politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The official campaign Day 1: The line-up for Thursday night

The line up on the stage was decided by lots being drawn this morning. It is hard to work out who has come out best. Farage has Clegg on his left and Miliband on his right though he’s some way along from Cameron.
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ELBOWing yesterday's ComRes and today's Populus, the Tories are 1.1% ahead so far this week!
So a tie with Populus is a Tory lead with most other pollsters because of their methodology/house effects.
Tories on their highest score (33.6%) in ELBOW since the very first week of the series (10th Aug = 33.7)
https://twitter.com/Sunil_P2/status/582185731872940032
Would be my guess.
Having seen my tip for Bennett he has raised the odds. I may be a rival for rogerdamus in forecasting skill...
Probably Thursday is not a good day for him to try and do imperious....
But I'm not going to get further in on this particular event.
Europeans and other migrants are much less keen on houses.
So do we know who will be going first, and whom will be last
* How different people get to argue with one another I don't know.
Keep shouting this from the rooftops, Mr Max. We have a number of young profs working for us and even the humblest london property is way beyond them. There is a whole army of these people and they are going to to swing it for labour.
They even know labour are cr8p, but if enough money flees London after a Milli victory, they might have a chance to buy.
Which indicates selling rather than buying is technically correct.
So what did Labour do about this problem which mostly built-up under their governance?
Labour do not have a solution, and will only end up making things worse. They always do.
That is why when the BBC / Guardian lose it over something they deem insensitive that he has said, I always wonder if he does it deliberately, because he doesn't care one jot what they think, but he knows that with the people he is targeting it will get reported upon.
Assigning probabilities on a market like this is really hard - but I can't see beyond farage. The chance of him getting over 25% of people saying he "won" is pretty high - 70% perhaps? - and that would be enough to come first or 2nd.
Anyway, here's my stab at it;
Farage's chance of coming...
1st 35%
2nd 35%
3rd 15%
4th 5%
5-7th 10%
On that basis he is probably just about a buy at 31.
Nick Clegg is probably a sell at 13, too.
It's decided by a yougov poll isn't it? Who scores low with YG and who has the least committed supporters?
Who isn't a new face on the scene? Who is famous for breaking promises from the last campaign? Whose main supporters were nota who feel swindled?
No working their way up the ladder, saving for a deposit or poisoning a granny for them just served up on a plate with the moon on a stick thrown in.
I think Sturgeon could outperform her market expectations and there are sound arguments for Cameron, Miliband and Farage but the market is technically a sell and Clegg looks the best one to flog to me.
The value, if there is any, is in the spread.
Populus:had a 2-point Labour lead on YouGov methodology - Populus weight for certainty to vote, which is slightly higher with the Tories in this poll. I don't think either does ICM-style reweighting to assume that half of don't knows go home? We could really do with an at-a-glance link to show the poll differences.
http://www.thenational.scot/politics/murphy-and-mundell-hit-by-party-shame-accusations-over-leaflets.1540
Fixed odds
Farage
Cameron
Miliband
Sturgeon
Clegg
Bennett
Wood
Spreads
Farage
Cameron
Miliband
Clegg
Sturgeon
Wood
Bennett
Out of order.
Maybe that's why Ed is not in Labour's latest PEB
This is what they did for the Farage/Clegg events last year
http://cdn.yougov.com/cumulus_uploads/document/ykmpjgw80r/YG-Archive-140326-Clegg-Farage.pdf
Especially if Carswell chooses Wednesday to announce he's leaving UKIP... ;-)
I fail to see why given this opportunity anyone should feel like ruining the entire country just to be selfish.
However, there is one important group who will both notice and care, and that is the type of person who reads the FT. Since presumably this is precisely the group whom Labour were trying to reach, it looks like a very silly, and expensive, own-goal.
If this was a one off I think Sturgeon would be going for Miliband's throat. She wants 30 odd seats off him and one at best from the Tories. But she is going to get another go uninterrupted in the also ran debate and this is going to be her only shot at Cameron.
There is also the consideration that one way of having a go at SLAB is to prove she can be even tougher on the Conservatives than they are and the positioning above may well tend her that way.
Cameron is likely to be attacked by the Greens and PC for the same reason, everyone trying to prove who is the most lefty. And then there is Nick trying to differentiate. And of course Farage is going to be coming at him too since UKIP have a far better chance at picking up Tory seats than Labour ones.
All in all, not a comfortable night for DC. Make your points in your minute short and sharp and then hope it falls into a rammy so you can say I told you so seems the best option. Ed will get his comeuppance in the next debate. I think he is a goodish bet for coming out of this one ok as the fire is focussed on DC.
Edit, I forgot to add that Ed will want to concentrate on DC too so everyone will be leaving Nicola alone making her a good bet.
I can't believe CCHQ took this slot by accident or under duress.
Or, to put it in plainer English, the original suggestion is bonkers.
The situation can be looked at in another way: an owner occupier effectively pays himself the rents and profits of his estate in land. Had he let the property to a tenant, he would be charged to income tax on those rents and profits. Why should he escape liability merely by choosing to live in?
Some of those quotes are 2yrs old. What were they thinking of? Nevermind hi-jacking them as spurious endorsements?
It's epically poor form.
Of course, most readers of the FT probably agree that leaving the EU would be a very bad idea, but that's a different point.
Retirement is a complete disaster for a lot of people.
I suspect it will be as successful as the Tories taking an ad out in the Guardian saying "trust us on the NHS".
She'll save the outright attacks for the next debate where she will have more time to work through details.
I really hate these "celeb" videos, endorsements, etc. Most are as normally about as in touch with the real world as top politicians.
This came up in brilliant red. Is this something new?
The issue about whether they got approval is a relatively minor (save in the case of the individual who expressed his views on a personal basis but is quoted in his role with a bank) one but it does show a failure to sweat the small stuff. It's this lack of attention to detail which will trip them up in government (if they get there). Nice vague ideas are not enough.
Backed Dave £10 4-1; Sturgeon £5 8-1; Clegg £3 10-1; Wood £2 50-1.
So probably
Clegg
Wood
Farage
Cameron
Miliband
Sturgeon
Bennett
Is the order
That =
*FT readers won't think it's duplicitous to use quotes without permission that aren't current as faux endorsement of Labour.
* FT readers won't be bothered by this duplicity as they're *sophisticated*
* FT readers won't be concerned that their investments won't be negatively effected by such faux endorsements as they weren't really real and everyone knows this?
It's nonsense on stilts and you know it too. I admire your determination to mitigate this crap PR exercise. But it remains a crap PR exercise. Having those who you used to endorse you saying WTF? How Dare You isn't ever a good outcome.
This new politics sure looks like the old politics.