La Belle Alliance didn’t last very long – politicalbetting.com
La Belle Alliance didn’t last very long – politicalbetting.com
FT Exclusive: The Reform UK leader told donors he expects a deal or merger between his party and the Conservatives ahead of the next general election, suggesting he does not believe he can sweep to power alone. https://t.co/KwTYRvF9Xb pic.twitter.com/Ptz30Psikr
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We won't know what alliances are possible until after the next General election; all we will know is what parties say before the election. The Tories face an unenviable choice of what to present to the public, and have no choice but to present something. None are good.
They are:
Yes, deal with Reform possible.
No. Not possible.
Say nothing.
Say both they will and they won't.
Say the question doesn't arise because they are going to win anyway.
https://x.com/SkySportsPL/status/1995980346756632963
The impression I get from the Farage story is that he's not really prepared to do the hard graft of preparing for government.
He's a very effective campaigner, but that is perhaps the limit of his political skills.
Unfortunately the current government appears to have arrived with no ideas, and the previous government had run out of them.
Meanwhile the Russian allegations are not going away and several Tories are implicated too.
For Starmer the situation is very far from hopeless when the right have crappy policies and crappy electoral tactics
😄
BTW the fact that Farage's skills are limited does not stop him winning an election. Someone has to come first, and someone has to form a government. 'Governing brilliantly' skills are in short supply.
Nigel has a problem. Most of his voters are ex-Conservatives who hate their old party. But I suspect his donors just want Nigel to put some lead back in the Tory pencil, as in Canada. Farage would need 100 or so ministers, and the most plausible source is the charred remains of the Conservative party.
1) Nigel Farage has told donors he expects a deal or merger between his Reform UK party and the Conservatives ahead of the next general election,
2) A false story in the FT tonight claims Reform would do a deal with the Tories.
So either an unstable minority government is more likely than an LD/Lab+/- Green coalition. Then a further election a year or so later.
https://x.com/AdamCrafton_/status/1996045364164788560
Dec 2025 and after watching Reform councils in places like Kent and Cornwall, people start to change their minds.
The only possible way there may be an alliance is if Jenrick replaced Kemi as Tory leader. Farage has spoken highly of Jenrick in the past and a deal could be done between them where the Tories only put up paper candidates where Reform were second to Labour at the last general election in return for Reform only putting up paper candidates in middle class seats where the Tories were second to Labour or the LDs and Reform polled below their national voteshare
“They’ll be few people listening, even to @BBCr4today, who have had a 28% pay rise,” says @wesstreeting correctly berating the BMA.
Accuses BMA of “often behaving like a cartel rather than a trade union.”
https://x.com/lmharpin/status/1996132287000535112
...
This is on top of the £192m spent by the inquiry itself
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj9yepzl1rjo
The good news for lawyers is the inquiry still has another two years to run.
Not sure it suits either side . A decision to not stand in certain seats seems more probable .
Thankfully in my own council they seem to have been rather muted so far.
Will they change the lyrics to “F,I,F,A” from YMCA?
It makes all those calls for rejoining any big trading group (either the EU, EEA or EFTA) completely pointless. There is no.way any of them would touch the UK with a barge pole as long as there's any prospect of a future Reform Government.
Farage could be 70 at the election after next. The upcoming election is his last shot to govern, as a majority or minority partner, assuming that's what he wants to do. British politicians just don't carry on through their 70s like American ones do.
I suspect the political right coalesces around a single party soon after he leaves the scene.
The dynamic interplay of scorpion, top predator, fear of power, arrogance and (let us not forget entirely) desire to serve are a toxic cocktail with unpredictable outcomes.
2029 is already fascinating.
The French called it the Battle of Mont-Saint-Jean.
Though if we do get a hung parliament the Tories and Reform might win a majority of seats in England but not UK wide
where you can commit war crimes 🎶
If I were to hazard a guess the Tories will retain the structure of the party but there’ll be reform influence on the branding (even the name). The biggest challenge the Tories have now is that the Conservative name carries significant baggage, not only for those who associate it with Thatcher but also now the very poor governance they provided 2016-2024.
“Appreciate the question, thank you Algar. As you know, I’ve just talked through our policy on space wombats. We have an extensive set of policies spelled out in our manifesto- clearly those are the best policies for the future of this country and so our entire focus is on convincing as many voters as possible to elect a Tory government on May 5”
Pandemics, like wars, are indeed expensive, but to spend what’s going to end up being close to half a *BILLION* on the inquiry, while learning very little that wasn’t known already about how to handle the next pandemic..?
Shares in a US cryptocurrency miner backed by Donald Trump Jr and Eric Trump shed a third of its value on Tuesday as early investors cashed out en masse at the end of a lock-up period.
https://bsky.app/profile/financialtimes.com/post/3m6zqvwfkka2r
Maybe Farage will say he never directly lied to anyone, like he “never directly racially abused anyone”.
Which suggests that Trump isn't as historically unpopular as has been claimed and that the Dems are neither enthusing either their own or swing voters.
Now the Dems will still gain the House next year but the pattern of failing governments and congressional gridlock looks set to continue.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/cwypq7xjvdqt
https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/politics/reform-durham-county-council-darren-grimes-400775/
There is absolutely no way Badenoch or the conservatives should tie themselves into a hard right Trump loving nasty piece of work that is Farage
Indeed Badenoch attacked Farage recently, and aa she has attracted 6 million of donations to Farage's 2 million maybe it is he who is panicking
He and reform have nothing to offer other than discourse and division
Badenoch is beginning to be heard and she needs her own district policies and frankly to ignore Farage and concentrate on redeeming the conservative brand over the next 3 years
There is time and the ' green shoots of recovery' are showing made easier by the disaster that is Starmer and Reeves
By way of reference, a quick bit of googling says that the three main transport investigation branches (AAIB, RAIB, MAIB) have between them some 130 staff and a budget somewhere around £30m per year.
Half a billion would also pay for around 1,000 Flamingo missiles for the Ukrainians, quite literally blowing up the money is better value!
Maybe Special Reporteur to the Court of St. Basil in Moscow. Then nobody needs to pretend to look the other way as to where his sympathies (and finances) lie.
What pact ?
The Brexit Party had to stand down its candidates in 2019 because the candidates were themselves standing down by their own choice.
Much to Farage's annoyance as he wanted to stop Brexit from happening.
What is Reform's policy for mending the broken funding model for local government? 3 words: Close. Things. Down.
The problem of ignoring reality is that it won't ignore you.
Nashville East and
Nashville South and
One side supports cracking while the other side supports packing.
Or one side supports packing while the other side supports cracking.
She’s in favour of defunding police, providing sanctuary to foreign criminals etc, and said previously that she hated Nashville and country music, before standing in a district that contained half of, err, Nashville.
Yes the Dems will take back the House, but if their primary process produces fringe candidates in swing seats it could be closer than expected. The Senate will likely stay GOP but with a reduced majority, and we’ll have two years of total gridlock in Congress.
F1: not a shock but a shame to see Tsunoda's F1 career seemingly end. Lindblad to Racing Bulls and Hadjar promoted/demoted to Red Bull.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/articles/c5y0rlx05l4o
The House therefore is almost certainly going Dem next year, if the GOP are stupid enough to nominate Paxton over Cornyn in Texas the Dems could scrape home in the Senate too as polls show Paxton could be beaten by the Dems in Texas while Maine and NC are also likely Dem pickups and Ohio looks close. The Dems need 4 net gains to retake the Senate
For the LOLs he should crash into the back of Verstappen on Sunday.
Or, even, a couple of bags of PPE from a Tory donor!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennessee's_7th_congressional_district
It’s the same as any other local
Govt
More.govt.money
The ability of Mother Russia to absorb carnage is a remarkable feature of its DNA.
This all reminds me of the days of the Alliance and the notion of "realignment". Back then, the SDP members thought the future was the Alliance replacing Labour as the main challenger to the Conservatives and offering a pragmatic, centrist alternative to what was seen as Thatcherite extremism.
The truth was electoral success was coming FROM the Conservatives rather than Labour so others began to wonder if the aim should be to replace the Conservatives as the challengers to Labour's "leftie" extremism.
As we know, internal contradictions, such as on defence, led to the project failing and ending in acrimony and farce.
Reform may desire to end the Conservatives - they many not find it as easy as they believe. The next election is increasingly looking like Reform vs Not Reform (it should be Labour vs Not Labour but that's where high poll numbers gets you) and ironically it might be Nigel Farage who ends up giving Labour a second term. He might actually prefer that if the price is reducing the Conservatives to a meaningless rump.
As I've said before, BOTH the LDs and Conservatives need to think about positioning as the next GE approaches - the LDs cannot afford to be seen to be too close to Labour and, to be fair, Sir Ed is playing that one well while the Conservatives cannot seen to be too close to Reform and, to be fair, Badenoch and Stride are doing their best on that.
The other point to remember is what parties say before an election and what they do after can be and often is very different. You can say you won't do a deal with the LDs two days before an election (as Cameron did) to maximise your vote but you have to game the scenario in which you have to deal with them (the Conservatives did that and did it well, the LDs didn't and paid the price in the negotiations).