Just 23% of voters think Badenoch is doing a good job – politicalbetting.com
Just 23% of voters think Badenoch is doing a good job – politicalbetting.com
Just 23% of Britons think Kemi Badenoch has done a good job so far as Conservative leader, ahead of the first anniversary of her leadership election win this SundayGood job: 23%Bad job: 42%2024 Conservative votersGood job: 54%Bad job: 24%yougov.co.uk/politics/art…
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Good morning, everybody.
Good morning and thanks for the laugh.
..71% of Tory voters see the party as being in a weak state right now, but 61% of them feel that they'd be in this state no matter who was leader..
Unless someone makes a very strong case for change, and I doubt that's Jenrick, of heaven help us Lam (happy to be corrected by PB's Tories), then she'll quite possibly survive a disaster in the local educations.
The survival of the party is arguably on just as unstable footing as Badenoch's.
Main countries aren’t bothering. Hard to see what it can achieve aside from the regular demand for ‘climate reparations’.
We uncovered previously undisclosed details about an 18-month money laundering investigation into Jeffrey Epstein that took place alongside the 2007 federal sex crimes probe
https://x.com/JasonLeopold/status/1984245354410480089
Seems likely that Acosta (who let Epstein off with the plea bargain) lied to Congress when he denied knowledge of any financial investigation.
Think logically. What do you gain by jumping to a conclusion either way that will be wrong a significant percentage of the time, just wait a couple of days and live your own life.
Hard to see how it’s sustainable to get much beyond lunchtime without charging and naming the assailants.
This never seems to be the case now. I presume that at the higher levels (who will have a much better overall picture) this has now become absolutely verboten. Compare Lee Rigby to that story off a solider getting followed and stabbed up by an individual from what 18 months ago. I don't think anybody ever ran any substantial information on that.
What percentage of voters think Sir Useless is doing a good job?
I suppose there will be more security on trains now, as there are at airports post 9/11 (not comparing the two events)
I disagreed with that at the time because it felt like we were giving into the bots on twitter/Facebook - and it didn't stop thousands of feverish tweets about a race war anyway. Then came the pivot to "family man" a few hours later.
(It's also not implausible that the media team were at the pub last night and we're waiting for them to shake the hangover....)
The problem for Badenoch is that there is now a clear alternative on the right.
One can only hope that everyone’s okay, there’s various reports of up to a dozen people in hospital.
Suspect that BT Police will be a lot more visible on trains in the coming days and weeks, as will local armed police at major stations.
Controversially, it's hard to anyone how anyone else in the current Conservative Party would be doing any better at this time. Jenrick would have sold the party to Reform and Stride, for all this brave talk last week, isn't much known outside Devon.
Cleverly, who is clearly @HYUFD's favourite - swapping one Essex MP for another - is perhaps (or not) going to go for the London Mayoralty in 2028 and given Sadiq has apparently said he's going to run for a fourth term (reasoning, I presume, Labour are going to lose the 2029 election and he'll have more clout as London mayor than as an out-of-favour backbench opposition MP but given his record on political analysis, it probably means Labour will win the next GE easily), has an outside chance of victory.
Beyond that, the likes of Coutinho or Lam as leader would be analogous to Romulus Augustulus as Roman Emperor in the spring of 476AD with Nigel Farage playing the role of Odoacer.
I don't think Badenoch is doing too badly after a poor start. So much will depend on the May 2026 elections in Scotland, Wales, London and elsewhere. The elections this year were off the high water mark of 2021 so losses were expected.
In 2022, the projected national shares were Labour 35%, Conservatives 30%, LDs 19%, Greens 11%. The Conservatives lost 485 seats then and will be looking to minimise 2026 losses or to have those losses look insignificant next to those of Labour. There were 4,411 seats fought in 2022 against 4,249 up for grabs next May.
It’s tricky. I don’t know if Spain do that for all metro-style trains or if it’s just the long distance ones. Should we do that here? Perhaps.
You can't plan for every single possible scenario, but attacks of trains using knives have happened in a number of Europe countries on quite a few occasions.
So much will rest on whether Farage brings in Big Dogs from industry for his shadow cabinet or just makes Tice Chancellor in waiting.
It just goes to show how fickle and shallow much opinion is on this.
From colostomy bags.
But they'd better get that out today or the internet rumour mill will. People will assume another cover up is in play, and then they will be overtaken by events.
Given the current state of policing, there would likely still be two arrests if there was one guy with a knife - who finally got battered almost to extinction by somebody on the train?
Two lunatics at the same time in the same place doing the same thing to random members of the public, and counter-terrorism officers are involved?
The political history of business leaders dabbling in politics is not particularly auspicious.
Or do you just mean a few of his City mates ?
In truth, man made climate change is rather low down the list for likely causes of civilisational collapse.
Whoever he brings in will have to be entirely subordinate to his ego. In that, he is very Trumpian.
We now live in a world where the former al-Qaeda guy running Syria is less corrupt than the American president
https://x.com/JeremiahDJohns/status/1984845939337494528
Reuters reports that Syria's president Ahmad al-Sharaa closed the business office of his brother and warned his family 'against exploiting the family name for personal gain'
https://x.com/spectatorindex/status/1984175646269227256
It's going to be exceptionally difficult to reverse and, while there is enormous uncertainty about the severity and nature of the ongoing damage, it's almost certainly better value to reduce emissions now than spend billions on flood defences and deal with mass migration from Africa, crop blight etc etc. Or at least it is if you are younger or care about the next few generations.
The same people who were denying climate change existed have now reached a final, late stage of denialism where they insist it's not worth doing anything about. It's pathetic and transparent.
https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/diplomacy-and-international-relations/madrid-commuter-train-bombing
Farage's "unelected Cabinet of top people" currently seems like a bit of sticking plaster over the accusation that he wouldn't have enough experienced MPs to form a government, and that the ones he has fall into the fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists category. Except with less of the closeting these days.
As for the answer, perhaps we have to accept that cabinet jobs are now mostly too big for one brain to process, and decide what to do about that.
It's not my problem, but I suspect if the Conservatives became junior partners in a RefCon coalition that would be an event too far for their long term survival. I don't believe the R A Butler wing of the party would ever return to the fold.
Just to add balance, I suspect the Labour Party's prospects for survival past 2029 are even more perilous. A political party without direction, let alone ideology (and that goes for the Tories too) doesn't deserve to survive, let alone thrive. That doesn't bother me in a way it once would have.
Two perps suggests something organised, terroristic in nature, whereas one perp could be a lone nutter with a mental health issue or on too many drugs.
One arrested for being the guy with the knife, and another arrested for beating the crap out of the first guy, is also plausible. Even if the second guy doesn’t get charged once the evidence and CCTV is reviewed, they’d still want to detain him at the scene.
Edit: https://www.eurostar.com/uk-en/travel-info/travel-planning/luggage/prohibited-items#Prohibited-items
Anyway, the logical outcome from this kind of debate is we need to think about investing much more in adaptation. Flooding is the obvious one (particularly SE England).
They can’t stop some meaningful percentage of people travelling on commuter trains without tickets. Laughable to think you can stop this sort of attack through screening.
It’s a cost of living in a high trust society and the solution and the solutions are sorry to say, rather more difficult and politically difficult than scanning bags.
Labour is more understandable as a slightly less useless Conservative leader might split the RefCon vote more evenly.
Good morning from Elsewhere, where Labour are in for a drubbing.
Which means about 2.5-3C of warming and very serious consequences.
As of September 2025, BTP had a workforce of 2,852 police officers, 1,619 police staff & designated officers, 189 police community support officers, 211 special constables, and 42 support volunteers.
That’s not many for 10,000 miles of railway track, and includes a number of special teams for major incident response.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Transport_Police
Every local train?
Every tube and metro service?
Every bus?
Totally impractical.
Is the Ukraine War an RMA?
https://www.chinatalk.media/p/ukraines-drone-war
There were proposals to do that in Scotland about a decade ago follolwing Westminster legislation to give SG oversight of BTP in Scotland. However, it got slowed/derailed for various reasons. Committee solution adopted. THose issues might well apply also to any southern merger.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-48766423
One of them is by speeding up how fast water travels to the sea by dredging and channelisation. The problem with this is that underperformance anywhere from source to sea causes localised catastrophe.
The other is by slowing down how quickly water reaches population centres. You achieve this by reinstating meanders, woodland and wetlands along the way, so that the ground acts as a sponge. Soaking up sudden downpours and slowly releasing it over weeks. This has rather nice wildlife benefits but takes up more land. See Knepp.
It’s not beyond our wit to combine these two approaches. Hard engineering solutions within and just downstream of population centres and sort solutions upstream. The same is true even within population centres, permeable paving as the norm with proper spend on drainage.
I guess you could argue that gaps between stations makes a difference.
In terms of geological time the temerature may restore, but we may have to go extinct first.
Both sides have used millions, millions of small drones, not to mention the longer-range large one-way drones currently taking out O&G facilities across Russia.
One good thing it has shown, is that current Western kit is considerably better than Soviet kit, although the Chinese are still pushing the innovation so we need to make sire we don’t fall behind.
Yay capitalism.
And now it seems that Musk is backing away from his triumph, just as it is happening. Why? Has he been driven mad by his own opinion machine?