What are these ratings going to look like at the next general election? – politicalbetting.com
What are these ratings going to look like at the next general election? – politicalbetting.com
? / The public's already negative view of Labour is getting worse still on key metrics monitored by our trackers62% of Britons see the party as weak, up from 52% before the welfare rebellion in late JuneWeak: 62% (+10 from 7-9 June)Neither: 17% (-4)Strong: 9% (-5)yougov.co.uk/topics/polit…
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I'm pretty sure that being moderate isn't the positive it used to be in a much more polarised country with a stagnant economy.
4 years is a very long time.
Individually, I'm not sure they mean all that much (does anyone actually give much real consideration to "key metrics" ?); it's simply that around two thirds of the country really don't like this government.
Without significant economic progress, that is not going to change. Stagnation plus higher taxes certainly won't do it.
I actually think this govt has improved this year, but from a very low base, but we are in 1975 not 1998 and the worst is yet to come.
Where Reform could really offer an alternative is with fiscal discipline. However they won’t as many of their supporters are social conservative but fiscally liberal.
The cost of sending children to private school will almost double after the introduction of VAT on fees, analysis suggests.
The parents of a privately educated child leaving school this year after A-levels are likely to have spent an average of £204,622 on fees, according to Weatherbys Private Bank. The cost of putting a child of the same age through boarding school is estimated to have been £413,471. However, costs vary widely with the Good Schools Guide putting the highest annual fees at £75,000.
Weatherbys says that for a child starting in reception at a private school this September the cost could ultimately reach £377,000 — £763,000 if they were boarding. This assumed annual inflation of 3 per cent, which accounts for two thirds of the increase, with VAT responsible for the rest.
Last September private schools put up fees by an average 6.7 per cent. When 20 per cent VAT was imposed in January, many schools initially cut fees by 5 per cent to cushion parents from the immediate impact, but overall, the average fee rose by about 22 per cent.
https://www.thetimes.com/business-money/money/article/total-cost-of-private-school-to-almost-double-to-380000-nh0bs330g
It is a curiosity of current British politics that both of our former major parties have leaders that MPs, members and voters have no faith in and want replaced. Both expect a pasting in next years elections and expect their leaders to be replaced before the GE.
We live amongst zombies.
Reform, on the other hand, can't offer real fiscal discipline- not with the coalition they are building. Their whole take is that there are lots of easy wins that the Uniparty are refusing to do because of stubbornness and malice. It's an attractive story. But, as Musk found out and various county councillors are finding out, it's mostly rubbish.
Besides, social conservatism is expensive, if you insist on enforcing it.
Now about a quarter of an inch deep and six feet wide.
"We're not the Tories" isn't going to do you any good when the response is "No, you're even more useless..."
Starmer needs a Cabinet reshuffle. That includes a new Chancellor - before the Budget.
Man poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT
Patient replaced table salt with sodium bromide after consulting AI software, say doctors
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2025/08/12/man-poisoned-himself-after-taking-medical-advice-from-chatg/
And yes, the tax was directly a cause.
A real person, and a real job lost.
It's now Xi, Brooklyn and Cy - i.e. the international elite and sons and daughters of rich footballers and celebrities.
Those Lab numbers are dire.
Basically a One Term Latest set.
I notice that the Times headline talks about migrants arriving in very fast boats. No wonder so many of them get through...
Unless economic parameters markedly improve, or Labour face up to some very difficult choices on spending, this narrative is just going to continue. Another summer, another wave of fevered speculation what taxes will rise next (IHT gifting seemed to be the poison of choice yesterday). It is inescapable for Labour, and it lends to the air of a government in panic and a miserable populace having more misery to endure.
No government can be run like this and expect to be getting any benefit.
C. Hoare & Co, Barclays Private Banking, Arbuthnot Latham, that's elite.
(I am enjoined from having C. Hoare & Co as my bankers because I would tell the world 'My bankers are Hoares'.
But he also needs a vision, and people who can sell that vision to the public. Because he can not.
I cannot tell you what Kemi's Conservative Party stands for: they seem to have no vision. But the same is true for the government, who seem not only to lack vision, but also be just reacting to events.
But the odd thing is that the Farage Party does not have much of a vision either: they just seem to think the country's shit (despite their own acts in making it so), and that the shittiness is down to immigrants and people trying to be be nice to other people.
You think its bad for Labour? The Tories have decided to out-Farage Reform this week, with endless performative posts on social media. Apparently they will send all migrants home. Excluding Kemi.
Though to be neither is the worst.
As I’ve probably observed before, principles in politics are traditionally seen as weakness or a burden. However in fact they are something that can provide the foundation of trying to enact unpopular or painful policies. If voters believe that politicians’ principles are sincerely held they tend to respect the holders even if they don’t agree with them. Unfortunately for SKS and Labour the general (probably correct) perception that they have no strong or consistent attachment to a principle is becoming entrenched.
Of course you also have the weird scenario where true believers have faith in the good intentions of the most obviously principle-free reprobates going. No names, no pack drill.
We expect to be totally priced out in years to come but, for now,trying to stick with it.
1) It will cost the state more money than it raises
2) Most people don't care because they see this as fair
3) Schools are using VAT to cover all number of things
I can understand the frustration of parents affected - it is unfair. Then again there are so many things which are egregiously unfair and this isn't anywhere near the top of the unfairness chart. Carers losing their entire allowance for going £1 over the earnings cap? More unfair. And there's stacks of examples of things done by merciless ministers to make the lives of the poor and sick practically unliveable which are more unfair.
This explains point 2 above.
And the figures aren't inflation adjusted.
Happens at other unis, of course.
“The first method for estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him.”
Stupid people will do stupid things, so for similar reasons someone who loses a kid to measles can't sue anti-vaxxers.
Badenoch seems like a category 3.
Reform are eating them alive for the simple reason that they have called out everything the Tories failed to do and laughed at them trying it on. Despite the projected rage from a few and simmering unrest from many, the Tories aren't gaining any ground at all. The opposite seems true.
They can do nothing else with Madam Sneer as leader. She is Flawless and Can Do No Wrong. They need someone more honest - Cleverley not Jenrick.
The Govt have to see perceived life improve (ie "Lived Experience"
As I see it, that is their table stake - and I'm not clear just how many of those are lockouts if they do not deliver, and then they get consideration in the Election Game.
They are correct is blaming nearly everything on the previous headless chicken government, but that card is a Joker with diminishing value, and they have not been ruthless in driving that stake in to the opposition's heart. It will take a full decade to recover, at least, for example in building prisons that were multiply promised followed by a blank hole. But that's where we are.
As I see it, the best they have for the Budget is to do what ought to have been done last autumn.
Consider paying your Private Medical Fees in advance; VAT on those seems logical as a tax rhetorically to hypothecate to NHS Service improvements eg dentistry etc.
It's also worth noting that, despite the apparent loathing of the government, Labour are still consistently second in the opinion poll ratings. It seems almost counter-intuitive that such deep unpopularity hasn't yet seen them overtaken by the Tories or Lid Dems.
Of course that means that the whole premise of the Labour Party, and the left wing generally, that they can run a decent economy while screwing over the enterprising and productive to shovel money towards their favourite groups, is wrong, at least unless they get everything else absolutely right. But that's been obvious for decades, somewhat disguised by Blair and Brown sqaundering the last few years of Margaret Thatcher's legacy.
The country's problem is that it's very far from clear that anyone other party has, either.
It may be bad, but are they the best of the bunch?
The problem is one of perception. People need to believe that life is better and things are happening to make it better still. Never has there been a better time to be alive, yet so many believe in decline. Labour needs to be in a position to copy SuperMac "you never had it so good". They are nowhere near that and have a terrible communications strategy.
“E.J. Antoni, the economist tapped by President Donald Trump to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics, suggested suspending the agency’s closely watched monthly jobs report, arguing that its underlying methodology, economic modeling and statistical assumptions are fundamentally flawed.”
https://x.com/Olivia_Beavers/status/1955296469642096810
https://samf.substack.com/p/the-great-vat-panic
The TLDR is that campaigns against government policy work best when you have a back channel negotiation to come up with a mutually-acceptable deal. The Independent Schools Council went straight for berating the policy in the press, and only that, which was never going to work.
Yes, VAT on school fees is another version of "Do it to Julia"; accept that there needs to be pain to balance the books, but that pain should be experienced by other people. A lot of the anger was because people used to getting their way didn't.
(And whilst there will be some blowback from this policy, it will need a massive exodus to be a net negative for the government. There is no sign of that right now. In large part because British private schools are mostly fishing in the global elite market, which isn't very price-sensitive. Hard on those who have gone from just about affording school fees to not affording them, but they're a minority of a minority.)
However if Starmer can get the 25% who see it as doing the right thing it is possible Labour could still scrape most seats in a hung parliament with tactical votes from LD and Green supporters in marginal seats purely to keep Farage from power
But I think the problem is deeper than that. I don’t think spending alone will fix the problem. Coming at things from where I see them on the (broadly) centre right, we now have an over regulated process state that finds it increasingly difficult to deliver the innovation, productivity and development that we need to drive growth and create the wealth in the first place. And that spills over into public service delivery too.
That is not the fault of public institutions at local or even national level for the most part. They are obliged to comply with vast swathes of legislation that have been introduced over the years, which now ties us in knots and serves as a brake on progress.
Labour got the message right on planning (one of the things that attracted me to them) but the problem doesn’t just lie there - it is far, far deeper and broader - and I think their first year have shown that Labour is instinctively queasy in confronting this - partly because at its heart, it is a party that broadly accepts the process state in the first place.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/08/12/jeremy-clarkson-leads-cotswolds-backlash-jd-vance-usa/ (£££)
Lefty woke
BBCAmazon Clarkson. Wasn't there a subplot in The West Wing where the President increases his challenger's security level in order that roadblocks and traffic stops around his rallies should inconvenience more voters?We've already had everything being piled on top, and all of it blamed on VAT - with for example, no mention of reduction of the increase by VAT recovery.
There are other pressures, such as demographic change creating space in the state system, so there's at least an indication for those schools who can of moving upmarket.
There was other commentary last week (Telegraph?) trying to position increased equality in school entrance, ie undermining the impact of very nearby house prices, as an "attack on the middle classes".
Same old politics !
We've already had everything being piled on top, and all of it blamed on VAT - with for example, no mention of reduction of the increase by VAT recovery.
There are other pressures, such as demographic change creating space in the state system, so there's at least an indication for those schools who can of moving upmarket.
There was other commentary last week (Telegraph?) trying to position increased equality in school entrance, ie undermining the impact of very nearby house prices, as an "attack on the middle classes".
Same old politics !
We've already had everything being piled on top, and all of it blamed on VAT - with for example, no mention of reduction of the increase by VAT recovery.
There are other pressures, such as demographic change creating space in the state system, so there's at least an indication for those schools who can of moving upmarket.
There was other commentary last week (Telegraph?) trying to position increased equality in school entrance, ie undermining the impact of very nearby house prices, as an "attack on the middle classes".
Same old politics !
And, BTW, the idea that private schools, except those that have admission policies that take no regard of ability to pay, should be charities has always been nonsense.
Of course in the good old days being hated could lead to you being eaten.
'In the hysteria that followed, he and his brother Cornelis de Witt were blamed and lynched in The Hague, with their corpses at least partially eaten by the rioters'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johan_de_Witt
Schools holding workshops on basic phone skills ahead of A-level results day
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/08/12/gen-z-students-ucas-phone-calls-university-clearing/ (£££)
No wonder teachers are stressed. One moment the government says ban phones in schools, the next, it's how to use a phone lessons.
Have infants schools stopped doing that thing with the string and baked bean cans?
In the olden days it was possible for a media outfit to be broadly 'pro social democracy', 'pro free market and deregulation', 'pro state ownership of the big economic beasts', as a broad set of ways forward. That's all gone. There is a gap in the market for popular thought.
So true and so depressing
I have no idea how any of the parties provide a solution and that includes the Lib Dems and Greens
However, it is fair to say Starmer is not PM material and Reeves certainly is not COE material either, and with huge tax increases on the horizon I cannot see how labour recovers, and that is without Magic Grandpa and Sultana getting their act together
My granddaughter, fresh with her degree from Leeds, has applied for 60 jobs with no success and is now on UC
How the next government will cope is for discussion but I would be amazed if labour were part of it
There is a massive and growing anti-Labour vote out there and where Reform are clearly best placed to beat Labour, the majority of Con voters will place their crosses to kick Labour accordingly imo.
These are the schools that will suffer - the public schools with international or national reputation and big endowments alongside the London private day schools with a big global wealthy community to fill places who would never dream of sending their children off to board will largely be fine.
She can talk about Milei all she wants but this has been the problem with the Tories for years - all talk and absolutely no guts or vision to follow through with anything. If she means business she’s going to have to start practically setting out and winning the argument on some of this stuff - backed up with genuine policies (a hard ask when the media is looking elsewhere) and sounding like she actually has the drive, belief and team to deliver it.
Anne is quite right to suggest that all our politicians seem far more interested in power than they do in policy.
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I'm still doing consulting work for clients
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I'm doing my own 60 second politics reels on X and TikTok which are getting great interaction straight out of the box
Everything is business! Even politics as my consulting / media production business is technically producing all content I create on all channels...
They plot for power, get it, don’t know what to do with it. They cannot even get legislation through with a large majority. Part of the problem is in opposition they don’t really want to develop policy until close to the election for fear of scrutiny.
She’s spoken about means testing the triple lock, which is stupid and would be needlessly bureaucratic.
What Millei style spending cuts is she offering. What is she proposing to cut ?
"The number of pupils in private schools in England has decreased by 1.9% in the past year – from 593,486 in January 2024 to 582,477 in January this year."
2%. That's less than one pupil per average class. And even that fall is not all due to VAT given state school numbers are down as well. From https://schoolsweek.co.uk/private-school-vat-raids-whats-the-actual-impact/ :
1 Is there anyone else on the political scene who would be doing better? Badenoch is worse. Farage is worse. If you think (as I do) that Sunak and Hunt spent their final year laying traps for their successors, they are worse.
2 If the Prime Ministers we have had in recent decades have all been horribly flawed, maybe the problem is the role and our expectations, not the people who have done it.
Excluding international schools, about 5% of private school pupils are non-British with parents living abroad. The largest group are from China (both mainland and Hong Kong).
Another 5% are non-British but with parents who live in Britain.
Now who is is a separate question, but not an excuse to give Starmer and Reeves aa pass by suggesting everyone else is worse
I'd swap back Sunak and Hunt in a heartbeat for what replaced them. They were dealt the shittiest hand of any post-war Government, but at least looked like they knew what needed doing.
Yes, poor numbers for Labour but I think we know if any other party were in Government at this time their numbers would be as bad if not worse.
It's often said some elections are "bad ones to win" - 1992 being a good example - but 2024 would be right up there it seems. I'll be honest (and this seems a peculiarly London-centric view) - I don't think Starmer is doing too badly. At worst he's Continuity Sunak but big shifts in governance aren't easy - as has been said, there were probably only three really radical Governments in the 20th century - Asquith, Attlee and Thatcher.
In a globally interconnected world, doing something radical isn't easy and even within Britain one decision impacts on others. Cuts in public spending on the scale some here would seem to want don't end at the balance sheet - they would impact real people in their daily lives, perhaps not the individuals and their families urging the deep cuts but nonetheless.
Government is difficult especially at a time of weak economic growth - however you try to slice the cake someone complains about their share or lack of it. I do agree some of the initial ideas of the new Government were implemented in a hamfisted way - removing Winter Fuel Allowance from higher rate taxpayers while retaining it for those on basic rate would probably have been sellable. The "boats" defy all attempts at a solution for now though I suspect autumn and winter will slow things down a bit.
Cutting Peter's benefits to ensure Paul pays less tax isn't the answer and nor is raising Paul's taxes so Peter can keep all his benefits so it becomes dancing on a pinhead in terms of what you can and can't do.
It also becomes easier to look for scapegoats - blame the migrants, blame the scroungers, blame those with mental and physical challenges, blame those with long Covid, blame the last Government, blame this Government etc.
You can see the attraction of masterly inactivity and the destiny of the poor can as it gets propelled once more down the road. You can also see why those peddling "easy answers" get traction.
One is that a Labour win didn't look at all on the cards until 2022 or so. Planning a manifesto to lose with dignity is different to planning a project for government.
The other is the boots-on-the ground practicalities of government. Getting to talk to civil servants and suchlike. Prior to 1997 and 2010, those access talks started about sixteen months before the election. Starmer had less than five months. It shows.
How long before he discovers the fact that Putin is a land-grabbing c*** who uses terror as his one and only tactic, destroying homes, hospitals, schools to get his way? And discovers that hundreds, thousands of innocent Ukrainians have died whilst Trump keeps cutting Vlad some more weeks and months of slack?
Sending a child at 16 abroad is very different to at age 6. So St Custards prep is very different to Eton or Uppingham.
https://x.com/keir_starmer/status/1955526701813018743
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