My 100/1 tip on Ed Miliband is looking good – politicalbetting.com
My 100/1 tip on Ed Miliband is looking good – politicalbetting.com
You can back Ed Miliband as next PM at 21s on Betfair and 11.5s as next Labour leader, you can get 25/1 and 50/1 respectively at Ladbrokes, I think both those prices at Ladbrokes represent an excellent opportunity for profit.
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/articles/cwy9dlqxx2ro
Buying tickets for West Ham on the black market...I bet the touts have 1000s of those things that they can't give away.
Miliband has a lot of support in Labour but not sure about the wider public
He is also a supporter of Lucy Powell
He's yesterday's man though, he needs to let it go.
Independence was not much of a choice for many parents previously, of course. My poor mum certainly couldn't keep an eye on 4 kids by herself whilst working full time. Had some upsides and some downsides.
Have to say, it's not clear why there's all the Millihate. He does seem to be doing the right sort of things with reasonable oomph.
He lost in 2015 because he didn't look or aound like a PM, and I'm not convinced he does now. Would that change if he were PM? A bit, surely, but enough?
I think Ed Miliband has mellowed and matured a bit over the last decade, becoming more relaxed and comfortable being himself. A bit like the way Portillo and Balls have done, but Miliband has managed it while remaining in Parliament.
Labour could do a lot worse, though I think they could do better too.
Laying non-Labour MPs for next PM seems free money to me. No way is Labour going into the next GE with Starmer leading. Most likely gone next summer I think.
That's EdM for you.
I see ladbrokes now have a 'defection watch' with odds on a list of MPs likely to cross the floor. Mainly Tories but an odd Lab MP too
The odds on next PM are only just starting to get more realistic. As TSE says, Lads have EdM at 25/1, same odds as Rupert Lowe(!) With Boris Johnson coming in at 28/1
I think Miliband has bade his time well and can be considered a serious figure again, the bacon sandwich incident must be 11 or 12 years ago now, distant memory
Note that Phillipson is now 4/1 with Ladbrokes, which seems long for a 2 horse race
So in with a decent chance.
I very much doubt he's be able to win a GE though. He's a steady-the-ship candidate. If the ship hasn't already sunk by the time he gets the job.
https://x.com/senschumer/status/1968815321185227226?s=61&t=LYVEHh2mqFy1oUJAdCfe-Q
Meanwhile, Sir Ed Davey is bigging up the LibDems' prospects in Sheffield next May.
Whatever the opposite of bigging up is, that's what I'm doing for Labour in Bradford. All out elections, threats from left and right. Ouch.
https://www.ft.com/content/54bee7cc-b0b4-4acb-9776-9ad6d39f3400
No, its entering a new era of Goebbelsism. The parallels between the US and 1933 Germany are clear.
He's got the ideological entrenchment of Jeremy Corbyn and the competence of Chris Grayling.
He's managed to turn a sensible goal with wide public support- decarbonising our energy supply - into an expensive and increasingly unpopular shambles.
An anti-pragmatic ideologue.
Douglas Ross accuses SNP minister of assaulting him at parliament
Conservative MSP Douglas Ross has accused a Scottish government minister of physically assaulting him in parliament.
The former Tory leader claimed Parliamentary Business Minister Jamie Hepburn attacked him as he left the chamber on Wednesday, after the pair had clashed over the scheduling of a summit to discuss "out of control" seagulls.
Hepburn said he put his hand on Ross's shoulder and that he "used a few choice words I shouldn't have", adding: "That's it."
Police said they had advised Ross over the confrontation, though he had not made an official complaint.
Hepburn told reporters: "I will freely fess up to things I've done, but I will not apologise for things I've not done.
"I am clearly sorry I conducted myself in the fashion that I did and I recognise that I let myself down but that is the extent of it.
"Some of what has been suggested does not tally with the reality."
Hepburn declined to answer questions on whether he had breached the ministerial code or whether the first minister continued to have confidence in him.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgjey1xz21o
None of that would do his leadership chances much harm, though.
Labour need to do one very simple thing: throw a load of money into communities. Like tomorrow. Get councils pulling up weeds and filling potholes and opening pop-up shops to get trading back onto high streets and restoring all of the stuff that is crumbling to nothing. And pose people a very simple question - do you really want Reform to take all of this away?
I suspect Ed would be a poor choice to take on Farage though.
If the Ed movement has momentum (?), the odds of the Conservatives forming the next government would be interesting. I'm discounting a Reform government for the obvious reason that their foray into Local Government will expose how daft they are. So daft, they could give Ed a run for his money.
If it wasn't for hanging about before he jets off to California Sunak's entire political career would be over in 10 years, and Starmer had a similarly swift rise. He was even picked out as a leader immediately on becoming an MP, before he had a chance to show any political skills.
https://www.theregister.com/2025/09/18/russian_fakenews_network/
He eventually moved from broadcast to subscription services as they’re not regulated in the US.
A tidbit of over analysis of local by elections for you, the two results from Warwick last night - whilst i think there ars some minor differences in the wards between distrct and county, the results are both a very close match to May's county council results in Warwickshire, LDs took Leamington Clarendon in May but it was 1% difference at 30% like last night just the other way round and in May Greens won Kenilworth Park Hill 44-26 over the Tories versus 41-24 last night
Borrowing – the difference between total public sector spending and income – was £18.0 billion in August 2025; this was £3.5 billion more than in August 2024 and the highest August borrowing for five years.
Borrowing in the financial year to August 2025 was £83.8 billion; this was £16.2 billion more than in the same five-month period of 2024 and the second-highest April to August borrowing since monthly records began in 1993, after that of 2020.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/governmentpublicsectorandtaxes/publicsectorfinance/bulletins/publicsectorfinances/august2025
It's also fair to point out that Milliband has (unusually for a cabinet minister) long experience in his current portfolio, having similar responsibility under the last Labour government and for a time in opposition.
And is now making a hash of it.
Or are you thinking long term and going into the optician business as future generations ruin their eyesight staring at screens all day?
https://www.ft.com/content/706898a7-5b93-40cb-9c16-a8f90f88c0a3
"The number of hotels has more than halved since its peak under the last Conservative government. "
"Britannia hotels around the country have been fined repeatedly on public protection grounds, from food hygiene to asbestos breaches"
"Which? reported Britannia’s Docklands hotel for “horrendous” fire-safety breaches. Two months later the magazine’s representatives returned and found some aspects were worse"
If Leon really wants them closed down, he should be pursuing them on health and safety grounds.
Both my boys came out of the womb with their own strong personalities that are still recognisable decades later. Until you have kids you imagine them to be more malleable.
Hepburn apologised for using ‘industrious’ language. I assume he meant industrial, but I too would be industrious in calling Ross a ****** ********** little *****.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxJPLaUlDmI
Only to then realise the angry entertaining shouting had been about a classroom building programme in the east midlands.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wO-Eji4aow
I do agree that the steady reduction in perceived quality of life that all those little local cheeseparings have brought about is one of the drivers of discontent and of Reform. But you can't at this point call spending the money to fix this "simple".
He could say Hepburn was very inappropriate and a dick perhaps, but claim actual physical assault, well, that requires escalation and action to back it up.
I was a bit surprised that they were malleable at all.
But as both are now exemplary human beings, I can only conclude that they were.
Boris went the same way. Could have reworked proposals with his majority but just abandoned it.
Social care reform will be the same.
Today 25°C, tomorrow 21°C, rest of the week, 16°C
Regeneration of town centres requires turning them into something new. The old high street isn't coming back.
I don't think Labour will do anything positive because after 15 months in office they already look broken.
With all due respect to @kle4 his views are unlikely to impact the outcome - but they might make the price cheaper so you can get more on…
C) this is one of those occasions where swearing is entirely justified
Which usually ends up with a radical in charge at some point, with a clear mandate to make significant changes. It might be a Farage or a Corbyn, but could easily be someone more extreme if governments continue to just tread water and ignore significant issues affecting the electorate.
Problem is they raised the very worst possible tax to increase.
National Insurance is only payable by those actually working, or those actually creating jobs. Something we want to encourage, not discourage.
We heavily penalise paid employment by taxing it far, far more than unearned incomes, which is the polar opposite of what we should be doing - and Labour made that differential worse, with inevitable consequences.
By increasing taxes on productive employment, we've seen a slowdown in the economy, shock horror, which worsens the Budget.
We should be lowering and seeking to abolish National Insurance and equalising taxes between earned and unearned incomes, which would be Budget-friendly without trashing the economy.
Residents largely don't want the speed limits and cannot understand how this is a priority. Worse, councils have had to stop spending on other things to deliver this government project.
So how would Labour do it? Pull funding from whatever daft national strategy you like, and direct councils to go at it.
When areas look run down, the economy runs down. So tarting everything up and getting people to participate in their local community will drive economic growth.
There's a widespread but to my mind completely bizarre belief that his older brother had the right to be leader and it was somehow a betrayal to stand in an open contest.
Arthur Laffer wins again.