confused with a Ukrainian drone. Pantsir air defense system mistakenly fired at a passenger plane, which suffered minor damage. The crew successfully landed the plane."

    https://x.com/Maks_NAFO_FELLA/status/1943511760910098461
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,808

    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Many of the big-hitters in the 'liberal' wing of the Conservative Party were against Boris. Hence he got rid of them.

    IMV this is a significant causal factor in the party's current woes.
    Agreed. The breadth and depth of the tent has been significantly narrowed making it much harder to put together a winning coalition.

    This should, on topic, be a real opportunity for the Lib Dems to properly take the middle ground from the Tories once and for all but I am not sure that it is working out like that. There is a wing of the Lib Dems that is just a bit too left for former Tories and, of course, like all the main parties, there is a deep reluctance to face the reality we are living in.

    As a socially liberal, fiscally hawkish ex Tory I feel pretty homeless right now.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 39,081
    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Like Israel's ancient creed, it spread so widely that it ran to seed.

    In many ways, liberal assumptions are taken for granted. But, liberalism (like all ideologies) is riddled with paradoxes.

    How do you reconcile the rights of majorities, in a democracy, with protecting the rights of minorities? Is liberalism universalist, or is a government justified in prioritising its citizens over non-citizens? How does liberalism operate in a world where sometimes, it's necessary to wage war?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Good morning

    There is a lot I agree with @Garethofthevale and to be fair I would consider the Lib Dems but for their stance on the EU which I do not want to rejoin.

    I did query their policies a few days ago and received a response that they had a policy of a 6% digital tax and taxing oil companies

    Given the first would cause fury from Trump, and the second is already heavily taxed, then I do not know where they would find the money especially with their desire to deal with social care

    I also do not agree with their support for WASPI women

    I remain one of the dwindling band of conservative supporters but here in Wales at the Senedd election next year and the GE I am likely to vote Plaid to oust labour

    I might do the same although Plaid almost joined a rainbow coalition including UKIP that almost immediately fell apart.

    Steer clear of the Faragistas. They will do very well in the RedWall South.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 66,132

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    Excellent header!

    Sky did not couch it like that. They squarely put the blame at Rachel Reeves's door.

    I have found my hotel TV also has CNN, so I can dispense with the mindless presenting style of Sky and enjoy a proper Communist station. I haven't seen CNN for a while, and yes they are very critical of Trump, but there would appear to be a World outside Washington ( or in our case Westminster). Apparently there is a continent out there called Africa and wholesale humanitarian atrocities in a place called Sudan have been going on. I thought the only news was that Starmer is a bastard! We live and learn if we can access CNN.
    You seem to have a thing about Sky because they are saying things you do not like, but are fairly obvious to many

    Reeves budget was a disaster and 'the chickens are coming home to roost'

    Burley, Rigby and others haunted conservative politician when they were in government and now Labour are experiencing the same treatment

    Best not to watch much like I do not watch GBNews
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 66,132

    Good morning

    There is a lot I agree with @Garethofthevale and to be fair I would consider the Lib Dems but for their stance on the EU which I do not want to rejoin.

    I did query their policies a few days ago and received a response that they had a policy of a 6% digital tax and taxing oil companies

    Given the first would cause fury from Trump, and the second is already heavily taxed, then I do not know where they would find the money especially with their desire to deal with social care

    I also do not agree with their support for WASPI women

    I remain one of the dwindling band of conservative supporters but here in Wales at the Senedd election next year and the GE I am likely to vote Plaid to oust labour

    I might do the same although Plaid almost joined a rainbow coalition including UKIP that almost immediately fell apart.

    Steer clear of the Faragistas. They will do very well in the RedWall South.
    I will not vote Reform under any circumstances
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 19,093
    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 66,132

    Good morning

    There is a lot I agree with @Garethofthevale and to be fair I would consider the Lib Dems but for their stance on the EU which I do not want to rejoin.

    I did query their policies a few days ago and received a response that they had a policy of a 6% digital tax and taxing oil companies

    Given the first would cause fury from Trump, and the second is already heavily taxed, then I do not know where they would find the money especially with their desire to deal with social care

    I also do not agree with their support for WASPI women

    I remain one of the dwindling band of conservative supporters but here in Wales at the Senedd election next year and the GE I am likely to vote Plaid to oust labour

    I might do the same although Plaid almost joined a rainbow coalition including UKIP that almost immediately fell apart.

    Steer clear of the Faragistas. They will do very well in the RedWall South.
    I expect they will do very well here in North Wales but not with my vote
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 11,755
    The point about the LDs manifesto is spot on. It is tinkering around the edges. In some ways the two main parties have moved closer to one another - we can see this in that Labour arrive after a 14y absence and don't really change that much. This has corralled the LDs onto an increasingly narrow path, and they can't find any big ideas to distinguish themselves. I think this is true, but it's also absolutely crazy - so much of the state is completely broken - it shouldn't be too hard to come up with a wide ranging programme of measures to start to fix things. It'd be very painful, it'd be a treacherous path, but it'd be more radical and inspiring than anything else currently served up on the little chef menu of British politics.


    Moreover working on quite how you rip things up and start again without just wrecking things would ensure and attractive political debate - young people might be attracted. Possible good MP material, rather than the beige workaday cloth of the current mob.

    What the LDs need in short is;
    New Leader
    Better MPs
    Policies that will make a difference

    Where they are now I think it's not so hard to imagine a competing party being set up.

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 52,159
    edited July 11
    Broadly I agree with the lead.

    The one advantage the LDs have - which we see in the local results, including last night’s by-elections, is that while both Tory (brand already trashed) and Labour (brand now being trashed) are losing votes in droves to Reform, the LibDem vote base is reasonably resilient, and indeed the LDs are well-positioned to pick up extra anti-Reform votes from the (former) major parties.

    Anyhow, as I get sorted for yet another ferry crossing, here’s a photo from yesterday at Norway’s second largest glacier, dog for scale (although not showing a great deal of interest in this notable geographical feature tbh).


  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,731

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 19,093
    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 66,132
    Omnium said:

    The point about the LDs manifesto is spot on. It is tinkering around the edges. In some ways the two main parties have moved closer to one another - we can see this in that Labour arrive after a 14y absence and don't really change that much. This has corralled the LDs onto an increasingly narrow path, and they can't find any big ideas to distinguish themselves. I think this is true, but it's also absolutely crazy - so much of the state is completely broken - it shouldn't be too hard to come up with a wide ranging programme of measures to start to fix things. It'd be very painful, it'd be a treacherous path, but it'd be more radical and inspiring than anything else currently served up on the little chef menu of British politics.


    Moreover working on quite how you rip things up and start again without just wrecking things would ensure and attractive political debate - young people might be attracted. Possible good MP material, rather than the beige workaday cloth of the current mob.

    What the LDs need in short is;
    New Leader
    Better MPs
    Policies that will make a difference

    Where they are now I think it's not so hard to imagine a competing party being set up.

    Your Lib Dem needs actually apply to all the parties and this is why we are in this deep hole getting deeper by the day
  • MonksfieldMonksfield Posts: 2,903

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    Genuine question. What radical shifts would you like to see the Lib Dems propose?
    A new constitutional settlement. Based on abolition of the Lords in its current form, introduction of PR and a stronger role for regional Government.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,192
    Sean_F said:

    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Like Israel's ancient creed, it spread so widely that it ran to seed.

    In many ways, liberal assumptions are taken for granted. But, liberalism (like all ideologies) is riddled with paradoxes.

    How do you reconcile the rights of majorities, in a democracy, with protecting the rights of minorities? Is liberalism universalist, or is a government justified in prioritising its citizens over non-citizens? How does liberalism operate in a world where sometimes, it's necessary to wage war?
    I think liberalism is perceived to have failed and so people happily accept the snake oil peddled by the populist right, and in some cases the populist left. It needs to rediscover its self confidence and make the liberal case from first principles in my view
  • AugustusCarp2AugustusCarp2 Posts: 405

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 39,081

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
    It's very common. Polina Molotova remained a committed Stalinist, for all her life, despite suffering years of dreadful imprisonment at his hands.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 3,732
    Good morning, everybody. I just posted a comment that's vanished. I hope I didn't inadvertently mention anything that's forbidden. It was on topic and included thanks for an interesting header. It may return from the void so I won't repeat it.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 46,192

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
    And lots of people seem to think that the anti-immigrant rhetoric, the "white British" shite and "send them home!" applies only to those nasty dusky-looking criminals, not their friends, spouses or children who might be an immigrant or not "white British".

    As the ICE stuff is showing in America, they are wrong. Racists don't care that the person they hate is your friend or wife. They don't care if that person is a doctor, or helps loads of people in the wider community. They care only that they are different.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 79,166
    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    She's clearly not a stupid woman - trilingual; turned her life around after a criminal
    conviction; runs a business - but the level of cognitive dissonance is remarkable.

    ..Yet her family says they have faith that Arpineh will be released, and believe that only hardened, dangerous criminals will actually be deported.
    "I don't blame Trump, I blame Biden," Arthur says. "It's his doing for open borders, but I believe in the system and all the good people will be released and the ones that are bad will be sent back."
    While many of those detained do not have criminal records, Aprineh is a convicted felon, which makes her a prime target for removal.
    ICE did not respond to a request for comment about Arpineh's case..


    Trump's "worst of the worst" lies have penetrated deep. It's anyone's guess how long it will take for the reality to sink in.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 66,132

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
    And lots of people seem to think that the anti-immigrant rhetoric, the "white British" shite and "send them home!" applies only to those nasty dusky-looking criminals, not their friends, spouses or children who might be an immigrant or not "white British".

    As the ICE stuff is showing in America, they are wrong. Racists don't care that the person they hate is your friend or wife. They don't care if that person is a doctor, or helps loads of people in the wider community. They care only that they are different.
    It is a horrible and deeply disturbing attitude which is being played out in the US and God forbid it should come to our shores

    That doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything to stop the boats for very many reasons
  • StereodogStereodog Posts: 1,078

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
    I think that’s trickier now that the Greens have moved in so successfully on the student and hippy middle class vote. My suggestion would be for the Lib Dems to try and target Labour in some of the wealthy suburbs of newly flourishing Northern cities like Manchester and Newcastle. Some of those are just as prosperous and full of professionals as any Home Counties seat. The difficulty is that they’ve got no activist base there but they’ve got time to work on that before the next election.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 55,580

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    In Hitler’s Germany and Stalin’s Russia, on a number of occasions, people were executed while still fervently believing in the Great Leader.

    Shouts of “Heil Hitler” and “Long live Comrade Stalin” just before the execution were not unknown.
  • TazTaz Posts: 19,595

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    Well done Rachel
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 79,166

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
    Which is even more bizarre given the entire enterprise was built on mass murder from the start. And never really stopped.

    They were great exploiters of nationalism, too.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,475
    edited July 11
    Omnium said:

    The point about the LDs manifesto is spot on. It is tinkering around the edges. In some ways the two main parties have moved closer to one another - we can see this in that Labour arrive after a 14y absence and don't really change that much. This has corralled the LDs onto an increasingly narrow path, and they can't find any big ideas to distinguish themselves. I think this is true, but it's also absolutely crazy - so much of the state is completely broken - it shouldn't be too hard to come up with a wide ranging programme of measures to start to fix things. It'd be very painful, it'd be a treacherous path, but it'd be more radical and inspiring than anything else currently served up on the little chef menu of British politics.


    Moreover working on quite how you rip things up and start again without just wrecking things would ensure and attractive political debate - young people might be attracted. Possible good MP material, rather than the beige workaday cloth of the current mob.

    What the LDs need in short is;
    New Leader
    Better MPs
    Policies that will make a difference

    Where they are now I think it's not so hard to imagine a competing party being set up.

    I think part of the problem, partly alluded to in the excellent header, is that radical solutions (which are needed) will break some things for some voters, probably existing LD voters in particular. They're mostly fairly comfortable and have done ok from the status quo - any big changes could be a threat.

    It's almost like the LDs need to do a Jaguar and pivot away from the existing base.

    Another, related problem, is economics. Liberalism is, rightly, the main basis of the party, but that leads open left or right economics, to some extent. Pure liberalism would look more centre-right, but recent and historic liberalism has had things in common with the left. A radical outlook means choosing a direction and that will also alienate some. An alliance with liberal Cameroon Tories made sense, philisophically, but it still shocked and appalled the more left-inclined voters.

    Under PR we'd probably have two liberal parties, with different economic ideas, fairly friendly and willing to go into coalitions together, but a challenger in different seats - not entirely unlike the Alliance. The other parties would also split of course, with the more liberal Tories and Labourites likely joining the two strands of liberalism.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    Excellent header!

    Sky did not couch it like that. They squarely put the blame at Rachel Reeves's door.

    I have found my hotel TV also has CNN, so I can dispense with the mindless presenting style of Sky and enjoy a proper Communist station. I haven't seen CNN for a while, and yes they are very critical of Trump, but there would appear to be a World outside Washington ( or in our case Westminster). Apparently there is a continent out there called Africa and wholesale humanitarian atrocities in a place called Sudan have been going on. I thought the only news was that Starmer is a bastard! We live and learn if we can access CNN.
    You seem to have a thing about Sky because they are saying things you do not like, but are fairly obvious to many

    Reeves budget was a disaster and 'the chickens are coming home to roost'

    Burley, Rigby and others haunted conservative politician when they were in government and now Labour are experiencing the same treatment

    Best not to watch much like I do not watch GBNews
    I don't see much of a bias on Sky. They seem to hate everyone on Sky in equal measure. My main issue, as with the BBC is the mindless inane banter between anchor and reporter purporting to be insight and expertise.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 66,748
    Poor GDP figures just released.
  • AugustusCarp2AugustusCarp2 Posts: 405
    Stereodog said:

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
    I think that’s trickier now that the Greens have moved in so successfully on the student and hippy middle class vote. My suggestion would be for the Lib Dems to try and target Labour in some of the wealthy suburbs of newly flourishing Northern cities like Manchester and Newcastle. Some of those are just as prosperous and full of professionals as any Home Counties seat. The difficulty is that they’ve got no activist base there but they’ve got time to work on that before the next election.
    Yes, I take your point, but I think the Lib Dems are better placed to squeeze the Greens than the Greens are to squeeeze the Lib Dems. The difficult job of detaching habitual Labour voters has already been done - by the Greens, by Reform and by the Lib Dems. All that is needed now is to concentrate them behind the best placed candidate. It's a two horse race!
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,475
    IanB2 said:

    Broadly I agree with the lead.

    The one advantage the LDs have - which we see in the local results, including last night’s by-elections, is that while both Tory (brand already trashed) and Labour (brand now being trashed) are losing votes in droves to Reform, the LibDem vote base is reasonably resilient, and indeed the LDs are well-positioned to pick up extra anti-Reform votes from the (former) major parties.

    Anyhow, as I get sorted for yet another ferry crossing, here’s a photo from yesterday at Norway’s second largest glacier, dog for scale (although not showing a great deal of interest in this notable geographical feature tbh).


    Is that glacier really small? Or just far away? :wink:
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 79,166
    Omnium said:

    The point about the LDs manifesto is spot on. It is tinkering around the edges. In some ways the two main parties have moved closer to one another - we can see this in that Labour arrive after a 14y absence and don't really change that much. This has corralled the LDs onto an increasingly narrow path, and they can't find any big ideas to distinguish themselves. I think this is true, but it's also absolutely crazy - so much of the state is completely broken - it shouldn't be too hard to come up with a wide ranging programme of measures to start to fix things. It'd be very painful, it'd be a treacherous path, but it'd be more radical and inspiring than anything else currently served up on the little chef menu of British politics.


    Moreover working on quite how you rip things up and start again without just wrecking things would ensure and attractive political debate - young people might be attracted. Possible good MP material, rather than the beige workaday cloth of the current mob.

    What the LDs need in short is;
    New Leader
    Better MPs
    Policies that will make a difference

    Where they are now I think it's not so hard to imagine a competing party being set up.

    Probably by not ripping things up.
    Radical change is needed; year zero isn't.

  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 12,623
    edited July 11
    Morning all,
    Very good nights for Reform and LDs on the locals, hideous results for Con and Labour.
    Polling this morning from Techne, changes since a fortnight ago

    Ref 29 (+1)
    Lab 22 (-1)
    Con 18 (=)
    LD 16 (=)
    Green 9 (+1)
    SNP 2 (-1)
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 66,748
    Close to recession?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Poor GDP figures just released.

    Don't worry. Under the Conservatives we reassured ourselves that it would always uptick when the revised figures arrived.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 40,298
    Labour - growing the gangs, smashing the economy.

    Whoops. Four more years of this, I'm not sure the nation can take it.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451
    MaxPB said:

    Labour - growing the gangs, smashing the economy.

    Whoops. Four more years of this, I'm not sure the nation can take it.

    And a load more tax rises to look forward to in a few months.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 55,580

    Close to recession?

    What I see, in the sectors I’m involved with, is decisions on spending being put off. Existing projects carry on, but new stuff is gently rolled into the future.

    To get such flat growth numbers, some sectors must already be in recession.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 52,159
    Stereodog said:

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
    I think that’s trickier now that the Greens have moved in so successfully on the student and hippy middle class vote. My suggestion would be for the Lib Dems to try and target Labour in some of the wealthy suburbs of newly flourishing Northern cities like Manchester and Newcastle. Some of those are just as prosperous and full of professionals as any Home Counties seat. The difficulty is that they’ve got no activist base there but they’ve got time to work on that before the next election.
    The posher parts of the cities ought to be back in contention - seats like Hornsey, Hampstead, Hallam, and in the west of Manchester, Cardiff, Leeds etc
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 12,623
    edited July 11

    Close to recession?

    Needs two quarters of downward. Q2 looks almost certain, its hard to see where the growth comes from in Q3 to avoid it. Reeves is screwed though, theres a growing black hole in the figures
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 1,108

    Close to recession?

    Yes. If you keep promoting one. Best way to avoid it is to go out and spend / take out credit / sell the children.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 39,081

    Poor GDP figures just released.

    TBF to Rachel Reeves (not something you'll often hear me say), March's figure was revised up quite sharply. Without that, May would have shown GDP growth.
  • TazTaz Posts: 19,595
    In Durham there’s no reason why the Lib Dem’s shouldn’t be competitive in the city of Durham seat especially as they are very well entrenched in several of its council seats. They had a chance a few elections back but poor candidate selection and weak campaigning let them down.

    I just feel the Lib Dem’s don’t give a shit about most parts of the country. Just the Waitrose part.

    They’re also very fragile and don’t like being criticised
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Close to recession?

    Needs two quarters of downward. Q2 looks almost certain, its hard to see where the growth comes from in Q3 to avoid it. Reeves is screwed though, theres a growing black hole in the figures
    If Smoot Hawley taught you anything it was World recessions follow US tariff barriers.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 25,195
    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 52,094

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    No, I don't think we do need a new leader. Davey is highly competent and knows how to run both local and national campaigns. The next GE will be about consolidation of those 72 seats, and adding a modest amount of further ones.

    @GarethoftheVale2 gets a couple of things wrong in his header, the first being the lazy stereotypes, when actually the polling shows that the LDs have some of the most even support by demographic groups. The second is his interpretation of the gap between the 17% NEV in the locals and the 14% nationally. Yes, GOTV counts, but as well as that there is a willingness of LD voters to vote tactically, and to recruit tactical voters nationally. That seam of voters has plenty left. The next GE will be a festival of tactical voting, with voters trying to keep out Reform. LDs stand to benefit.

    In terms of overall policy I think the LDs are right to not buy into the "Britain is Broken" meme being driven by the populist right and Social Media. The country is not fundamentally broken, at least not more than it ever was, and that sort of relentless negativity and hate driven politics needs opposition. There's a lot of people out there who are fundamentally decent, happy to help their neighbours and happy with both diversity and international co-operation. A lot of us don't want to burn the country to its foundations.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 55,580
    Battlebus said:

    Close to recession?

    Yes. If you keep promoting one. Best way to avoid it is to go out and spend / take out credit / sell the children.
    Selling relatives in a foolish idea.

    You incur an immediate capital gains tax hit.

    What you need to do is create a Collateralised Relative Obligation - a derivative with physical delivery in a low/no tax domicile. Then create an OTC market in CRO.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 55,580

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    Over the centuries, from radical right to radical left, various policies have been suggested to promote growth. Many have been tried. The effects are still debated.

    The Chancellor did none of these.

    Growth did not result.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 52,159

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    I have an MBA including a stack of economics courses given by various learned econos including Evan Davis, back when.

    So, probably not...
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    About as much as the Chancellor then.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 1,108
    Was it a mistake for the new Government to say they were going to continue the policies of the Conservatives?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874
    edited July 11

    MaxPB said:

    Labour - growing the gangs, smashing the economy.

    Whoops. Four more years of this, I'm not sure the nation can take it.

    And a load more tax rises to look forward to in a few months.
    Well look on the bright side after a combination of at least ten years of Labour and Tory misrule Nigel will genuinely have nowhere to go. The cupboard is bare and the nation overrun with people of a colour he disapproves of. Despite his disparate band of landsliders he will fall in a month, and they can all cross the floor to the inch perfect Jenrick Tories.
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 12,623
    Foxy said:

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    No, I don't think we do need a new leader. Davey is highly competent and knows how to run both local and national campaigns. The next GE will be about consolidation of those 72 seats, and adding a modest amount of further ones.

    @GarethoftheVale2 gets a couple of things wrong in his header, the first being the lazy stereotypes, when actually the polling shows that the LDs have some of the most even support by demographic groups. The second is his interpretation of the gap between the 17% NEV in the locals and the 14% nationally. Yes, GOTV counts, but as well as that there is a willingness of LD voters to vote tactically, and to recruit tactical voters nationally. That seam of voters has plenty left. The next GE will be a festival of tactical voting, with voters trying to keep out Reform. LDs stand to benefit.

    In terms of overall policy I think the LDs are right to not buy into the "Britain is Broken" meme being driven by the populist right and Social Media. The country is not fundamentally broken, at least not more than it ever was, and that sort of relentless negativity and hate driven politics needs opposition. There's a lot of people out there who are fundamentally decent, happy to help their neighbours and happy with both diversity and international co-operation. A lot of us don't want to burn the country to its foundations.
    How do the LDs stand to benefit from tactical votes to keep out reform? Where are these LD/Reform battlegrounds? A couple in the SW maybe but the LD battles are almost all vs the Tories.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 10,351

    Good morning

    There is a lot I agree with @Garethofthevale and to be fair I would consider the Lib Dems but for their stance on the EU which I do not want to rejoin.

    I did query their policies a few days ago and received a response that they had a policy of a 6% digital tax and taxing oil companies

    Given the first would cause fury from Trump, and the second is already heavily taxed, then I do not know where they would find the money especially with their desire to deal with social care

    I also do not agree with their support for WASPI women

    I remain one of the dwindling band of conservative supporters but here in Wales at the Senedd election next year and the GE I am likely to vote Plaid to oust labour

    The digital tax would cause fury from Trump. It is also the right thing to do. Taxation should follow economic substance.

    But let’s not call it a digital service tax. Let’s make it a withholding tax or something or a transnational minimum tax incentivisatiom scheme of something suitably opaque
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 128,848
    Yes, it looks like the LDs maxed out in seats in 2024. Indeed ironically even PR would have given them almost the same number of seats as they got via FPTP anyway.

    To get further seats they would likely need to see the Tory vote largely collapse further to Reform, then the LDs can be base for the more moderate One Nation Cameroon types in the South especially who are still in the party and didn't already go LD at the 2024 GE and who wouldn't vote for Farage.

    Or they would need to hope Starmer is ousted by Rayner in which case they could be a base for more moderate social democrats as they were in 2019 when Corbyn led Labour. They won't win voters who want a more leftwing party than Starmer Labour as they will back the Greens or Corbyn's new party
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Morning all,
    Very good nights for Reform and LDs on the locals, hideous results for Con and Labour.
    Polling this morning from Techne, changes since a fortnight ago

    Ref 29 (+1)
    Lab 22 (-1)
    Con 18 (=)
    LD 16 (=)
    Green 9 (+1)
    SNP 2 (-1)

    Greens smashing SNP out of the park! Or is it Greens smashing Labour out of the Park and Reform smashing SNP out of the park? Or is it MoE?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 128,848

    Morning all,
    Very good nights for Reform and LDs on the locals, hideous results for Con and Labour.
    Polling this morning from Techne, changes since a fortnight ago

    Ref 29 (+1)
    Lab 22 (-1)
    Con 18 (=)
    LD 16 (=)
    Green 9 (+1)
    SNP 2 (-1)

    Gives Reform 339 MPs and a narrow majority of 28 for Farage
    https://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/fcgi-bin/usercode.py?scotcontrol=N&CON=18&LAB=22&LIB=16&Reform=29&Green=9&UKIP=&TVCON=&TVLAB=&TVLIB=&TVReform=&TVGreen=&TVUKIP=&SCOTCON=&SCOTLAB=&SCOTLIB=&SCOTReform=&SCOTGreen=&SCOTUKIP=&SCOTNAT=&display=AllChanged&regorseat=(none)&boundary=2024base
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 31,613

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    How would that work? Surely it is sales to US distributors that would be brought forward to avoid American tariffs?
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 10,351
    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Many of the big-hitters in the 'liberal' wing of the Conservative Party were against Boris. Hence he got rid of them.

    IMV this is a significant causal factor in the party's current woes.
    Agreed. The breadth and depth of the tent has been significantly narrowed making it much harder to put together a winning coalition.

    This should, on topic, be a real opportunity for the Lib Dems to properly take the middle ground from the Tories once and for all but I am not sure that it is working out like that. There is a wing of the Lib Dems that is just a bit too left for former Tories and, of course, like all the main parties, there is a deep reluctance to face the reality we are living in.

    As a socially liberal, fiscally hawkish ex Tory I feel pretty homeless right now.
    Ditto!
  • wooliedyedwooliedyed Posts: 12,623

    Morning all,
    Very good nights for Reform and LDs on the locals, hideous results for Con and Labour.
    Polling this morning from Techne, changes since a fortnight ago

    Ref 29 (+1)
    Lab 22 (-1)
    Con 18 (=)
    LD 16 (=)
    Green 9 (+1)
    SNP 2 (-1)

    Greens smashing SNP out of the park! Or is it Greens smashing Labour out of the Park and Reform smashing SNP out of the park? Or is it MoE?
    If it looks like MoE, smells like MoE, is within MoE............
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 10,193

    MaxPB said:

    Labour - growing the gangs, smashing the economy.

    Whoops. Four more years of this, I'm not sure the nation can take it.

    And a load more tax rises to look forward to in a few months.
    Well look on the bright side after a combination of at least ten years of Labour and Tory misrule Nigel will genuinely have nowhere to go. The cupboard is bare and the nation overrun with people of a colour he disapproves of. Despite his disparate band of landsliders he will fall in a month, and they can all cross the floor to the inch perfect Jenrick Tories.
    I feel a bit sorry for Nigel. Within weeks of becoming PM he'll be there on GB News saying 'Look, we inherited a mess form both Labour and the Tories...' and that will be that. Everyone will be looking for the next saviour.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 25,195

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    Well apart from it being my background from my BSc, MSc onwards, I somehow managed to spot that dramatically increasing NI was a terrible idea despite that.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    About as much as the Chancellor then.
    Does she post on here too?
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 31,613
    IanB2 said:

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    I have an MBA including a stack of economics courses given by various learned econos including Evan Davis, back when.

    So, probably not...
    Evan Davis. Oxford PPE, to reawaken the thread on posh journalists. Ideal training to present Dragons Den.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451

    The economy shrank in May (0.1%) after businesses brought forward purchases earlier in the year, the ONS said, in an attempt to get ahead of Donald Trump’s tariff onslaught.

    How would that work? Surely it is sales to US distributors that would be brought forward to avoid American tariffs?
    I think the flurry of activity we saw was as much to do with getting ahead of the tax rises in the UK.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,731

    Good morning

    There is a lot I agree with @Garethofthevale and to be fair I would consider the Lib Dems but for their stance on the EU which I do not want to rejoin.

    I did query their policies a few days ago and received a response that they had a policy of a 6% digital tax and taxing oil companies

    Given the first would cause fury from Trump, and the second is already heavily taxed, then I do not know where they would find the money especially with their desire to deal with social care

    I also do not agree with their support for WASPI women

    I remain one of the dwindling band of conservative supporters but here in Wales at the Senedd election next year and the GE I am likely to vote Plaid to oust labour

    The digital tax would cause fury from Trump. It is also the right thing to do. Taxation should follow economic substance.

    But let’s not call it a digital service tax. Let’s make it a withholding tax or something or a transnational minimum tax incentivisatiom scheme of something suitably opaque
    I believe we have a tax withholding treaty with America to prevent double income taxation, as per the W8-BEN form. Calling it a withholding tax would, perhaps, be deeply unwise.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 25,195
    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Many of the big-hitters in the 'liberal' wing of the Conservative Party were against Boris. Hence he got rid of them.

    IMV this is a significant causal factor in the party's current woes.
    Agreed. The breadth and depth of the tent has been significantly narrowed making it much harder to put together a winning coalition.

    This should, on topic, be a real opportunity for the Lib Dems to properly take the middle ground from the Tories once and for all but I am not sure that it is working out like that. There is a wing of the Lib Dems that is just a bit too left for former Tories and, of course, like all the main parties, there is a deep reluctance to face the reality we are living in.

    As a socially liberal, fiscally hawkish ex Tory I feel pretty homeless right now.
    +1
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 32,874

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    Well apart from it being my background from my BSc, MSc onwards, I somehow managed to spot that dramatically increasing NI was a terrible idea despite that.
    As you know I am but an ill-educated serf who thinks the Laffer Curve is in practical terms bollocks and even I raised an eyebrow at the employer NI increases.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 10,351

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    Genuine question. What radical shifts would you like to see the Lib Dems propose?
    A new constitutional settlement. Based on abolition of the Lords in its current form, introduction of PR and a stronger role for regional Government.
    Doesn’t fix the problems voters care about.

    They want to have a job that pays them enough to own a home, have a family, get to eat out occasionally and may be go on holiday once a year. Most people are pretty modest in their ambitions.

  • AugustusCarp2AugustusCarp2 Posts: 405

    Foxy said:

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    No, I don't think we do need a new leader. Davey is highly competent and knows how to run both local and national campaigns. The next GE will be about consolidation of those 72 seats, and adding a modest amount of further ones.

    @GarethoftheVale2 gets a couple of things wrong in his header, the first being the lazy stereotypes, when actually the polling shows that the LDs have some of the most even support by demographic groups. The second is his interpretation of the gap between the 17% NEV in the locals and the 14% nationally. Yes, GOTV counts, but as well as that there is a willingness of LD voters to vote tactically, and to recruit tactical voters nationally. That seam of voters has plenty left. The next GE will be a festival of tactical voting, with voters trying to keep out Reform. LDs stand to benefit.

    In terms of overall policy I think the LDs are right to not buy into the "Britain is Broken" meme being driven by the populist right and Social Media. The country is not fundamentally broken, at least not more than it ever was, and that sort of relentless negativity and hate driven politics needs opposition. There's a lot of people out there who are fundamentally decent, happy to help their neighbours and happy with both diversity and international co-operation. A lot of us don't want to burn the country to its foundations.
    How do the LDs stand to benefit from tactical votes to keep out reform? Where are these LD/Reform battlegrounds? A couple in the SW maybe but the LD battles are almost all vs the Tories.
    I think that should be "LD battles WERE almost all vs the Tories". Things might have changed now. It's still too early to tell, but if Reform really are polling in the mid-to-upper 20% region, then the number of lib Dem -v- Reform contests might be much higher than the last GE Results might indicate. A lot will be to do with positioning - if Labour says that Reform is the real opposition, then that helps the Lib Dems' efforts to assure people in some constituencies that "it's two horse race". "Only the Lib Dems can beat Reform here in [insert name of university town].
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 128,848
    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Many of the big-hitters in the 'liberal' wing of the Conservative Party were against Boris. Hence he got rid of them.

    IMV this is a significant causal factor in the party's current woes.
    Agreed. The breadth and depth of the tent has been significantly narrowed making it much harder to put together a winning coalition.

    This should, on topic, be a real opportunity for the Lib Dems to properly take the middle ground from the Tories once and for all but I am not sure that it is working out like that. There is a wing of the Lib Dems that is just a bit too left for former Tories and, of course, like all the main parties, there is a deep reluctance to face the reality we are living in.

    As a socially liberal, fiscally hawkish ex Tory I feel pretty homeless right now.
    Planty of socially liberal, fiscally hawkish MPs and voters still in the Kemi Tories, many of the socially conservative, fiscally hawkish Tories have gone to Reform.

    Ed Davey is also as a veteran of Cameron's Coalition government on the fiscally hawkish wing of the LDs while still being socially liberal
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 128,848
    Stereodog said:

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
    I think that’s trickier now that the Greens have moved in so successfully on the student and hippy middle class vote. My suggestion would be for the Lib Dems to try and target Labour in some of the wealthy suburbs of newly flourishing Northern cities like Manchester and Newcastle. Some of those are just as prosperous and full of professionals as any Home Counties seat. The difficulty is that they’ve got no activist base there but they’ve got time to work on that before the next election.
    Yes, the university towns would more likely go Green or Corbyn's new party if they want to protest against Labour.

    Only the wealthiest areas of them might go LD
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 11,229
    edited July 11
    MaxPB said:

    Labour - growing the gangs, smashing the economy.

    Whoops. Four more years of this, I'm not sure the nation can take it.

    I note that the ONS have revised their growth figures for March though, doubling their previous estimate. Supports your long-held view that they are too pessimistic.

    Typical government statisticians, talking down the Conservative Labour government ;).
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 128,848

    DavidL said:

    FF43 said:

    Liberalism is in crisis everywhere. Not just taking about the Lib Dems. There used to be a strong liberal element in the Conservative Party too.

    Many of the big-hitters in the 'liberal' wing of the Conservative Party were against Boris. Hence he got rid of them.

    IMV this is a significant causal factor in the party's current woes.
    Agreed. The breadth and depth of the tent has been significantly narrowed making it much harder to put together a winning coalition.

    This should, on topic, be a real opportunity for the Lib Dems to properly take the middle ground from the Tories once and for all but I am not sure that it is working out like that. There is a wing of the Lib Dems that is just a bit too left for former Tories and, of course, like all the main parties, there is a deep reluctance to face the reality we are living in.

    As a socially liberal, fiscally hawkish ex Tory I feel pretty homeless right now.
    +1
    You aren't, you voted Starmer Labour
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,141

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    There are several. You haven't been paying attention

  • CookieCookie Posts: 15,618
    IanB2 said:

    Stereodog said:

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
    I think that’s trickier now that the Greens have moved in so successfully on the student and hippy middle class vote. My suggestion would be for the Lib Dems to try and target Labour in some of the wealthy suburbs of newly flourishing Northern cities like Manchester and Newcastle. Some of those are just as prosperous and full of professionals as any Home Counties seat. The difficulty is that they’ve got no activist base there but they’ve got time to work on that before the next election.
    The posher parts of the cities ought to be back in contention - seats like Hornsey, Hampstead, Hallam, and in the west of Manchester, Cardiff, Leeds etc
    A pedant notes: Manchester doesn't really have a 'west'. If you walk a few hundred yards west from the city centre, you're in Salford. Which isn't really the posh bit.

    In fact, a pedant continues (sorry), while I agree with your point, the bits you are thinking of of those three cities are South Manchester, North Leeds and North Cardiff.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 46,192

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
    And lots of people seem to think that the anti-immigrant rhetoric, the "white British" shite and "send them home!" applies only to those nasty dusky-looking criminals, not their friends, spouses or children who might be an immigrant or not "white British".

    As the ICE stuff is showing in America, they are wrong. Racists don't care that the person they hate is your friend or wife. They don't care if that person is a doctor, or helps loads of people in the wider community. They care only that they are different.
    It is a horrible and deeply disturbing attitude which is being played out in the US and God forbid it should come to our shores

    That doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything to stop the boats for very many reasons
    Indeed. But the rhetoric we see is not just about stopping the boats. It's a general anti-immigrant sentiment, powered by racists who obsess with things like "White British".

    By all means tackle the boats issue; it is problematic for a whole host of reasons. But it's not right to use that issue as a way of bashing all immigrants.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 15,618
    I noticed this morning that 'The New European' appears to have rebranded itself as 'The New World'. Its cover story is a picture of Noel and Liam Gallagher, alongside a picture of SKS, with the slogan 'they did - can he?' Presumably they are asking whether he can 'come back' in general, rather than specifically sell out Heaton Park for five days in a row.

    Quite a lot to unpick there from the house journal of the Centrist Dad.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 52,094

    Foxy said:

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    No, I don't think we do need a new leader. Davey is highly competent and knows how to run both local and national campaigns. The next GE will be about consolidation of those 72 seats, and adding a modest amount of further ones.

    @GarethoftheVale2 gets a couple of things wrong in his header, the first being the lazy stereotypes, when actually the polling shows that the LDs have some of the most even support by demographic groups. The second is his interpretation of the gap between the 17% NEV in the locals and the 14% nationally. Yes, GOTV counts, but as well as that there is a willingness of LD voters to vote tactically, and to recruit tactical voters nationally. That seam of voters has plenty left. The next GE will be a festival of tactical voting, with voters trying to keep out Reform. LDs stand to benefit.

    In terms of overall policy I think the LDs are right to not buy into the "Britain is Broken" meme being driven by the populist right and Social Media. The country is not fundamentally broken, at least not more than it ever was, and that sort of relentless negativity and hate driven politics needs opposition. There's a lot of people out there who are fundamentally decent, happy to help their neighbours and happy with both diversity and international co-operation. A lot of us don't want to burn the country to its foundations.
    How do the LDs stand to benefit from tactical votes to keep out reform? Where are these LD/Reform battlegrounds? A couple in the SW maybe but the LD battles are almost all vs the Tories.
    The foundation of any party's GE campaign should start with retaining their existing seats, so these are the first place to recruit anti-Reform tactical voters. Labour needs to consider this too, and that will require appealling to LD inclined voters (the disparity between LD local and national vote shows that a lot of LD inclined voters already tactically vote).

    I think the Tories have the hardest job defending their existing seats, being squeezed by both the Reform party and the LDs. I think Tory seat numbers will fall further. They have no USP, just reflexive voters like BigG who have always voted Tory, and those are dwindling further.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 10,351

    Who could have predicted that the Chancellor dramatically increasing taxes in April on employment could cause a recession with declines in April and May?

    Apart from anyone who understands anything about Economics that is.

    Do you know anyone on here who understands anything about Economics? Maybe Robert, but I can't think of anyone else.
    There’s a professional economist on here (forget his name).

    But that’s not inconsistent with your statement…

  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 10,435

    FF43 said:

    Unfathomable stupidity.

    If Arpineh Masihi could vote, she would have cast her ballot for Donald Trump. She's a devout supporter of the US president – even now that she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

    "He's doing the right thing because lots of these people don't deserve to be here,"

    "I will support him until the day I die. He's making America great again."


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3vd1vn9n06o

    The "victim of the evil dictator still worshipping the evil dictator" is a standard trope of that sort of dystopian fiction.

    It's a shock seeing it play out in real life, but it probably shouldn't be a surprise.
    Not just fiction.

    Many Soviets thought they'd be fine in a purge because they hadn't done anything wrong.
    And lots of people seem to think that the anti-immigrant rhetoric, the "white British" shite and "send them home!" applies only to those nasty dusky-looking criminals, not their friends, spouses or children who might be an immigrant or not "white British".

    As the ICE stuff is showing in America, they are wrong. Racists don't care that the person they hate is your friend or wife. They don't care if that person is a doctor, or helps loads of people in the wider community. They care only that they are different.
    It is a horrible and deeply disturbing attitude which is being played out in the US and God forbid it should come to our shores

    That doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything to stop the boats for very many reasons
    Indeed. But the rhetoric we see is not just about stopping the boats. It's a general anti-immigrant sentiment, powered by racists who obsess with things like "White British".

    By all means tackle the boats issue; it is problematic for a whole host of reasons. But it's not right to use that issue as a way of bashing all immigrants.
    Morning, PB.

    Our friend Nige has a lot to do with that. The internal unhappiness is always written on his face.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 52,159
    Cookie said:

    IanB2 said:

    Stereodog said:

    On topic:

    This iteration of the Lib Dem map looks a lot more coherent and stable than previous ones, which often tracked a mixture of hyperactive activists, by-election wins and opportunistic campaigns (like tuition fees). On top of that, it's quite a bit bigger, and still has some room to grow. It helps that the Conservatives appear to have given up on the "nice England" part of their former coalition.

    The catch is that Nice England gets you a solid block, but nowhere near winning nationwide. In their glory days, the Conservatives had the shires and the suburbs. The Red Wall was only ever the jam on top, and probably more trouble than it was worth, coherence-wise. Labour got the cities, the suburbs and the wall. Reform appear to be uniting the shires and the red wall, which looks mad but seems to work for now.

    What's the next type of place for the Lib Dems to attack?

    In answer to your specific question, I would suggest University towns,
    I think that’s trickier now that the Greens have moved in so successfully on the student and hippy middle class vote. My suggestion would be for the Lib Dems to try and target Labour in some of the wealthy suburbs of newly flourishing Northern cities like Manchester and Newcastle. Some of those are just as prosperous and full of professionals as any Home Counties seat. The difficulty is that they’ve got no activist base there but they’ve got time to work on that before the next election.
    The posher parts of the cities ought to be back in contention - seats like Hornsey, Hampstead, Hallam, and in the west of Manchester, Cardiff, Leeds etc
    A pedant notes: Manchester doesn't really have a 'west'. If you walk a few hundred yards west from the city centre, you're in Salford. Which isn't really the posh bit.

    In fact, a pedant continues (sorry), while I agree with your point, the bits you are thinking of of those three cities are South Manchester, North Leeds and North Cardiff.
    OK; usually it's the west. Leeds West was a liberal seat once upon a time, wasn't it?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,907
    Thanks for the article on the LDs. IMO for now they will continue to be the substitute for Labour as the party opposing the Tories in up to 100 seats, and won't get further.

    Their dilemma is real. If they are to expand - say into being the challenger in 300 seats and not 100, it has to be clear who is their adversary. Currently their adversary is the Tories, which rationally means that to expand they need to seek more seats where they can be the adversary of the Tories.

    I don't think this can happen. They can't displace Labour. So can they displace the Tories as opponent of Labour? It doesn't look like it.

    Their best approach therefore is to slightly and incrementally build on the current status, as the party who can help Labour to a second term, who are obviously not Tories, but hold some common ground with Labour.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,475
    Foxy said:

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    No, I don't think we do need a new leader. Davey is highly competent and knows how to run both local and national campaigns. The next GE will be about consolidation of those 72 seats, and adding a modest amount of further ones.

    @GarethoftheVale2 gets a couple of things wrong in his header, the first being the lazy stereotypes, when actually the polling shows that the LDs have some of the most even support by demographic groups. The second is his interpretation of the gap between the 17% NEV in the locals and the 14% nationally. Yes, GOTV counts, but as well as that there is a willingness of LD voters to vote tactically, and to recruit tactical voters nationally. That seam of voters has plenty left. The next GE will be a festival of tactical voting, with voters trying to keep out Reform. LDs stand to benefit.

    In terms of overall policy I think the LDs are right to not buy into the "Britain is Broken" meme being driven by the populist right and Social Media. The country is not fundamentally broken, at least not more than it ever was, and that sort of relentless negativity and hate driven politics needs opposition. There's a lot of people out there who are fundamentally decent, happy to help their neighbours and happy with both diversity and international co-operation. A lot of us don't want to burn the country to its foundations.
    As I was saying, about LD supporters probably not wanting too much change, thank you very much :wink:

    It's a valid point, of course, there is much that is good with the country. But we have some fundamental issues, particularly around expenditure and tax receipts that need addressing, along with investing sensibly for longer term gain.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 52,094

    We need to rediscover radical liberalism from the last century. The party created modern Britain in two phases, giving us universal education, healthcare and welfare. Britain is broken at a basic level, so radical shifts are once again needed.

    In short, we need a new leader. I think Ed did a fantastic job transforming our prospects after the coalition, but he’s topped out.

    Genuine question. What radical shifts would you like to see the Lib Dems propose?
    A new constitutional settlement. Based on abolition of the Lords in its current form, introduction of PR and a stronger role for regional Government.
    Doesn’t fix the problems voters care about.

    They want to have a job that pays them enough to own a home, have a family, get to eat out occasionally and may be go on holiday once a year. Most people are pretty modest in their ambitions.

    There was a time when the Tories believed in that Major-ite world. No longer.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 85,451
    Cookie said:

    I noticed this morning that 'The New European' appears to have rebranded itself as 'The New World'. Its cover story is a picture of Noel and Liam Gallagher, alongside a picture of SKS, with the slogan 'they did - can he?' Presumably they are asking whether he can 'come back' in general, rather than specifically sell out Heaton Park for five days in a row.

    Quite a lot to unpick there from the house journal of the Centrist Dad.

    Given the tricky climate for print media, I am surprised it is still going. I mean Steve Bray and Alastair Campbell can't buy that many copies between them.
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