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Plaid Cymru prove to be the big cheese in Caerphilly – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 12,751
edited October 24 in General
Plaid Cymru prove to be the big cheese in Caerphilly – politicalbetting.com

Caerphilly, Senedd constituency by-election result:PC: 47.4% (+19.0)REF: 36.0% (+34.2)LAB: 11.0% (-34.9)CON: 2.0% (-15.3)GRN: 1.5% (+1.5)LDEM: 1.5% (-1.2)GWL: 0.3% (+0.3)UKIP: 0.2% (+0.2)Plaid Cymru GAIN from Labour.

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  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 17,139
    First like Plaid
  • RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 31,248
    edited October 24
    Peak Farage right here. Caerphilly = Hartlepools
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 68,555
    Thanks for the tip TSE.

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 68,555
    Andrew Sparrow (Guardian live results blog):

    The last time I was writing about Lindsay Whittle was more than 30 years ago. My first job in journalism was on the South Wales Echo, where I spent more than a year in the early 1990s in the Caerphilly office covering the Rhymney Valley. Whittle was leader of the Plaid group on the council at the time. Even then he was a veteran (he was first elected as a councillor in the 1970s) and he was a useful contact (friendly, approachable, decent, public-spirited), but not that useful, because Labour ran south Wales, and the idea that Plaid might ever replace them seemed fanciful.

  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195
    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 1,822
    eek said:

    I think the important thing here is

    Turnout increasing at a by-election from the previous general elections feels unprecedented.

    Which says

    1) Reform are attracting voters who don't usually vote (which means the vote could be very soft)
    2) In some places there are a lot of people willing to come out and vote to ensure Reform don't win.

    Reform good for democracy ? If you don't vote you get Reform.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 45,618
    I hope spread betting was available on a Caerphilly by-election?
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    Rather a shame, though, that there's unlikely to be any interest from that present majority to address the issues that motivate others to become Reform voters.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 68,555
    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

  • eekeek Posts: 31,604
    edited October 24

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    But as I pointed out earlier it's easy in a by-election to see who you need to vote for to defeat Reform - that's not so easy in a General Election where you won't have local polling..
  • boulayboulay Posts: 7,706

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 63,039
    eek said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    But as I pointed out earlier it's easy in a by-election to see who you need to vote for to defeat Reform - that's not so easy in a General Election where you won't have local polling..
    It'll be interesting to see if there's even a vague electoral pact between the Lib Dems and others.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 27,363
    Well tipped @TheScreamingEagles - I'm not sure I agree with this bit:

    "There are a few reasons why I still think Labour have a chance of winning the next general election is because of that, people will coalesce around who is best placed to defeat Reform."

    Labour are in government. That's a big problem. If support could coalesce around someone else (The Greens? The Lib Dems?), then that might be more plausible.

    But in Scotland and Wales, Reform will clearly have an uphill task.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,913
    edited October 24
    AnneJGP said:

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    Rather a shame, though, that there's unlikely to be any interest from that present majority to address the issues that motivate others to become Reform voters.
    Also rather amusing that Lefties, whose politicians do little but lie (see e.g. the current government) and sow division and resentment, get annoyed when they think Reform is beating them at their own game.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 17,139
    AnneJGP said:

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    Rather a shame, though, that there's unlikely to be any interest from that present majority to address the issues that motivate others to become Reform voters.
    I don't think that is right at all. Labour is absolutely focused on fixing the asylum system so that those without a valid claim can be deported quickly, it is focused on cutting the huge backlog it inherited in the NHS, it is focused on housebuilding to deal with the massive housing shortage it inherited... but all of these things take time and so we will only see the results in coming years. To deal with the country's problems we need competence and steady progress, not populist slogans, scaremongering and scapegoating.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195

    AnneJGP said:

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    Rather a shame, though, that there's unlikely to be any interest from that present majority to address the issues that motivate others to become Reform voters.
    I don't think that is right at all. Labour is absolutely focused on fixing the asylum system so that those without a valid claim can be deported quickly, it is focused on cutting the huge backlog it inherited in the NHS, it is focused on housebuilding to deal with the massive housing shortage it inherited... but all of these things take time and so we will only see the results in coming years. To deal with the country's problems we need competence and steady progress, not populist slogans, scaremongering and scapegoating.
    We do, but sadly competence isn't something I've associated with this government so far in its short service.
  • Not even remotely close in the end.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 124,459
    edited October 24
    tlg86 said:

    Well tipped @TheScreamingEagles - I'm not sure I agree with this bit:

    "There are a few reasons why I still think Labour have a chance of winning the next general election is because of that, people will coalesce around who is best placed to defeat Reform."

    Labour are in government. That's a big problem. If support could coalesce around someone else (The Greens? The Lib Dems?), then that might be more plausible.

    But in Scotland and Wales, Reform will clearly have an uphill task.

    I am assuming Labour display a bit of competence between now and 2029 which might be a heroic assumption.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 45,618
    I read on twitter that Caerphilly voted 57% for Brexit. Perhaps voters really have moved on.
  • boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    What would be the point in voting ToryReform to stop ReformTory? I am horrified about a racist party getting in who wants to deport brown taxpayers. So why would I vote Tory who want to deport brown taxpayers?
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    Brexit is the perfect example, of course, of why it is essential not to let right wing populists win.
    I'd rephrase that somewhat. Brexit is the perfect example of why it is essential to deal properly with the concerns that drive people into the right wing populist camp before those people get there.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488
    tlg86 said:

    Well tipped @TheScreamingEagles - I'm not sure I agree with this bit:

    "There are a few reasons why I still think Labour have a chance of winning the next general election is because of that, people will coalesce around who is best placed to defeat Reform."

    Labour are in government. That's a big problem. If support could coalesce around someone else (The Greens? The Lib Dems?), then that might be more plausible.

    But in Scotland and Wales, Reform will clearly have an uphill task.

    Reform also have the advantage of another 3 years of US billionaire funded social media campaigns, not to mention the Tory leadership continually promoting the very issues that boost Reform and hurt not just Labour but also the Tories.

    If Labour sort out the boats (to a significant decline in numbers and end to hotels) and the economy is ok or better they win, otherwise they don't imo.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 68,555

    I read on twitter that Caerphilly voted 57% for Brexit. Perhaps voters really have moved on.

    Many of them are dead.
  • More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    No way should people who are here lawfully be deported. If government thinks it was a mistake to let certain people in, we have to deal with the problem created some other way.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,135
    Some good holds and gains from the LibDems in last night's local by-elections
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488
    AnneJGP said:

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    No way should people who are here lawfully be deported. If government thinks it was a mistake to let certain people in, we have to deal with the problem created some other way.
    I know it is considered revolutionary but perhaps we could actually build a few houses rather than just create plans to build houses that we never actually build?
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 20,713

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    I think that's wrong in one respect. The next election is going to be more about turnout than tactical voting.

    If you look at how the opinion poll for this by-election was wrong, it wasn't that the Labour vote was squeezed to oblivion by tactical voting. It was that the combined Left vote was higher and the combined Right vote was lower.

    The problem with tactical voting is that, in a lot of places, it will look like the obvious anti-Reform tactical vote will be for Labour - and people really don't want to vote for Labour.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    What would be the point in voting ToryReform to stop ReformTory? I am horrified about a racist party getting in who wants to deport brown taxpayers. So why would I vote Tory who want to deport brown taxpayers?
    To be fair to the Tories they will let some of the brown people stay whilst they are paying tax. They only get deported if they start drawing on their pension.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 17,139
    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    Brexit is the perfect example, of course, of why it is essential not to let right wing populists win.
    I'd rephrase that somewhat. Brexit is the perfect example of why it is essential to deal properly with the concerns that drive people into the right wing populist camp before those people get there.
    I don't disagree with that at all.
  • eekeek Posts: 31,604

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    But where else will the estate agent / solicitor pocket £45 profit from a £50 purchase.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 40,653
    @WillHayCardiff

    Nigel Farage was everywhere in Caerphilly today.

    He now appears to have vanished.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    Rather a shame, though, that there's unlikely to be any interest from that present majority to address the issues that motivate others to become Reform voters.
    I don't think that is right at all. Labour is absolutely focused on fixing the asylum system so that those without a valid claim can be deported quickly, it is focused on cutting the huge backlog it inherited in the NHS, it is focused on housebuilding to deal with the massive housing shortage it inherited... but all of these things take time and so we will only see the results in coming years. To deal with the country's problems we need competence and steady progress, not populist slogans, scaremongering and scapegoating.
    We do, but sadly competence isn't something I've associated with this government so far in its short service.
    They have already started to reduce the NHS waiting list (slowly) after it rose from 2mn to 8mn under the Tories. Money is tight and the machinery of government has atrophied in recent decades so I don't expect spectacular improvements, but behind the scenes this government has started the slow process of turning things around, IMHO.
    They have and it is an improvement on Sunak, Truss and Johnson sure. But they are way too timid, unambitious and lacking in ideas on delivery.

    And just as bad as Sunak and Truss, and far worse than Johnson in selling what they are doing to the voting public.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 17,139

    I read on twitter that Caerphilly voted 57% for Brexit. Perhaps voters really have moved on.

    Many of them are dead.
    I'm sorry but the old Brexit coalition can't come to the phone right now.
    Why?
    Oh, because it's dead.

    (With apologies to Taylor Swift).
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 20,323

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 40,653
    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    Brexit is the perfect example, of course, of why it is essential not to let right wing populists win.
    I'd rephrase that somewhat. Brexit is the perfect example of why it is essential to deal properly with the concerns that drive people into the right wing populist camp before those people get there.
    The difficulty with that statement though is that the concerns that drove people into the populist camp were entirely confected and the solution 'worse' than the problem as far as they are concerned

    Brexit was a temper tantrum by emotional toddlers who yearned for an imagined past

    It's not a perfect anything
  • boulayboulay Posts: 7,706

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    I have faith that mad ideas like that will be binned before the election.
  • ManOfGwentManOfGwent Posts: 251
    Plaid should be kicking themselves that they have signed up to get rid of the FPTP element of the Assembly electoral system. No one will be able to dominate Welsh elections again in the way Labour have, or the SNP does in Scotland. May's outcome will be a sloppy mess.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488
    edited October 24

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    Might the estate agent/solicitor continue to ask for and charge for ID to prove existing address?
  • eekeek Posts: 31,604
    edited October 24

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    It’s me - national firms centralize identification tasks and have good reasons not to trust locals. Hence if you don’t have a passport it’s impossible for some people to get work at larger firms because the checks are based on an automated check that requires a passport

    No passport and they just move on to the first candidate who can be quickly validated
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,287
    edited October 24
    It’s way too early to declare peak Reform IMHO.

    If they attracted a result like that from nowhere in a by election, they’d still pick up tons of seats nationally in a GE.

    What it might show is a nascent “anti Reform” vote that some have theorised might appear , which will make it much harder to obtain a majority.

    This result is still a good result for them, but shows they are not invincible. And maybe, just maybe, some of our other parties actually need to start talking about sensible policies to ease concerns and bring us back together, rather than trying to ape Farage at every turn.



  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488
    boulay said:

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    I have faith that mad ideas like that will be binned before the election.
    But what are voters supposed to believe? Lam is talked seriously as a future leader of the party and Jenrick is the favourite to that role.

    If they are the Tory leaders in cabinet come 2035 and they are looking for a scapegoat, how are Brits born overseas expected to feel comfortable under them?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 40,653
    @akmaciver

    By 2030, if polls are correct:

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿Scottish nationalists will run Holyrood
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿Welsh nationalists will run the Senedd
    🇮🇪Irish nationalists will run Stormont
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿English nationalists will run Westminster

    🇬🇧People who believe in the UK need to reimagine it.

    https://x.com/akmaciver/status/1981626874447966357
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 20,323
    Selebian said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    As with Brexit, the thing - I think - is to actually address the reasons large groups of people are unhappy with the existing parties.

    Leaving the EU and whatever Reform claim to stand for are symptoms of more general discontent and could be addressed in other ways that actually solve some of the problems.
    I think it was Lots Ashcroft who pointed out that a decisive chunk of the reason that the referendum went the way it did was the slice of voters who parsed the question as "are you happy with how things are?"

    That was a decade ago, and we're all collectively more narked now than then. Question is whether there is a good idea that hasn't been tried that will work, or whether there are only bad ideas that have been tried and failed even more than this is failing.

    And at least some of the complaints, such as "taxes are too high and we don't get enough from the government" are pulling in opposite directions.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 15,470
    IanB2 said:

    Some good holds and gains from the LibDems in last night's local by-elections

    Yes, another week of solid results - perhaps the most interesting of all the local contests, in Paulsgrove (Portsmouth), counts this morning.

    As for Caerphilly - a solid win for Plaid and, let's be fair, a decent result for Reform. Everyone else was frankly squeezed out of it with incredibly poor results for the Greens, Conservatives and LDs and catastrophic for Labour in a former heartland.

    I disagree with Tice and Farage (as I do on many things) - "two party politics" isn't dead, well, it is, if you assume that it's a monolithic conflict everywhere between Labour and Conservative.

    There are all manner of one, two and three party (and possibly even four and five) party conflicts evolving across England, Scotland and Wales to mirror what has been happening in Northern Ireland for some time.

    A number of these new conflicts don't include Labour or the Conservatives. Fenland, for example, a solid Conservative hold in what's probably the heart of their new heartland, is Conservative vs Reform.

    IF there's a national overview involving Reform, it won't play out in seats like East Ham where Reform could conceivably come fourth at best. For us, it will either be Labour vs Newham Independents vs Green.

    What we are seeing is the end of national political movements - we now have a patchwork of regional or economic-based parties conflicting in different areas of England where East Ham and Fenland are a million miles apart on so many levels. Trying to read the runes of all that is going to be a challenge.
  • numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 8,287

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Am I going mad, or did Labour expressly say when they announced this terrible policy that it only applied to right to work?
  • More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
  • One trusts this is the last of the cheese jokes.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195
    Scott_xP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    Brexit is the perfect example, of course, of why it is essential not to let right wing populists win.
    I'd rephrase that somewhat. Brexit is the perfect example of why it is essential to deal properly with the concerns that drive people into the right wing populist camp before those people get there.
    The difficulty with that statement though is that the concerns that drove people into the populist camp were entirely confected and the solution 'worse' than the problem as far as they are concerned

    Brexit was a temper tantrum by emotional toddlers who yearned for an imagined past

    It's not a perfect anything
    The concern that democratic consent was often promised and always avoided was not confected.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 27,363

    One trusts this is the last of the cheese jokes.

    They're really starting to grate.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488

    One trusts this is the last of the cheese jokes.

    Cheese jokes - they won't happen here.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 11,455

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    So much easier to hate than to come up with a positive reason to vote for your side
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Am I going mad, or did Labour expressly say when they announced this terrible policy that it only applied to right to work?
    AIUI It will be mandatory for right to work but can be used for other things voluntarily.

    Although will should be probably be replaced by would because I doubt they will get it through the Commons.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 82,480

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    Tactical voting and turnout.
    What every other party except for Reform has failed to do is communicate a single, simple and persuasive national message.

    Reform's is pretty vile for a large slice of the electorate (and the rest of their policies are contradictory nonsense) but it does tick those boxes.
    Whichever party can do that with something more civilised, backed with a coherent policy offering, will reap large dividends.
  • ManOfGwentManOfGwent Posts: 251
    Scott_xP said:

    @akmaciver

    By 2030, if polls are correct:

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿Scottish nationalists will run Holyrood
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿Welsh nationalists will run the Senedd
    🇮🇪Irish nationalists will run Stormont
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿English nationalists will run Westminster

    🇬🇧People who believe in the UK need to reimagine it.

    https://x.com/akmaciver/status/1981626874447966357

    Devolution looking like quite a slippery, slippery slope. Who'd have thunk it.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 63,039

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Am I going mad, or did Labour expressly say when they announced this terrible policy that it only applied to right to work?
    AIUI It will be mandatory for right to work but can be used for other things voluntarily.

    Although will should be probably be replaced by would because I doubt they will get it through the Commons.
    Mr. Above, then it'll be normalised for other stuff and the scope will just increase and increase.

    I don't want this ID bullshit anyway. And we recently just barely avoided a far left government led by Corbyn, and currently have Reform leading the polls, and I like even less the idea of this sort of system in the hands of a Corbyn or Farage.
  • eek said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    But as I pointed out earlier it's easy in a by-election to see who you need to vote for to defeat Reform - that's not so easy in a General Election where you won't have local polling..
    The LDs seem to do a good job in this respect at GE. Here in hitherto Tory Tewkesbury the Labour vote collapsed at the last GE and the Yellow Peril romped home by 6,000.

    The voters plainly got the message.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 11,455

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    I’m not sure Windrush is entirely analogous though. Wasn’t that a case of the state screwing up and deporting people who had the right to remain but didn’t have the paperwork?

    If the state chooses to retrospectively withdraw/put additional conditions on the right to remain indefinitely, then that is tough on the individuals concerned but legitimate. Of course this doesn’t mean ICE breaking down their doors the next morning - people would rightly revolt against that - but giving them 6-12 months to leave in an orderly fashion.
  • eekeek Posts: 31,604

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
    They have passports but everyone plunging a house needs AML identity checks and they are say £x to perform. But the agency can charge whatever they can get away with for the checks so say charge £x0 instead.

    That is the point Starmer is getting out with an OD card the agency wouldn’t be able to charge £x0 to confirm you are Fred, you would have an ID card that confirmed the answer immediately.

    Now it’s a niche issue but it’s an easy to explain one
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195
    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    It’s me - national firms centralize identification tasks and have good reasons not to trust locals. Hence if you don’t have a passport it’s impossible for some people to get work at larger firms because the checks are based on an automated check that requires a passport

    No passport and they just move on to the first candidate who can be quickly validated
    Even in lesser transactions it's more difficult than 50 years ago to prove who you are and where you live. The near-demise of paper bills etc has seen to that.

    In my view the digital ID thing is a decision for the younger people who will be affected throughout their lives. For me, only a few years.
  • derekderek Posts: 5
    I agree I think this actually speaks well for labour in the uk the greens will attract a lot of unhappy voters especially asthey are being endorsed by ms vorderman thesupposedqueen of tactical voting I availedmyself of all the 2 to 1 available the next 4 years may throw up some easy money making opportunities certainly opposing reform
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 20,323

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    So much easier to hate than to come up with a positive reason to vote for your side
    True across the board. There have been some brilliant bits of knocking copy by the Conservatives. And I have to admire the Lib Dem who came up with "all this... and they still expect you to vote for them?" as the Good Morning leaflet on 22 November 1990. (Look it up.)

    Elections have always had at least as much "vote against" as "vote for" about them. The problem is going to be putting together a government with multiple blocks who dislike each other.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 1,762
    AnneJGP said:

    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    It’s me - national firms centralize identification tasks and have good reasons not to trust locals. Hence if you don’t have a passport it’s impossible for some people to get work at larger firms because the checks are based on an automated check that requires a passport

    No passport and they just move on to the first candidate who can be quickly validated
    Even in lesser transactions it's more difficult than 50 years ago to prove who you are and where you live. The near-demise of paper bills etc has seen to that.

    In my view the digital ID thing is a decision for the younger people who will be affected throughout their lives. For me, only a few years.
    If only people had taken the same attitude to Brexit
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    I’m not sure Windrush is entirely analogous though. Wasn’t that a case of the state screwing up and deporting people who had the right to remain but didn’t have the paperwork?

    If the state chooses to retrospectively withdraw/put additional conditions on the right to remain indefinitely, then that is tough on the individuals concerned but legitimate. Of course this doesn’t mean ICE breaking down their doors the next morning - people would rightly revolt against that - but giving them 6-12 months to leave in an orderly fashion.
    It only sounds legitimate to me in the case of a war and 'enemy aliens'. People build lives.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 63,039
    AnneJGP said:

    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    It’s me - national firms centralize identification tasks and have good reasons not to trust locals. Hence if you don’t have a passport it’s impossible for some people to get work at larger firms because the checks are based on an automated check that requires a passport

    No passport and they just move on to the first candidate who can be quickly validated
    Even in lesser transactions it's more difficult than 50 years ago to prove who you are and where you live. The near-demise of paper bills etc has seen to that.

    In my view the digital ID thing is a decision for the younger people who will be affected throughout their lives. For me, only a few years.
    Younger people may be affected longer but they also have no experience of a pre-internet world which means they have no personal comparison between the upsides and downsides of physical and digital processes.

    I fear the endless novelty value and infatuation with new tech is leading to gullible acceptance of new concepts that deserve more scrutiny, and to exchanging privacy and freedom for the sake of speed and convenience. Humbug!
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 4,195
    Have a good day, everyone.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Am I going mad, or did Labour expressly say when they announced this terrible policy that it only applied to right to work?
    AIUI It will be mandatory for right to work but can be used for other things voluntarily.

    Although will should be probably be replaced by would because I doubt they will get it through the Commons.
    Mr. Above, then it'll be normalised for other stuff and the scope will just increase and increase.

    I don't want this ID bullshit anyway. And we recently just barely avoided a far left government led by Corbyn, and currently have Reform leading the polls, and I like even less the idea of this sort of system in the hands of a Corbyn or Farage.
    Perhaps as a sop to Jenrick and Lam we can also add "deportable" as an extra field on the cards?
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 1,762
    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
    They have passports but everyone plunging a house needs AML identity checks and they are say £x to perform. But the agency can charge whatever they can get away with for the checks so say charge £x0 instead.

    That is the point Starmer is getting out with an OD card the agency wouldn’t be able to charge £x0 to confirm you are Fred, you would have an ID card that confirmed the answer immediately.

    Now it’s a niche issue but it’s an easy to explain one
    You get asked to prove your ID to rent as well
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488
    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
    They have passports but everyone plunging a house needs AML identity checks and they are say £x to perform. But the agency can charge whatever they can get away with for the checks so say charge £x0 instead.

    That is the point Starmer is getting out with an OD card the agency wouldn’t be able to charge £x0 to confirm you are Fred, you would have an ID card that confirmed the answer immediately.

    Now it’s a niche issue but it’s an easy to explain one
    Won't they still want proof of address for AML? And address explicitly isn't included on the new ID?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 40,653
    AnneJGP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    Brexit is the perfect example, of course, of why it is essential not to let right wing populists win.
    I'd rephrase that somewhat. Brexit is the perfect example of why it is essential to deal properly with the concerns that drive people into the right wing populist camp before those people get there.
    The difficulty with that statement though is that the concerns that drove people into the populist camp were entirely confected and the solution 'worse' than the problem as far as they are concerned

    Brexit was a temper tantrum by emotional toddlers who yearned for an imagined past

    It's not a perfect anything
    The concern that democratic consent was often promised and always avoided was not confected.
    Do voters feel more empowered now we no longer have any say in EU laws that increasingly impact them?

    No

    It was, is and will forever remain, a bullshit argument.

    Before Brexit we could vote Dan Hannan out of office. Now he makes our laws for life.

    Where is my democratic consent for that?
  • eekeek Posts: 31,604
    Dopermean said:

    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
    They have passports but everyone plunging a house needs AML identity checks and they are say £x to perform. But the agency can charge whatever they can get away with for the checks so say charge £x0 instead.

    That is the point Starmer is getting out with an OD card the agency wouldn’t be able to charge £x0 to confirm you are Fred, you would have an ID card that confirmed the answer immediately.

    Now it’s a niche issue but it’s an easy to explain one
    You get asked to prove your ID to rent as well
    Yep - but I think fees for those checks have been legislated away - which is why I didn’t mention it
  • It’s way too early to declare peak Reform IMHO.

    If they attracted a result like that from nowhere in a by election, they’d still pick up tons of seats nationally in a GE.

    What it might show is a nascent “anti Reform” vote that some have theorised might appear , which will make it much harder to obtain a majority.

    This result is still a good result for them, but shows they are not invincible. And maybe, just maybe, some of our other parties actually need to start talking about sensible policies to ease concerns and bring us back together, rather than trying to ape Farage at every turn.

    I’m on the leading edge of this one. Point is that we’re not in a GE tomorrow so there is plenty of time for this to develop.

    My take is this: people are waking up to how nasty ReformTory are and want to stop them.

    For the actual Tories that process is simple. Sack Badenoch, don’t elect Jenrick or Lam. Remember what conservative actually means.

    For Reform? Their entire grift is based on weaponising fear and division to get the infrequent voters out. Let’s assume people coalesce around not being racist and those Reform leads start wilting. The never vote group go back to type and disappear. That leaves Reform beached and fighting each other.

    I’m not saying they will immediately disappear.
  • eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
    They have passports but everyone plunging a house needs AML identity checks and they are say £x to perform. But the agency can charge whatever they can get away with for the checks so say charge £x0 instead.

    That is the point Starmer is getting out with an OD card the agency wouldn’t be able to charge £x0 to confirm you are Fred, you would have an ID card that confirmed the answer immediately.

    Now it’s a niche issue but it’s an easy to explain one
    AML checks would presumably still need to be done, even if you have a digital ID.

    And if they don't, that sounds more concerning not less.

    Digital ID that bypasses all security checks, in the hands of a fraudster, would be a tremendous tool to commit identity theft and financial crimes.

    The idea that a digital ID card would be secure and immune from theft or fraud is for the birds.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 21,270
    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    I think they would in a by-election but probably not in a general. Being in a constituency which has voted Reform would be pretty shameful. Having said that let's see how far Katie Lam moves the dial
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 56,365
    Plaid Cymru easily overwhelm the Reform surge!

    Labour come a poor third!

    Broken, sleazy Tories, LibDems, and Greens lose their deposits :lol:
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 7,394

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Am I going mad, or did Labour expressly say when they announced this terrible policy that it only applied to right to work?
    AIUI It will be mandatory for right to work but can be used for other things voluntarily.

    Although will should be probably be replaced by would because I doubt they will get it through the Commons.
    Mr. Above, then it'll be normalised for other stuff and the scope will just increase and increase.

    I don't want this ID bullshit anyway. And we recently just barely avoided a far left government led by Corbyn, and currently have Reform leading the polls, and I like even less the idea of this sort of system in the hands of a Corbyn or Farage.
    In which case, we need to change the law so that anyone can open a bank account if they have money to put in it, or buy a house if they have the money to buy it.

    Although anyone lending you money will presumably still want to know who you are.
  • Roger said:

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    I think they would in a by-election but probably not in a general. Being in a constituency which has voted Reform would be pretty shameful. Having said that let's see how far Katie Lam moves the dial
    Which party was elected in your constituency?
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 63,039
    Scott_xP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Scott_xP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Seems to me there's a strong echo here of the exercise we went through which ultimately led to Brexit. No worries, chaps, we can block out all the concerns that these stupid people are expressing.

    Until it was too late.
    Brexit is the perfect example, of course, of why it is essential not to let right wing populists win.
    I'd rephrase that somewhat. Brexit is the perfect example of why it is essential to deal properly with the concerns that drive people into the right wing populist camp before those people get there.
    The difficulty with that statement though is that the concerns that drove people into the populist camp were entirely confected and the solution 'worse' than the problem as far as they are concerned

    Brexit was a temper tantrum by emotional toddlers who yearned for an imagined past

    It's not a perfect anything
    The concern that democratic consent was often promised and always avoided was not confected.
    Do voters feel more empowered now we no longer have any say in EU laws that increasingly impact them?

    No

    It was, is and will forever remain, a bullshit argument.

    Before Brexit we could vote Dan Hannan out of office. Now he makes our laws for life.

    Where is my democratic consent for that?
    We could also vote for parties that promised a referendum on Lisbon, and did so, and they reneged. If that referendum had been held we'd all be in a better position, but Labour decided that asking the electorate as promised would just be wrong. It was a major reason why the vote ended up being Leave or Remain and, for me, why my knife-edge vote went to Leave. I didn't trust politicians to ever give us the chance to vote again if things continued to go down the path of integration.

    Turns out lying to the electorate diminishes trust and increases grievance. Not an EU flaw, a UK pro-EU political flaw.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 46,103
    edited October 24

    Plaid Cymru easily overwhelm the Reform surge!

    Labour come a poor third!

    Broken, sleazy Tories, LibDems, and Greens lose their deposits :lol:

    Bugger third - it's second equal in Scotland, with Reform, in the mid teens, for Holyrood.

    https://www.thenational.scot/news/25567796.snp-huge-lead-holyrood-elections-new-poll-finds/?ref=ed_direct

    Edit: and Tories below the Greens.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 7,706

    boulay said:

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    I have faith that mad ideas like that will be binned before the election.
    But what are voters supposed to believe? Lam is talked seriously as a future leader of the party and Jenrick is the favourite to that role.

    If they are the Tory leaders in cabinet come 2035 and they are looking for a scapegoat, how are Brits born overseas expected to feel comfortable under them?
    How about voters see what’s on offer when it comes to the election - if Jenrick and Lam are in charge, vote accordingly, if they aren’t then again, vote accordingly. If Ke I is in charge and wins the election then Jenrick and co are likely to have been sidelined by then.

    Otherwise it’s exactly the same as voting for any party as you have no idea how the fortunes of the party might change between elections.

    Are you worried that if Starmer got dumped and through the middle came some extreme left or Corbyn type who large swathes of Labour voters wouldn’t have voted for?

    Did you warn of this possibility before the last election or is it only Tories who can go rogue?
  • More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Am I going mad, or did Labour expressly say when they announced this terrible policy that it only applied to right to work?
    AIUI It will be mandatory for right to work but can be used for other things voluntarily.

    Although will should be probably be replaced by would because I doubt they will get it through the Commons.
    Mr. Above, then it'll be normalised for other stuff and the scope will just increase and increase.

    I don't want this ID bullshit anyway. And we recently just barely avoided a far left government led by Corbyn, and currently have Reform leading the polls, and I like even less the idea of this sort of system in the hands of a Corbyn or Farage.
    In which case, we need to change the law so that anyone can open a bank account if they have money to put in it, or buy a house if they have the money to buy it.

    Although anyone lending you money will presumably still want to know who you are.
    Universal service obligations already exist for many sectors.

    Less intrusive to do that, than to install an ID system.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 40,653

    Turns out lying to the electorate diminishes trust and increases grievance. Not an EU flaw, a UK pro-EU political flaw.

    Nobody told more lies to the electorate than Brexit BoZo and Nigel Fucking Farage
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 7,394

    The next general election is going to be all about tactical voting. Britons are very good at tactical voting and centre-left Britons are especially good at it. One thing that I am a little more sure about today is that there is a majority of us who really hate Reform and its dishonest and divisive approach to politics, and I think that this majority may be more effective than people expect at locking Reform out of power.

    So much easier to hate than to come up with a positive reason to vote for your side
    The voter is sovereign and can vote how he pleases. It is as legitimate to vote against a party as it is for one, if that is what is important to you. I also don't have "a side" so if a party I normally vote for doesn't give me good reasons to do so, I will vote for someone else.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 35,350
    Roger said:

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    I think they would in a by-election but probably not in a general. Being in a constituency which has voted Reform would be pretty shameful. Having said that let's see how far Katie Lam moves the dial
    It is not just Katie Lam and Honest Bob. Kemi has herself promoted the idea of ICE (her term not mine) style agents policing illegal immigration. Neither has Kemi censured Katie Lam. They are all singing from the same hymn sheet.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 25,488
    edited October 24
    boulay said:

    boulay said:

    boulay said:

    AnneJGP said:

    Well done to Plaid.

    But 0% to 36% in one election cycle is pretty impressive too. Or should that be pretty worrying?

    Good morning, everybody.

    Adonis has told Guardian he thinks it shows how a group of voters will get behind whoever seems strongest/likeliest at the time to block Reform.

    Would be interesting to see if Labour and Lib Dem supporters would vote Tory if the Tories are the best chance to stop Reform or is that going too far? Has there been any polling on this?
    There has been some private polling which says yes but there's a huge caveat, the focus groups have picked up Robert Jenrick's and Katie Lam's recent comments and those tactical voters have said no now as they see nothing that distinguishes the Tories from Reform.

    The thought of deporting people who are here lawfully is particularly repugnant to voters, see the Windrush scandal.
    I have faith that mad ideas like that will be binned before the election.
    But what are voters supposed to believe? Lam is talked seriously as a future leader of the party and Jenrick is the favourite to that role.

    If they are the Tory leaders in cabinet come 2035 and they are looking for a scapegoat, how are Brits born overseas expected to feel comfortable under them?
    How about voters see what’s on offer when it comes to the election - if Jenrick and Lam are in charge, vote accordingly, if they aren’t then again, vote accordingly. If Ke I is in charge and wins the election then Jenrick and co are likely to have been sidelined by then.

    Otherwise it’s exactly the same as voting for any party as you have no idea how the fortunes of the party might change between elections.

    Are you worried that if Starmer got dumped and through the middle came some extreme left or Corbyn type who large swathes of Labour voters wouldn’t have voted for?

    Did you warn of this possibility before the last election or is it only Tories who can go rogue?
    Corbyn et al were expelled. If Badenoch expels Jenrick and Lam I shall consider voting Tory again.

    ps Judging parties on their manifestos is naive to the point of ridiculous. Of course I won't do that.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 33,012

    Peak Farage right here. Caerphilly = Hartlepools

    It's higher than Reform's national poll rating, and an increase of 30 something percentage points.

    There's something for everyone to take from this - except Labour and the Tories really.

    Reform's job is now to portay Plaid as part of the uniparty and continuity Labour, and that should not be too hard a task, now that Plaid are looking to be a repository for tactical Labour and general left-wing votes, so will actively avoid radical positions.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 35,350
    Scott_xP said:

    Turns out lying to the electorate diminishes trust and increases grievance. Not an EU flaw, a UK pro-EU political flaw.

    Nobody told more lies to the electorate than Brexit BoZo and Nigel Fucking Farage
    Perhaps you could put that on the side of a bus.
  • eek said:

    Dopermean said:

    eek said:

    More StaLLMer.. I can't wait to get the POWER he's so generously granting us

    Keir Starmer
    @Keir_Starmer
    ·
    21m
    I recently spoke with someone buying a house with her partner.

    She told me that she had to pay just to verify who she was.

    With digital ID that could be done in seconds and wipe out the costs.

    Digital ID will save you time and money.

    https://x.com/Keir_Starmer/status/1981618379850228183

    Thing is, Boring Old Starmer is right, but he's not really talking to you this time.

    When you are starting out in life, with new jobs/houses/financial arrangements, you have to prove your identity a lot. And at the moment, doing so involves various somewhat leaky ways that are a PITA.

    If you are established, those issues largely melt away; we saw that with voter ID. And someone here (eek?) who points out that it's easier for companies to take on foreigners than young locals, because they have ID papers in place.
    How many people without passports or driving licences buy houses?

    Pinnokeir's example is horseshit
    They have passports but everyone plunging a house needs AML identity checks and they are say £x to perform. But the agency can charge whatever they can get away with for the checks so say charge £x0 instead.

    That is the point Starmer is getting out with an OD card the agency wouldn’t be able to charge £x0 to confirm you are Fred, you would have an ID card that confirmed the answer immediately.

    Now it’s a niche issue but it’s an easy to explain one
    You get asked to prove your ID to rent as well
    Yep - but I think fees for those checks have been legislated away - which is why I didn’t mention it
    There are times when I think ID checks should be in place for posters on PB.

    No doubt Robert would be happy to provide a checking service....for a modest fee.
  • DopermeanDopermean Posts: 1,762
    Sorry if posted already but a Welsh journalist take on the result, sad to read in the closing paragraph that they have faced numerous threats of violence for being a reporter.

    https://willhaywardwales.substack.com/p/plaid-smash-reform-to-win-in-caerphilly
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 45,618
    Carnyx said:

    Plaid Cymru easily overwhelm the Reform surge!

    Labour come a poor third!

    Broken, sleazy Tories, LibDems, and Greens lose their deposits :lol:

    Bugger third - it's second equal in Scotland, with Reform, in the mid teens, for Holyrood.

    https://www.thenational.scot/news/25567796.snp-huge-lead-holyrood-elections-new-poll-finds/?ref=ed_direct

    Edit: and Tories below the Greens.
    Bloody pro-indy media!
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