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A 10/1 and a 6/1 tip to start your new year – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 12,864
edited 9:21AM in General
A 10/1 and a 6/1 tip to start your new year – politicalbetting.com

Latest YouGov Westminster voting intention (21-22 Dec 2025)Reform: 25% (-3)Lab: 20% (+2)Con: 19% (+2)Green: 15% (-2)Lib Dem: 15% (+1)SNP: 3% (-1)Results link in replies pic.twitter.com/F8Dxx62nYe

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Comments

  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 24,100
    First foot
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691
    SECOND!
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,171
    Archive.org has a nice set of links for Public Domain Day 2026.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691
    I dont really fancy either bet. It's too early to know if the signs that Reform may have peaked are the start of an SDP-style slip back to more modest ratings, or not, but it's certainly possible. And while the Greens may get some outliers on the upside, leapfrogging both main parties and Reform looks like a real stretch.
  • eekeek Posts: 32,207
    The problem is the 2 bets are polar opposites, for Zach to top a poll Reform needs to fall apart, and I just can't see where the other 7% Reform would require comes from.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,099
    First disaster of 2026 :grimace:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c8xdxvj2qjdt

    "Dozens could have died."
  • FrankBoothFrankBooth Posts: 10,278
    Disappointing to see pb so quiet this morning. The benefits of an early night etc

    More large scale protests in Iran. Important not to get ones hopes up too much but we'll just have to see.
  • CleitophonCleitophon Posts: 603
    Liz Truss was hated by many, but at least she catered unapologetically to her imbecile core voters. Starmer caters to nobody. He is the only idiot who Will attack brexit and then insist on the red lines. The brexiteers hate him and now his core voters hate him too. It isn't just brexit, he does this with every political issue. Starmer governs for nobody. But he just can't seem to wrap his mind around this simple political fact: you don't need to please everybody, but you must please your supporters. He is a total political numbskull. Deploying political power is not the same as judicial fairness (thinking of his old job). If he cannot understand that then he cannot be the leader of labour, that is simply not what that role is about.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,001

    First foot

    Can you come round my place please and let in the New Year? I'm trapped in my home because I have a Scottish wife who believes this nonsense...
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 24,100
    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    malcolmg said:

    Happy new Year to everyone, all the best for 2026

    May your turnips be very fruitful, Malc.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 24,100

    First foot

    Can you come round my place please and let in the New Year? I'm trapped in my home because I have a Scottish wife who believes this nonsense...
    Our dog was our first foot.
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,171
    edited 9:38AM
    Foss said:

    Archive.org has a nice set of links for Public Domain Day 2026.

    The National Library of Scotland also has a lovely new batch of OS maps from 1975.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 21,626
    IanB2 said:

    I dont really fancy either bet. It's too early to know if the signs that Reform may have peaked are the start of an SDP-style slip back to more modest ratings, or not, but it's certainly possible. And while the Greens may get some outliers on the upside, leapfrogging both main parties and Reform looks like a real stretch.

    The highest YouGov score for Reform in 2025 was 29%, which will have included outliers in their favour. So to hit 35% would require a bit more than good local elections and an outlier. Winning in Wales might do it, perhaps forming a credible Shadow Cabinet?

    The highest Green score in 2025 in a YouGov is 27%, while the lowest score to lead a YouGov poll last year was 23%. So the Greens would need the same growth in support to win this bet as Reform the other bet, convinced with a decline in Reform support so that they and the Tories evenly split the right-wing vote.

    The thing that both bets have in common is that the three largest parties in the Commons continue to struggle. And that feels a lot more likely than the detail of each individual bet, so the bets are probably best considered as a double.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 5,764
    Happy new year, everyone!

    I've got a big slow-cooker chilli on the go to see me through the next few cold days. Lots of chorizo in it which is making the kitchen smell comforting already.
  • FossFoss Posts: 2,171
    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
  • Daveyboy1961Daveyboy1961 Posts: 5,105

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    Causing trouble there I think, Sandy?

  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    Foss said:

    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
    Meanwhile America are on the sold elections every four years.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    ohnotnow said:

    Happy new year, everyone!

    I've got a big slow-cooker chilli on the go to see me through the next few cold days. Lots of chorizo in it which is making the kitchen smell comforting already.

    I'm planning a venison balti, with one chicken breast that seems to have got left over to pad it out a bit as there isn't quite as much venison as I would want.

    Slightly odd mixture, but hey, what the hell.
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 4,824
    eek said:

    The problem is the 2 bets are polar opposites, for Zach to top a poll Reform needs to fall apart, and I just can't see where the other 7% Reform would require comes from.

    For the Greens to top a poll Reform have to go further backwards, but only so far that the Conservatives (who will be the only beneficiaries) don't go that far forwards, and at the same time Labour will have to absolutely implode to probably single figures and the LIb Dems will not pick up any of the transfers. The window for that to happen is also quite narrow for Starmer will be gone by the middle of the year. So I don't see 10/1 as generous.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966
    edited 9:57AM
    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    MPs are younger than they used to be, so fewer pass away in office, but there’s always the occasional scandal or floor-crosser who resigns.

    16/1 does appear value though, it’s like the “no safety car at Monaco” bet that comes off more often than the odds suggest.

    The PM could of course screw up the bet by appointing an MP as an ambassador somewhere
    important.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 21,626
    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,099

    First disaster of 2026 :grimace:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c8xdxvj2qjdt

    "Dozens could have died."

    "'Several dozens' believed to have been killed in fire at Swiss ski resort bar, say authorities

    "The region's head of security says several different nationalities are involved in the incident, without giving further details."
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 57,099
    ydoethur said:

    ohnotnow said:

    Happy new year, everyone!

    I've got a big slow-cooker chilli on the go to see me through the next few cold days. Lots of chorizo in it which is making the kitchen smell comforting already.

    I'm planning a venison balti, with one chicken breast that seems to have got left over to pad it out a bit as there isn't quite as much venison as I would want.

    Slightly odd mixture, but hey, what the hell.
    Calm down, deer!
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778

    eek said:

    The problem is the 2 bets are polar opposites, for Zach to top a poll Reform needs to fall apart, and I just can't see where the other 7% Reform would require comes from.

    For the Greens to top a poll Reform have to go further backwards, but only so far that the Conservatives (who will be the only beneficiaries) don't go that far forwards, and at the same time Labour will have to absolutely implode to probably single figures and the LIb Dems will not pick up any of the transfers. The window for that to happen is also quite narrow for Starmer will be gone by the middle of the year. So I don't see 10/1 as generous.
    A good bet for me would actually be for Starmer to survive the year as PM. It is incredibly difficult to remove a sitting Labour leader without at least his tacit consent, as we saw with Corbyn, and Starmer shows no eagerness to quit.

    The only way he goes is if a heavyweight challenger launches a leadership challenge. There are not many of them outside the cabinet,* and I don't see any current cabinet minister breaking ranks. Angela Rayner would be the only really plausible challenger and given the circumstances under which she resigned I can't see her winning a leadership election.

    Personally I would be looking at autumn 2027 as a more likely exit year, if he decides he's had enough and wants to give his successor flexibility over the timing of the next election. But I won't be betting on earlier.

    *It is arguable as to how many there are inside the cabinet as well.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966
    edited 9:58AM

    Disappointing to see pb so quiet this morning. The benefits of an early night etc

    More large scale protests in Iran. Important not to get ones hopes up too much but we'll just have to see.

    There’s definitely something going on in Iran, although most Western media has has no-one there to report on it.

    Swiss ski resort explosion doesn’t look good, reports of of “several dozen” deaths.

    Explosions in Russia, on the other hand, appear to be plenty, so not all bad news.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778

    ydoethur said:

    ohnotnow said:

    Happy new year, everyone!

    I've got a big slow-cooker chilli on the go to see me through the next few cold days. Lots of chorizo in it which is making the kitchen smell comforting already.

    I'm planning a venison balti, with one chicken breast that seems to have got left over to pad it out a bit as there isn't quite as much venison as I would want.

    Slightly odd mixture, but hey, what the hell.
    Calm down, deer!
    I'm not up to a punning contest, so I'm afraid I'm chickening out.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,090

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,090
    I could go for those Davey odds. Not that he's done a bad job since a great GE, but things have been quiet, he's been around politics a long time, and with the party going to struggle to advance further maybe he'll take the option to say it's someone elses time.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497
    ydoethur said:

    ohnotnow said:

    Happy new year, everyone!

    I've got a big slow-cooker chilli on the go to see me through the next few cold days. Lots of chorizo in it which is making the kitchen smell comforting already.

    I'm planning a venison balti, with one chicken breast that seems to have got left over to pad it out a bit as there isn't quite as much venison as I would want.

    Slightly odd mixture, but hey, what the hell.
    Pb pot-rattlers who missed it might want to watch the Masterchef Christmas special with four former champions returning to win a tacky-looking golden frying pan.

    Spoiler: John Torode, since sacked, declared it the best food in the history of Masterchef.

    Festive Extravaganza: Champion of Champions
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002p0s1/masterchef-festive-extravaganza-champion-of-champions
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 24,100

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    Causing trouble there I think, Sandy?

    Just calling it as I see it. The LibDems have been flatlining since the GE, failing to pick up support from disaffected Tories and Labourites.

    They'll need big gains in May to distract from their poor performance in the national polling.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 21,626

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    And the more air defences are diverted to protect strategic assets more than a 1,000km from Ukraine, the fewer will be left to defend ammunition dumps and the like near the frontline.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    kle4 said:

    I could go for those Davey odds. Not that he's done a bad job since a great GE, but things have been quiet, he's been around politics a long time, and with the party going to struggle to advance further maybe he'll take the option to say it's someone elses time.

    Other bets to clearly avoid:

    Trump won't be impeached in 2026 as he controls Congress.

    Burnham won't become an MP as he won't resign as mayor of Manchester to fight a by-election which he stands at best a 50/50 chance of winning in any seat.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,090
    Foss said:

    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
    Deaths in office used to be higher, but getting through a year with no changes even now feels tough, though possible. And as time goes on more will be looking to jump ship or prepare new jobs.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966
    edited 10:07AM
    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.

    There’s almost certainly someone somewhere who has registered as a private hire company purely to take a couple of children known to him to school and back, and pocketing £100 a day for doing so.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691
    edited 10:05AM

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    That's only going to happen if he doesn't feel up to another GE campaign; the party won't push him out. So if there is a change, it won't be this year.

    As the lead says, Laddies produces the list of one-sided unlikelihoods in order to dupe the unwary; if I was forced to choose bets from that list, I'd be looking at the Reeves/Cooper/Mahmood to last out the year, three Tory MPs defect to Reform, and Jenrick to defect, ones. On the latter, the assumption would be that Kemi looks increasingly secure as the year goes by, yet the Tories have another bad set of elections.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,437
    Sandpit said:

    Disappointing to see pb so quiet this morning. The benefits of an early night etc

    More large scale protests in Iran. Important not to get ones hopes up too much but we'll just have to see.

    There’s definitely something going on in Iran, although most Western media has has no-one there to report on it.

    Swiss ski resort explosion doesn’t look good, reports of of “several dozen” deaths.

    Explosions in Russia, on the other hand, appear to be plenty, so not all bad news.
    In declining to call for regime change in Iran, for once Trump did something sensible.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    And the more air defences are diverted to protect strategic assets more than a 1,000km from Ukraine, the fewer will be left to defend ammunition dumps and the like near the frontline.
    Yes. That is the trouble with Russia – it is just too damn big.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,001

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 5,437

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    Causing trouble there I think, Sandy?

    Just calling it as I see it. The LibDems have been flatlining since the GE, failing to pick up support from disaffected Tories and Labourites.

    They'll need big gains in May to distract from their poor performance in the national polling.
    Yes, I think Daisy Cooper would be much more likely to attract the Green curious segment of the electorate.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,090
    edited 10:12AM
    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 57,001

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    And the more air defences are diverted to protect strategic assets more than a 1,000km from Ukraine, the fewer will be left to defend ammunition dumps and the like near the frontline.
    Yes. That is the trouble with Russia – it is just too damn big.
    President Xi will help with that problem. For a price...
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691
    edited 10:17AM

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    Causing trouble there I think, Sandy?

    Just calling it as I see it. The LibDems have been flatlining since the GE, failing to pick up support from disaffected Tories and Labourites.

    They'll need big gains in May to distract from their poor performance in the national polling.
    Yes, I think Daisy Cooper would be much more likely to attract the Green curious segment of the electorate.
    The optimal point of replacement for a late 2028/early 2029 election would be 2027, surely?

    Anyhow, Davey has just this minute emailed to wish me a Happy New Year, so he gets my vote!
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 21,626
    More FPV videos of Russian cavalry. These are becoming increasingly common.

    The Ukrainians seem to be taking a degree of care to avoid hurting the horses when possible. Perhaps they are aware of the sensitivities of the British public.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.

    There’s almost certainly someone somewhere who has registered as a private hire company purely to take a couple of children known to him to school and back, and pocketing £100 a day for doing so.
    That seems improbable given the regulatory, insurance and safeguarding hoops that would be required to be jumped through, although I'm not saying it's impossible.

    Ultimately, the issue with taxis is that successive governments have closed schools in the local area that could y'know, actually work with these children and therefore forced them to travel long distances where there were no school bus routes. I worked in two schools with specialist SEND units. In my very first school (Caldicot) we had one child who had to come by taxi from Abergavenny. In my last in Burton there were children coming over 20 miles from Stoke and Tamworth. That's just mad. Provide proper local provision and that issue disappears (and it's a lot better for the child).

    But no - we must close these schools because SEND provision is divisive (Labour) or not required as it isn't a thing (rather too many Tories and the DfE) and push them into mainstream schools.

    Where strangely, they don't do very well and spend a lot of time kicking off making things worse for everyone else too.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 36,332
    edited 10:13AM

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    Causing trouble there I think, Sandy?

    Just calling it as I see it. The LibDems have been flatlining since the GE, failing to pick up support from disaffected Tories and Labourites.

    They'll need big gains in May to distract from their poor performance in the national polling.
    Happy New Year, everyone.

    On topic, the LibDems poor opinion polling rather clashes with their decent council by-election performance. Perhaps it's because they rather like the little girl in the nursery rhyme; when they're good they're very very good, but when they're bad they're terribly, terribly popular
    Or should that be 'horrid'?
  • TazTaz Posts: 23,513

    ydoethur said:

    ohnotnow said:

    Happy new year, everyone!

    I've got a big slow-cooker chilli on the go to see me through the next few cold days. Lots of chorizo in it which is making the kitchen smell comforting already.

    I'm planning a venison balti, with one chicken breast that seems to have got left over to pad it out a bit as there isn't quite as much venison as I would want.

    Slightly odd mixture, but hey, what the hell.
    Pb pot-rattlers who missed it might want to watch the Masterchef Christmas special with four former champions returning to win a tacky-looking golden frying pan.

    Spoiler: John Torode, since sacked, declared it the best food in the history of Masterchef.

    Festive Extravaganza: Champion of Champions
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002p0s1/masterchef-festive-extravaganza-champion-of-champions
    Feel a little sorry for Torode. Sacked for an alleged racist comment neither he, nor others around him could remember.

    Typical BBC though. They sacked Tony Blackburn in a similar style. For failing to remember a discussion from the early seventies.

    All a cover for their failure to tackle real,wrong uns.

    Thomas Frake’s pudding looked amazing.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 125,430
    Legendary modesty klaxon.

    I predicted and have delivered a 28% return in a month, Warren Buffet is envious of me,

    https://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2025/11/26/a-28-return-in-just-over-a-month/
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    Causing trouble there I think, Sandy?

    Just calling it as I see it. The LibDems have been flatlining since the GE, failing to pick up support from disaffected Tories and Labourites.

    They'll need big gains in May to distract from their poor performance in the national polling.
    Happy New Year, everyone.

    On topic, the LibDems poor opinion polling rather clashes with their decent council by-election performance. Perhaps it's because they rather like the little girl in the nursery rhyme; when they're good they're very very good, but when they're bad they're terribly, terribly popular
    Or should that be 'horrid'?
    The LibDems are energetic election campaigners, and will find picking up tactical Labour votes where they're facing the Tories or Reform exceptionally easy this year. It's getting attention at national level when there isn't an election on, that they struggle with.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,090
    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    A Trump enforced 'peace' coming at the right time then.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 18,768
    4/1 for Donald Trump to be impeached on the assumption the Dems will landslide in 2026?

    What do people think?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    edited 10:15AM
    FF43 said:

    4/1 for Donald Trump to be impeached on the assumption the Dems will landslide in 2026?

    What do people think?

    Even if they do, the new Congress wouldn't take office until 2027 so no.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 100,090
    edited 10:16AM
    FF43 said:

    4/1 for Donald Trump to be impeached on the assumption the Dems will landslide in 2026?

    What do people think?

    Don't newly elected legislators take up office the next January, making that impossible for this year?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966
    edited 10:20AM
    kle4 said:

    FF43 said:

    4/1 for Donald Trump to be impeached on the assumption the Dems will landslide in 2026?

    What do people think?

    Don't newly elected legislators take up office the next January, making that impossible for this year?
    Correct, the swearing-in happens in January.

    An impeachment (as opposed to a conviction, read the terms of your bet carefully!) of Trump this year requires a handful of House Republicans to cross the floor. Not impossible, if a few lose primary contests from the right, but 4/1 seems short.

    A conviction in the Senate is going to be pretty much impossible unless there’s a clear act of treason in the minds of Republican Senators (rather than in the minds of CNN correspondents).
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497
    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.
    Ferrying kids to school could be done a bit more cheaply but there are fundamental constraints. First, children need to arrive at school at the same time, so there is a morning peak in demand. Second, they need driving home again. Third, this needs to happen every school day. Fourth, at least some drivers will need special training and/or equipment and/or DBS checks.

    So for any one taxi, that is one or two hours in the morning, and the same in the afternoon, for most of the year, and it will need to be booked in advance. Four hours a day, an hour for lunch, it is almost a full-time job. It's a seller's market.

    Councils might be able to save money by running specialist minibuses but because of parental choice, kids living in one place don't all go to the nearest school (one of my many recurring rants) so it will not be just the one minibus. Savings would be limited even if politics and belief in the preternatural efficiency of private sector solutions (viz taxis) were not factors.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 21,110
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.

    There’s almost certainly someone somewhere who has registered as a private hire company purely to take a couple of children known to him to school and back, and pocketing £100 a day for doing so.
    That seems improbable given the regulatory, insurance and safeguarding hoops that would be required to be jumped through, although I'm not saying it's impossible.

    Ultimately, the issue with taxis is that successive governments have closed schools in the local area that could y'know, actually work with these children and therefore forced them to travel long distances where there were no school bus routes. I worked in two schools with specialist SEND units. In my very first school (Caldicot) we had one child who had to come by taxi from Abergavenny. In my last in Burton there were children coming over 20 miles from Stoke and Tamworth. That's just mad. Provide proper local provision and that issue disappears (and it's a lot better for the child).

    But no - we must close these schools because SEND provision is divisive (Labour) or not required as it isn't a thing (rather too many Tories and the DfE) and push them into mainstream schools.

    Where strangely, they don't do very well and spend a lot of time kicking off making things worse for everyone else too.
    There do seem to be moves to reverse that- a new SEND school has just got approval to open down the road from me. And reduced transport costs are part of how it's being sold to the public.

    But yes, "taxis" is one of those words like "hotels". It sounds like a wasteful luxury, but it's probably the cheapest short-term answer to the question of how to get children from multiple A's to multiple B's.
  • SandraMcSandraMc Posts: 825

    First disaster of 2026 :grimace:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c8xdxvj2qjdt

    "Dozens could have died."

    The piece tells us that " about 100 injured are injured."

    Who says that BBC journalism standards are slipping?
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 21,110
    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    Partly it's the problem of having a statutory demand-led system coupled to an extremely finite pot of money.

    Partly it's that the mental health of the nation does seem to be getting worse.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497
    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
  • TazTaz Posts: 23,513
    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    So what is Wales doing differently as their costs seem to be being managed and not exploding ?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    edited 10:30AM

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    The Great Depression began, on the earliest possible date, in 1929. Do you mean the General Strike?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    Taz said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    So what is Wales doing differently as their costs seem to be being managed and not exploding ?
    Do you have figures for that, as it isn't my understanding of the situation?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 36,332
    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    I agree; I've two (not close) family members who have SEND. Both sets of parents had to fight very hard to get appropriate support for their children. In one case the 'child'...... she was in her late-is teens by then ended up in residential educational care and was finally able to be fairly independent, although she still needed LA support. The other child, who was very 'difficult' is still in the school system and it looks as though, if the requirement for a pass in Maths and or English is removed he'll do quite well in some artistic or similar field.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691
    edited 10:33AM

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    Plus the US's 250, about which we'll never hear the end of, during the summer
  • eekeek Posts: 32,207

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    The Great Depression is 1929 onwards...


  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966
    edited 10:34AM

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    Trump’s biggest party this year isn’t even going to be the World Cup, it’s going to be the USA’s 250th birthday party on 4th July.
  • TazTaz Posts: 23,513

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.

    There’s almost certainly someone somewhere who has registered as a private hire company purely to take a couple of children known to him to school and back, and pocketing £100 a day for doing so.
    That seems improbable given the regulatory, insurance and safeguarding hoops that would be required to be jumped through, although I'm not saying it's impossible.

    Ultimately, the issue with taxis is that successive governments have closed schools in the local area that could y'know, actually work with these children and therefore forced them to travel long distances where there were no school bus routes. I worked in two schools with specialist SEND units. In my very first school (Caldicot) we had one child who had to come by taxi from Abergavenny. In my last in Burton there were children coming over 20 miles from Stoke and Tamworth. That's just mad. Provide proper local provision and that issue disappears (and it's a lot better for the child).

    But no - we must close these schools because SEND provision is divisive (Labour) or not required as it isn't a thing (rather too many Tories and the DfE) and push them into mainstream schools.

    Where strangely, they don't do very well and spend a lot of time kicking off making things worse for everyone else too.
    There do seem to be moves to reverse that- a new SEND school has just got approval to open down the road from me. And reduced transport costs are part of how it's being sold to the public.

    But yes, "taxis" is one of those words like "hotels". It sounds like a wasteful luxury, but it's probably the cheapest short-term answer to the question of how to get children from multiple A's to multiple B's.
    Is there any criteria applied ? For instance do kids only get a taxi if the school is a certain distance away ?

    Is there any reason why parents cannot take their kids to school, or do they in most cases ?

    Newcastle Council recently said they were not going to keep providing whatever SEND provision they are legally obliged to for 16 and 17 year olds as they have no money and no statutory duty.

    Cue outraged entitled parents and a well supported campaign in the local media and on local TV.

    They reversed the decision. Any changes to the schemes legal obligations that reduces them would face the same outpouring.

    Of course they still have the massive financial problems, they’re just a little worse.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    Partly it's the problem of having a statutory demand-led system coupled to an extremely finite pot of money.

    Partly it's that the mental health of the nation does seem to be getting worse.
    It is also true we are getting much better at diagnosing these things, so there are needs that previously would have been written off as children being stupid, or naughty, or lazy are now being recognised as something else going on that can and should be addressed.

    The pandemic probably also did play a part, as school refusal has been much more common since. Quite a lot of children with needs they could previously manage have decided, you know, actually we *don't* want to go back into school to be harassed and bullied and forced to work at subjects we don't like or understand with lots of noise that we find disturbing rather than working comfortably and securely at a computer desk at home? (I can sympathise, following the truly appalling behaviour of the DfE in the pandemic I made the same decision, and a very good one it was.)

    But again - should we not be asking why that is the case? Would it not be better to make schools places where children actually want to go, and feel happy to learn even if it's not something that interests them particularly?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 125,430
    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    Trump’s biggest party this year isn’t even going to be the World Cup, it’s going to be the USA’s 250th birthday party on 4th July.
    I've already got the PB threader ready for that day.

    Happy Treason Day you bunch of ungrateful colonials.
  • TazTaz Posts: 23,513
    ydoethur said:

    Taz said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    So what is Wales doing differently as their costs seem to be being managed and not exploding ?
    Do you have figures for that, as it isn't my understanding of the situation?
    From this.

    https://x.com/tim_odoherty/status/1971975797310476600?s=61

    ‘ So, the results:

    In 2018 the Welsh rate of SEN was 22.6%. Upon the start of implementation cases immediately dropped 19.0%: from 19.5% in 2020/1 to 15.8% in 2021/2.

    2025: the Welsh rate of ALN is just 9.5%.

    (for context, the equivalent English figure in 19.6%; Scottish 40.5%)’
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 21,626

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    Partly it's the problem of having a statutory demand-led system coupled to an extremely finite pot of money.

    Partly it's that the mental health of the nation does seem to be getting worse.
    I think it's also partly that the standard system isn't working for standard kids, and so the parents of normal kids are looking for ways to help their children. Pushing hard for SEND assistance is one of the avenues available.
  • LennonLennon Posts: 1,845
    kle4 said:

    Foss said:

    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
    Deaths in office used to be higher, but getting through a year with no changes even now feels tough, though possible. And as time goes on more will be looking to jump ship or prepare new jobs.
    I'm tempted by the 16/1 on 0 by-elections this year partly as a proxy hedge (if there is a by-election, then chances are that I can make money on it - if there are none, then the opportunity is lost, so I get paid back in another way)
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691

    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    Trump’s biggest party this year isn’t even going to be the World Cup, it’s going to be the USA’s 250th birthday party on 4th July.
    I've already got the PB threader ready for that day.

    Happy Treason Day you bunch of ungrateful colonials.
    and they've been dumping tea into cold water ever since.

    As the pub landlord has it, America is a "good idea that has got out of hand".
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    Taz said:

    ydoethur said:

    Taz said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    So what is Wales doing differently as their costs seem to be being managed and not exploding ?
    Do you have figures for that, as it isn't my understanding of the situation?
    From this.

    https://x.com/tim_odoherty/status/1971975797310476600?s=61

    ‘ So, the results:

    In 2018 the Welsh rate of SEN was 22.6%. Upon the start of implementation cases immediately dropped 19.0%: from 19.5% in 2020/1 to 15.8% in 2021/2.

    2025: the Welsh rate of ALN is just 9.5%.

    (for context, the equivalent English figure in 19.6%; Scottish 40.5%)’
    A very interesting thread. However, there is one rather important point I think you have missed. That's about the classification of educational needs, not costs. It hasn't cut costs. Quite the contrary, they are soaring even faster than in England.

    Total expenditure on SEN/ALN provision in schools by local authorities is budgeted to be £668 million, an increase of £75.8 million or 12.8% compared with the previous year.

    29% of the total budgeted SEN/ALN expenditure is delegated to special schools. Notional allocations within nursery, primary, middle and secondary schools account for a further 40% of the total. The remaining 31% is non-delegated money held centrally by local authorities.

    Denbighshire delegate the largest proportion of their SEN/ALN budget to their schools at 84%, whilst Merthyr Tydfil delegate the smallest proportion at 49%.

    Total SEN/ALN expenditure per pupil for Wales is budgeted to be £1,486. This consists of £1,028 delegated expenditure per pupil and £458 non-delegated expenditure per pupil.

    Merthyr Tydfil has the largest SEN/ALN budget per pupil at £2,258, whilst Rhondda Cynon Taf has the smallest SEN/ALN budget per pupil at £1,086.


    https://www.gov.wales/budgeted-expenditure-special-educational-needs-sen-and-additional-learning-needs-aln-provision-april-2025-to-march-2026-html

    The charts for expenditure over time are also available. Since the date this new approach you highlight was brought in, the costs have just about doubled.

    This may be due to legacy issues, of course, but you would not expect such a dramatic rise if the policy you outline was having a significant financial effect.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 21,110
    Taz said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.

    There’s almost certainly someone somewhere who has registered as a private hire company purely to take a couple of children known to him to school and back, and pocketing £100 a day for doing so.
    That seems improbable given the regulatory, insurance and safeguarding hoops that would be required to be jumped through, although I'm not saying it's impossible.

    Ultimately, the issue with taxis is that successive governments have closed schools in the local area that could y'know, actually work with these children and therefore forced them to travel long distances where there were no school bus routes. I worked in two schools with specialist SEND units. In my very first school (Caldicot) we had one child who had to come by taxi from Abergavenny. In my last in Burton there were children coming over 20 miles from Stoke and Tamworth. That's just mad. Provide proper local provision and that issue disappears (and it's a lot better for the child).

    But no - we must close these schools because SEND provision is divisive (Labour) or not required as it isn't a thing (rather too many Tories and the DfE) and push them into mainstream schools.

    Where strangely, they don't do very well and spend a lot of time kicking off making things worse for everyone else too.
    There do seem to be moves to reverse that- a new SEND school has just got approval to open down the road from me. And reduced transport costs are part of how it's being sold to the public.

    But yes, "taxis" is one of those words like "hotels". It sounds like a wasteful luxury, but it's probably the cheapest short-term answer to the question of how to get children from multiple A's to multiple B's.
    Is there any criteria applied ? For instance do kids only get a taxi if the school is a certain distance away ?

    Is there any reason why parents cannot take their kids to school, or do they in most cases ?

    Newcastle Council recently said they were not going to keep providing whatever SEND provision they are legally obliged to for 16 and 17 year olds as they have no money and no statutory duty.

    Cue outraged entitled parents and a well supported campaign in the local media and on local TV.

    They reversed the decision. Any changes to the schemes legal obligations that reduces them would face the same outpouring.

    Of course they still have the massive financial problems, they’re just a little worse.
    I think it's a question of distance, and SEND schools being a long distance apart;

    Children of compulsory school age qualify for free school transport if they go to their nearest suitable school and any of the following apply:

    the school is more than 2 miles away and the child is under 8
    the school is more than 3 miles away and the child is 8 or over
    there’s no safe walking route between their home and school
    they cannot walk there because of their special educational needs or disabilities or a mobility problem


    https://www.gov.uk/free-school-transport

    The 16-18 thing is a mess; in theory, school isn't compulsory but in practice education is. The transport law just didn't keep up.

    Mainstream colleges often provide subsidised transport, either out of hardship funds or as marketing. (The marginal cost of teaching an extra student is tiny, so providing a bus season ticket is a win-win.) That probably doesn't work for institutions catering for lots of SEND students.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497
    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    The Great Depression began, on the earliest possible date, in 1929. Do you mean the General Strike?
    Yes. Autocorrect or insomnia, one of those. 100 years since the general strike.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    edited 10:51AM

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    A better question might be to ask why they are unaffordable. Is it, perhaps, because our school system is not well set up to cope with those who do not fit into tidy little boxes?

    Or because we start schooling very early - earlier than comparably run systems in Scandinavia - which means that we are forcing children to learn before they are fully ready?

    Or the dogmatic insistence on date of birth for start of school?

    Or the size of classes?

    Or the emphasis on academic subjects (some of which are very badly planned out in terms of content and assessment) in the curriculum?

    But nobody seems to be asking those questions. Largely I think because it raises too many awkward revelations about decades of mismanagement (not all of it well-intentioned) by the centre.
    All good questions to address wider issues, though well intentioned but too loose 'requirements' which incentivises classification is a matter which if addresses could stem the financial bleeding to give breathing room to look at them.

    But definitely not happening. Too many legitimate sob stories and would turbo charge all opposition.
    I've worked within the SEND system.

    Believe me, it is bloody difficult to get any support for a child. Even with wealthy parents who have high class barristers on tap. Councils just refuse.

    There is a reason almost 98% of refusals are overturned on appeal. However, even then most councils won't implement the decision. In Staffordshire, for example, they refuse to provide 1:1 support even where they are ordered to. The only case I know of where that was reversed was where the child's father, who happened to be an equalities lead for a national organisation, took them to court and won.

    We should not be asking about how to cut SEND costs. We should be asking instead how they are soaring so rapidly *even though councils are not actually doing what they should be* and therefore we *already* are failing to provide anything like adequate support.

    Which means we come back to the system.
    Partly it's the problem of having a statutory demand-led system coupled to an extremely finite pot of money.

    Partly it's that the mental health of the nation does seem to be getting worse.
    I think it's also partly that the standard system isn't working for standard kids, and so the parents of normal kids are looking for ways to help their children. Pushing hard for SEND assistance is one of the avenues available.
    20 years of experience tells me very firmly that you think wrong. You can barely get support for children whose dyslexia makes it nearly impossible for them to read and write without a legal dogfight, never mind anything else.

    I remember working with one individual with severe palsy. He couldn't get any funding at all even though he could barely walk to a classroom and when he got there he worked so slowly he was always behind. In desperation his parents scraped together just enough money for private tutors to get him through A-levels. And we did, but it was damned hard. The county still didn't want to bloody know.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 26,304
    5/2 no change to Reeves, Cooper, Mahmood is worth a bet. 6/1 Reform 35% definitely value. The 10/1 on the Greens, I don't see it, but its 10/1 so maybe, not quite for me.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 46,143
    edited 10:54AM

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    BBC R4 is currently going into overdrive over the 75th anniversary of the first episode of The Archers.

    We've become a commemorative nation served by a commemorative broadcaster. Franklin Mint UK (or GB if preferred).
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497
    edited 10:56AM
    Lennon said:

    kle4 said:

    Foss said:

    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
    Deaths in office used to be higher, but getting through a year with no changes even now feels tough, though possible. And as time goes on more will be looking to jump ship or prepare new jobs.
    I'm tempted by the 16/1 on 0 by-elections this year partly as a proxy hedge (if there is a by-election, then chances are that I can make money on it - if there are none, then the opportunity is lost, so I get paid back in another way)
    The main risk imo is not scandal but that one of Labour's paper candidates swept up in the landslide realises they will never make the front bench and didn't spend their life in the movement to send small children up chimneys or whatever else Starmer & Reeves propose. A principled resignation and return to their old job where they can at least make a difference will scupper the bet.

    Wealth warning: I cannot get on with Ladbrokes so have not used too many brain cells on this.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 132,470
    edited 10:58AM
    The May locals and devolved elections may actually provide a bigger bounce for the Greens than Reform. Most of the seats up in May are in London and big English cities so in the council elections the wards will be more likely to be inner city and urban and casting protest votes for the Greens than Reform. Polanski will therefore hope local election gains will see further Green poll gains from Labour. Though Reform will likely make gains in county elections postponed from last year in counties like Essex and Norfolk.

    In Wales Plaid will hope for gains as much as Reform and in Scotland Reform and the Greens are likely to be the biggest gainers as in England. Whether Starmer or Badenoch survive 2026 may well depend on whether it is Labour or the Conservatives second to Reform on NEV in May. Starmer could well face a leadership challenge if Labour end up third while Jenrick backing Tory MPs would be putting in letters to Bob Blackman for a VONC in Kemi faster than Usain Bolt if the Tories are third in May
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 132,470
    edited 11:04AM
    Sandpit said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    Trump’s biggest party this year isn’t even going to be the World Cup, it’s going to be the USA’s 250th birthday party on 4th July.
    Not impossible the King could be invited, in 1976 for the 200th anniversary the late Queen went to Philadelphia and gave a bicentennial bell, said the Founding Fathers lessons self governance were noteworthy and emphasised shared principles like Magna Carta. She also went to Boston and attended a state dinner at the White House with President Ford
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Bicentennial#:~:text=While in Philadelphia on July,July 1976 LET FREEDOM RING."
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966

    Taz said:

    ydoethur said:

    Sandpit said:

    kle4 said:

    Children ‘to lose right to Send support’ except in severe cases
    Schools to take over from parents to deal with the authorities directly for pupils with only ‘moderate’ needs in proposed government reforms to cut soaring bills

    https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/government-send-reforms-children-mental-health-adhd-sqw68bczx (£££)

    Proposals are at the considered by ministers stage so don't hold your breath.

    The current levels are simply unaffordable and not always needed, but there would be massive outcry - this will not happen.
    Taking a 500ft view, the use of taxis for school transport in particular seems worthy of investigation.

    I’m not saying it’s Minnesotan daycare levels of ‘mismanagement’, but it would be good to know who’s running the taxi companies that benefit and if the job of getting kids to school could be done more efficiently.

    There’s almost certainly someone somewhere who has registered as a private hire company purely to take a couple of children known to him to school and back, and pocketing £100 a day for doing so.
    That seems improbable given the regulatory, insurance and safeguarding hoops that would be required to be jumped through, although I'm not saying it's impossible.

    Ultimately, the issue with taxis is that successive governments have closed schools in the local area that could y'know, actually work with these children and therefore forced them to travel long distances where there were no school bus routes. I worked in two schools with specialist SEND units. In my very first school (Caldicot) we had one child who had to come by taxi from Abergavenny. In my last in Burton there were children coming over 20 miles from Stoke and Tamworth. That's just mad. Provide proper local provision and that issue disappears (and it's a lot better for the child).

    But no - we must close these schools because SEND provision is divisive (Labour) or not required as it isn't a thing (rather too many Tories and the DfE) and push them into mainstream schools.

    Where strangely, they don't do very well and spend a lot of time kicking off making things worse for everyone else too.
    There do seem to be moves to reverse that- a new SEND school has just got approval to open down the road from me. And reduced transport costs are part of how it's being sold to the public.

    But yes, "taxis" is one of those words like "hotels". It sounds like a wasteful luxury, but it's probably the cheapest short-term answer to the question of how to get children from multiple A's to multiple B's.
    Is there any criteria applied ? For instance do kids only get a taxi if the school is a certain distance away ?

    Is there any reason why parents cannot take their kids to school, or do they in most cases ?

    Newcastle Council recently said they were not going to keep providing whatever SEND provision they are legally obliged to for 16 and 17 year olds as they have no money and no statutory duty.

    Cue outraged entitled parents and a well supported campaign in the local media and on local TV.

    They reversed the decision. Any changes to the schemes legal obligations that reduces them would face the same outpouring.

    Of course they still have the massive financial problems, they’re just a little worse.
    I think it's a question of distance, and SEND schools being a long distance apart;

    Children of compulsory school age qualify for free school transport if they go to their nearest suitable school and any of the following apply:

    the school is more than 2 miles away and the child is under 8
    the school is more than 3 miles away and the child is 8 or over
    there’s no safe walking route between their home and school
    they cannot walk there because of their special educational needs or disabilities or a mobility problem


    https://www.gov.uk/free-school-transport

    The 16-18 thing is a mess; in theory, school isn't compulsory but in practice education is. The transport law just didn't keep up.

    Mainstream colleges often provide subsidised transport, either out of hardship funds or as marketing. (The marginal cost of teaching an extra student is tiny, so providing a bus season ticket is a win-win.) That probably doesn't work for institutions catering for lots of SEND students.
    Do those rules mean that, in practice, there’s a number of pupils for whom a SEND diagnosis means they get a taxi to school rather than being dropped off by a parent?

    That appears to be the hole in those rules as written.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 58,966

    Lennon said:

    kle4 said:

    Foss said:

    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
    Deaths in office used to be higher, but getting through a year with no changes even now feels tough, though possible. And as time goes on more will be looking to jump ship or prepare new jobs.
    I'm tempted by the 16/1 on 0 by-elections this year partly as a proxy hedge (if there is a by-election, then chances are that I can make money on it - if there are none, then the opportunity is lost, so I get paid back in another way)
    The main risk imo is not scandal but that one of Labour's paper candidates swept up in the landslide realises they will never make the front bench and didn't spend their life in the movement to send small children up chimneys or whatever else Starmer & Reeves propose. A principled resignation and return to their old job where they can at least make a difference will scupper the bet.

    Wealth warning: I cannot get on with Ladbrokes so have not used too many brain cells on this.
    Doing a Louise Mensch, as it should be known.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 16,143

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    My predictions for 2026:
    Badenoch and Starmer still in place on 31st December.
    Reform do not have a clear polling lead by the end of the year.

    And for the next GE:
    Reform to come either second or third in respect of both votes and seats.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 132,470
    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    I could go for those Davey odds. Not that he's done a bad job since a great GE, but things have been quiet, he's been around politics a long time, and with the party going to struggle to advance further maybe he'll take the option to say it's someone elses time.

    Other bets to clearly avoid:

    Trump won't be impeached in 2026 as he controls Congress.

    Burnham won't become an MP as he won't resign as mayor of Manchester to fight a by-election which he stands at best a 50/50 chance of winning in any seat.
    No if Trump is impeached again it will be in 2027 if the Democrats win the midterms, it only needs a simple majority of House Representatives to vote to pass articles of impeachment. Though a 2/3 majority of the Senate to convict a President after a trial.

    So far Trump is one of only 3 US Presidents to be impeached, the others being Johnson and Bill Clinton (Nixon resigned before he could be impeached). The odds are he will be the first President to be impeached twice before he leaves office
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 132,470
    Sandpit said:

    Lennon said:

    kle4 said:

    Foss said:

    Pro_Rata said:

    Is 16/1 attractive on 0 by-elections this year?

    I'm trying to think of ones that are potentially on their way for recalls, illnesses and the like and none spring to my mind. I'm not convinced the make way for Andy Burnham will manifest either.

    We were one punch away from no by-elections last year.

    Between 79 and 25 we averaged about four by elections a year.
    Deaths in office used to be higher, but getting through a year with no changes even now feels tough, though possible. And as time goes on more will be looking to jump ship or prepare new jobs.
    I'm tempted by the 16/1 on 0 by-elections this year partly as a proxy hedge (if there is a by-election, then chances are that I can make money on it - if there are none, then the opportunity is lost, so I get paid back in another way)
    The main risk imo is not scandal but that one of Labour's paper candidates swept up in the landslide realises they will never make the front bench and didn't spend their life in the movement to send small children up chimneys or whatever else Starmer & Reeves propose. A principled resignation and return to their old job where they can at least make a difference will scupper the bet.

    Wealth warning: I cannot get on with Ladbrokes so have not used too many brain cells on this.
    Doing a Louise Mensch, as it should be known.
    Louise Mensch was married to a multi millionaire New York based music manager though
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    HYUFD said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    I could go for those Davey odds. Not that he's done a bad job since a great GE, but things have been quiet, he's been around politics a long time, and with the party going to struggle to advance further maybe he'll take the option to say it's someone elses time.

    Other bets to clearly avoid:

    Trump won't be impeached in 2026 as he controls Congress.

    Burnham won't become an MP as he won't resign as mayor of Manchester to fight a by-election which he stands at best a 50/50 chance of winning in any seat.
    No if Trump is impeached again it will be in 2027 if the Democrats win the midterms, it only needs a simple majority of House Representatives to vote to pass articles of impeachment. Though a 2/3 majority of the Senate to convict a President after a trial.

    So far Trump is one of only 3 US Presidents to be impeached, the others being Johnson and Bill Clinton (Nixon resigned before he could be impeached). The odds are he will be the first President to be impeached twice before he leaves office
    He has already been impeached twice. Once over Ukraine, and once over the Capitol Riots.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 34,497
    OT two American pilots discuss the Harrier take-off & landing
    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/5qp8LfF5DbE

    That is 30 seconds clipped from
    The First U.S. Harrier Combat Mission
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xk9u04xfnBw
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 132,470
    edited 11:15AM

    With YouGov showing the LibDems in fifth, isn't the Davey out bet the one to take?

    No, the LDs are also likely to make gains in English counties and districts which have elections and the wealthiest parts of London from the Tories and Labour and rural Scotland and Edinburgh in the May elections from the Tories and SNP
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 132,470
    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    I could go for those Davey odds. Not that he's done a bad job since a great GE, but things have been quiet, he's been around politics a long time, and with the party going to struggle to advance further maybe he'll take the option to say it's someone elses time.

    Other bets to clearly avoid:

    Trump won't be impeached in 2026 as he controls Congress.

    Burnham won't become an MP as he won't resign as mayor of Manchester to fight a by-election which he stands at best a 50/50 chance of winning in any seat.
    No if Trump is impeached again it will be in 2027 if the Democrats win the midterms, it only needs a simple majority of House Representatives to vote to pass articles of impeachment. Though a 2/3 majority of the Senate to convict a President after a trial.

    So far Trump is one of only 3 US Presidents to be impeached, the others being Johnson and Bill Clinton (Nixon resigned before he could be impeached). The odds are he will be the first President to be impeached twice before he leaves office
    He has already been impeached twice. Once over Ukraine, and once over the Capitol Riots.
    The only President to have been impeached three times then, Trump will get the treble
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 76,778
    HYUFD said:

    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    ydoethur said:

    kle4 said:

    I could go for those Davey odds. Not that he's done a bad job since a great GE, but things have been quiet, he's been around politics a long time, and with the party going to struggle to advance further maybe he'll take the option to say it's someone elses time.

    Other bets to clearly avoid:

    Trump won't be impeached in 2026 as he controls Congress.

    Burnham won't become an MP as he won't resign as mayor of Manchester to fight a by-election which he stands at best a 50/50 chance of winning in any seat.
    No if Trump is impeached again it will be in 2027 if the Democrats win the midterms, it only needs a simple majority of House Representatives to vote to pass articles of impeachment. Though a 2/3 majority of the Senate to convict a President after a trial.

    So far Trump is one of only 3 US Presidents to be impeached, the others being Johnson and Bill Clinton (Nixon resigned before he could be impeached). The odds are he will be the first President to be impeached twice before he leaves office
    He has already been impeached twice. Once over Ukraine, and once over the Capitol Riots.
    The only President to have been impeached three times then, Trump will get the treble
    Trump is a case of trebles all round.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 53,691
    edited 11:22AM
    algarkirk said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    My predictions for 2026:
    Badenoch and Starmer still in place on 31st December.
    Reform do not have a clear polling lead by the end of the year.

    And for the next GE:
    Reform to come either second or third in respect of both votes and seats.
    The winnings for having laid Starmer and Badenoch's departure during 2025 (placed in Feb for Starmer and May for Badenoch) have just dropped into my account, and reinvesting some of it for the same outcome this year, while the odds for a lay - 3.2 for Kemi and 1.93 for Kier - still look attractive (significantly better than last year), is worth a punt IMHO. If only one of them makes it to Jan 2027, you'd more or less break even if you balance the bet sizes accordingly
  • CiceroCicero Posts: 4,086
    IanB2 said:

    algarkirk said:

    Sandpit said:

    The Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai is the first Russian oil refinery to be hit by Ukrainian drones in 2026. Previously targeted in November and September of 2025, it has a capacity of 6.5 million tons and is the... 26th largest refinery in Russia with about 2% of total Russian capacity.

    Also hit overnight was an oil terminal in Tartarstan that processes and stores crude oil from northern Russia oilfields. If the Ukrainians can damage that it might force some of the oil wells to shut down.

    And once shut down, oil wells can take years to restart so Russia will not want to allow that.
    Russia may not want =/= Russia can enforce.

    This winter is going to be brutal for all concerned in the Ukraine/Russia conflict. Ukrainians have endured 4 winters of it. Up to now, Russians in Moscow and St. Petersburg have endured 0. The shock for metropolitan Russians will be severe.
    Parts of Moscow and St.P spent last night without power, and at least four O&G facilities put on a free fireworks show.

    My prediction for ‘26 is that ordinary metropolitan Russians finally start to feel that their country is at war.
    My prediction for 2026 is that we'll be inundated with anniversaries: 10 years since Brexit; 100 years since the Great Depression; and that's just the big ones. 50 years since the long, hot summer of 76; 60 years since England won the World Cup (since renamed the Men's World Cup; no doubt soon to be renamed the Trump World Cup).
    My predictions for 2026:
    Badenoch and Starmer still in place on 31st December.
    Reform do not have a clear polling lead by the end of the year.

    And for the next GE:
    Reform to come either second or third in respect of both votes and seats.
    The winnings for having laid Starmer and Badenoch's departure during 2025 has just dropped into my account, and reinvesting some of it for the same outcome this year, while the odds for a lay still look attractive, is worth a punt IMHO.
    I think fourth in seats and quite possibly fourth in votes too.
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