politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Rubio the big betting gainer and Bush the big loser after a

Because there is a general clampdown down in the US on online betting many US observers are having to look at what is happening on the UK markets in order to get a sense of the betting sentiment on the White House Race.
Comments
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Mr. Rentool, 'pooled'?
Ha.
On-topic: I am mildly irked that my 50/1 bet on Rubio was for the preceding election. Morris Dancer = ahead of the times! [If Greening or Patel become the leader after next of the Conservatives I shall be very annoyed].0 -
Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.0
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I'm seeing double.0
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There's been speculation in some newspapers that he doesn't actually want it. Just going through the motions for family reasons.TheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
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I was reading something yesterday saying that Bush's support would entirely shift across to Rubio if he dropped out. Carson and Trump need to keep Bush in the race.0
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The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it0 -
The Common Agricultural Policy is 40% of the entire EU budget. I don't see how we can possibly justify taking money away from people suffering in Africa, yet still leave wealthy French farmers untouched.HurstLlama said:
By the same token why cannot the EU take the money it needs from existing budgets, perhaps spend less in one area in order to increase spending in another? Why is it that the EU's seemingly only solution to any problem is to demand more cash from its members' taxpayers.Richard_Nabavi said:
It could come out of the aid budget, so it needn't mean a net increase in our spending.DavidL said:But this is an EU problem, not a Greek or Hungary or Italy problem and we will need to help to clean up the mess. As you say it is in our interests to do so.
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Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it0 -
That would explain a lot.rottenborough said:
There's been speculation in some newspapers that he doesn't actually want it. Just going through the motions for family reasons.TheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
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FPT. Charles.
Partly the way my post was formatted. I was mainly aiming at Max's "Lazy Pakis vote Labour-Hard working Hindus vote Tory". You just joined in....
The problem with this site when it becomes completely Tory is that conversations which would normally be 'entre nous' you feel emboldened to say out loud0 -
Mr. Roger, 'entre nous'?0
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MD
Entre nous='between ourselves'0 -
Between ourselvesMorris_Dancer said:Mr. Roger, 'entre nous'?
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'entre nous' - openly slagging off English waitresses when one thinks we're amongst like minded bigoted souls.Morris_Dancer said:Mr. Roger, 'entre nous'?
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Cheers, Mr. Roger, Mr. Eagles, and Mr. 30.0
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Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank0 -
Would be interesting to hear what 'les indecideds' made of an Arron Banks funded film shown on the BBC that depicted a post EU Britain of social harmony, flourishing economy, zero crime and constant sunshine
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I'm putting together a thread on the Edstone.Anorak said:
Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank
I describe the Edstone as the most important obelisk in human history, even more so than the obelisk at the start of 20010 -
To me, Rubio looks the obvious choice for the Republicans. I think he would have an excellent chance of beating Hillary.
But I am quite a long way from a republican voter, let alone the average republican voter, and find it very hard to judge their thinking. What I can't help thinking is that these markets are getting driven more by people like me (who thinks Trump is a joke, more so than Corbyn even) than the people who are actually going to vote.
Or to put it another way, the markets are running dangerously far ahead of the polling. They may be right, I think they probably are, but it assumes not just common sense but a common frame of reference and I think that is missing.0 -
Then, he turns to Jimmy Saville for inspiration.TheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
I think Donald Trump, Herman Cain, or Christine O'Donnell would all make better candidates than Jeb.
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Because the French will say "NON"JEO said:
The Common Agricultural Policy is 40% of the entire EU budget. I don't see how we can possibly justify taking money away from people suffering in Africa, yet still leave wealthy French farmers untouched.HurstLlama said:
By the same token why cannot the EU take the money it needs from existing budgets, perhaps spend less in one area in order to increase spending in another? Why is it that the EU's seemingly only solution to any problem is to demand more cash from its members' taxpayers.Richard_Nabavi said:
It could come out of the aid budget, so it needn't mean a net increase in our spending.DavidL said:But this is an EU problem, not a Greek or Hungary or Italy problem and we will need to help to clean up the mess. As you say it is in our interests to do so.
It is a "Little Europe" policy that is well past it's sell by date.0 -
My money's split between Rubio and Trump with some speculative bets from some time ago on Fiorina who, to my mind at least, s by far the best candidate.DavidL said:To me, Rubio looks the obvious choice for the Republicans. I think he would have an excellent chance of beating Hillary.
But I am quite a long way from a republican voter, let alone the average republican voter, and find it very hard to judge their thinking. What I can't help thinking is that these markets are getting driven more by people like me (who thinks Trump is a joke, more so than Corbyn even) than the people who are actually going to vote.
Or to put it another way, the markets are running dangerously far ahead of the polling. They may be right, I think they probably are, but it assumes not just common sense but a common frame of reference and I think that is missing.
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@CycleFree
Mrs. Free, we spoke last night about cat food. Herself has just come home having done some shopping. Whilst helping to unpack (i.e. rummaging through the bags to see what goodies there are) I found a pack of frozen Crab Au Gratin. Naturally I made appreciative noises as a good husband should when his wife has bought him a treat. "Get off", she said, "Those aren't for you! They are for Thomas".
Good quality cat food is so expensive these days it is actually cheaper to feed the moggie on human food. A Waitrose roast chicken may not have the right mix of vitamins and minerals a cat needs but they only cost a fiver and when the moggie is over 18 years old does it matter.0 -
FWIW, punditry here thinks it is essentially between Rubio and Cruz at this point with Rubio the clear front runner and Cruz really just the flag bearer for the angry and ultra conservatives. Christie and Kasich are seen, as I voiced before this became the received wisdom, as the back ups in case Rubio falters.
Interesting to see Kasich's numbers have improved significantly as Bush has fallen.
Feeling smug to have been saying all along (at least since he announced and did not assume a commanding lead) that Jeb would not get it.0 -
F1: last time I'll put this up, but it was a bit late so you may have missed my post-race rambling about the Mexican Grand Prix, which went reasonably well:
http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2015/11/mexico-post-race-analysis.html0 -
rottenborough said:
There's been speculation in some newspapers that he doesn't actually want it. Just going through the motions for family reasons.TheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
I think that is re-writing history. Barbara Bush, who rules the family like an old-fashioned matriarch, was strongly opposed to Jeb running and had to be persuaded by him to give her blessing. He did not announce until he got it.0 -
Why not some good old Bush family sayings:Anorak said:
Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank
"Read my lips - no new taxes"
and
"Mission accomplished"0 -
Tut! 2001 had a monolith; obelisks are tapering. And you claim to be a classicist...TheScreamingEagles said:
I'm putting together a thread on the Edstone.Anorak said:
Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank
I describe the Edstone as the most important obelisk in human history, even more so than the obelisk at the start of 20010 -
What rot. You sought to taint the BBC's neutrality with wild accusations and minimal evidence. If you don't want derision heaped on you, don't conjure up absurd conspiracy theories.JEO said:
FPT You keep on arguing against strawman arguments I haven't said, like the BBC bidding for EU grants, or the EU being involved creatively in the programme. Those things are irrelevant. The only things you need to believe for my statement to be true are points 1 through 3. And you openly admit you don't know at least two of those points. But despite not knowing the facts, you insult someone that does know the facts for the conclusion that results from them.0 -
That it doesn't sound like compelling viewing. In other words, exactly what we made of the programme which JEO was getting so excited about.isam said:Would be interesting to hear what 'les indecideds' made of an Arron Banks funded film shown on the BBC that depicted a post EU Britain of social harmony, flourishing economy, zero crime and constant sunshine
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I think you are wrong on Fiorina. She is not a good campaigner and has way too much baggage in the closet which has not yet been fully deployed because she has not really cracked into the top tier.MikeSmithson said:
My money's split between Rubio and Trump with some speculative bets from some time ago on Fiorina who, to my mind at least, s by far the best candidate.DavidL said:To me, Rubio looks the obvious choice for the Republicans. I think he would have an excellent chance of beating Hillary.
But I am quite a long way from a republican voter, let alone the average republican voter, and find it very hard to judge their thinking. What I can't help thinking is that these markets are getting driven more by people like me (who thinks Trump is a joke, more so than Corbyn even) than the people who are actually going to vote.
Or to put it another way, the markets are running dangerously far ahead of the polling. They may be right, I think they probably are, but it assumes not just common sense but a common frame of reference and I think that is missing.
The natural politicians - those for whom it is 'easy' - in the GOP race are Rubio, Christie and Huckabee, although Huckabee could never get the nod.0 -
I can't think of any way to get the Deliverance banjo music into words. Maybe just "squeal like a pig".MTimT said:
Why not some good old Bush family sayings:Anorak said:
Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank
"Read my lips - no new taxes"
and
"Mission accomplished"0 -
Fiorina should be a strong candidate, in the same way as Huntsman should have been the last time, but sometimes it just doesn't happen. I think that once Trump starts falling it could be precipitous but I am conscious that I just found him ridiculous from day 1 and obviously many far more relevant Americans did not.MikeSmithson said:
My money's split between Rubio and Trump with some speculative bets from some time ago on Fiorina who, to my mind at least, s by far the best candidate.DavidL said:To me, Rubio looks the obvious choice for the Republicans. I think he would have an excellent chance of beating Hillary.
But I am quite a long way from a republican voter, let alone the average republican voter, and find it very hard to judge their thinking. What I can't help thinking is that these markets are getting driven more by people like me (who thinks Trump is a joke, more so than Corbyn even) than the people who are actually going to vote.
Or to put it another way, the markets are running dangerously far ahead of the polling. They may be right, I think they probably are, but it assumes not just common sense but a common frame of reference and I think that is missing.0 -
We get the text version of that on pb every day.isam said:Would be interesting to hear what 'les indecideds' made of an Arron Banks funded film shown on the BBC that depicted a post EU Britain of social harmony, flourishing economy, zero crime and constant sunshine
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Even if that were true, you criticise it!antifrank said:
We get the text version of that on pb every day.isam said:Would be interesting to hear what 'les indecideds' made of an Arron Banks funded film shown on the BBC that depicted a post EU Britain of social harmony, flourishing economy, zero crime and constant sunshine
But I don't really remember anyone suggesting any of that, it's normally that it wouldn't be much different, but we'd be in control
As I said yesterday, I'd rather Corbyn PM and open borders outside the EU ham the status quo. At least we could vote him out and he couldnt do the Cameron/May routine of blaming their hands being tied by some EU bureaucrat0 -
It doesn't I agree, but it wouldn't get shown and that's the differenceRichard_Nabavi said:
That it doesn't sound like compelling viewing. In other words, exactly what we made of the programme which JEO was getting so excited about.isam said:Would be interesting to hear what 'les indecideds' made of an Arron Banks funded film shown on the BBC that depicted a post EU Britain of social harmony, flourishing economy, zero crime and constant sunshine
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On topic, the UK betting markets on the US seem to me to be lagging rather than leading.
I'd not be comfortable betting against Ted Cruz at present.0 -
It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.0
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I think they are wholly unreliable. On average, I'd say that in political markets, people tend to bet on outcomes they want, rather than on what really will happen (of course, PB betters excepted). That is bad enough when the betters are voters. But when they are not even citizens of the country in which the election is to be held, and cannot have that gut feeling for elections that comes with living in the country, I'd strongly caution against placing much credence in them at all as predictors.antifrank said:On topic, the UK betting markets on the US seem to me to be lagging rather than leading.
I'd not be comfortable betting against Ted Cruz at present.0 -
Rubio is, perhaps, rightly favourite, but the current odds are too short. There are still many banana skins in his path. These include fundraising (he hasn't done much), organisation (he hasn't got much), relative inexperience, a patchy Senate record, and his position on immigration.
See here for a useful summary of his position and the field as a whole:
http://www.centerforpolitics.org/crystalball/articles/republicans-2016-oct-28-debate/
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To this longtime Bush-sceptic, it is no surprise he's going nowhere but it still looks murky. It may be a mistake to treat Carson and Trump as the same. From the far side of the Atlantic, it looks like Carson has the religious and rural right who might have gone to Huckabee, whereas the ideologically uncertain Trump has NOTA and voters who might otherwise go to Cruz (and for that reason, Cruz might be worth a look as VP candidate to a centrist at the top).MTimT said:FWIW, punditry here thinks it is essentially between Rubio and Cruz at this point with Rubio the clear front runner and Cruz really just the flag bearer for the angry and ultra conservatives. Christie and Kasich are seen, as I voiced before this became the received wisdom, as the back ups in case Rubio falters.
Interesting to see Kasich's numbers have improved significantly as Bush has fallen.
Feeling smug to have been saying all along (at least since he announced and did not assume a commanding lead) that Jeb would not get it.
The GOP Establishment has not jumped one way or the other. Bush remains in the race. Ryan as new Speaker might even make a difference if a more confrontational Congress pushes the candidates that way.0 -
The Bushes are old money Kennenbunkport - true WASPs, for all their Texas and Florida connections. Deliverance is hardly their style.Anorak said:
I can't think of any way to get the Deliverance banjo music into words. Maybe just "squeal like a pig".MTimT said:
Why not some good old Bush family sayings:Anorak said:
Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank
"Read my lips - no new taxes"
and
"Mission accomplished"0 -
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"Some people call you the Elite. I call you my base"MTimT said:
Why not some good old Bush family sayings:Anorak said:
Ooooo! We should have a competition for best suggested inscription (or engraving?).TheScreamingEagles said:
Jeb'll fix it with an 8 foot 6 inch limestone policy obelisk.Tissue_Price said:
The slogan was only the start of itTheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
He wrote it, and now he's a part of it
Having said that, I'm drawing a blank
"Read my lips - no new taxes"
and
"Mission accomplished"0 -
Dear Bill,Roger said:FPT. Charles.
Partly the way my post was formatted. I was mainly aiming at Max's "Lazy Pakis vote Labour-Hard working Hindus vote Tory". You just joined in....
The problem with this site when it becomes completely Tory is that conversations which would normally be 'entre nous' you feel emboldened to say out loud
Entre nous...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dear_Bill
You are a Private Eye Reader from the 1980s, and I claim my five gold sovereigns.0 -
Once again, you completely fail to engage with my arguments or the facts of the debate. As soon as the argument paints you into a corner, where you're forced to either deny something obviously true or concede the argument, you just avoid answering and start insulting the other person.antifrank said:
What rot. You sought to taint the BBC's neutrality with wild accusations and minimal evidence. If you don't want derision heaped on you, don't conjure up absurd conspiracy theories.JEO said:
FPT You keep on arguing against strawman arguments I haven't said, like the BBC bidding for EU grants, or the EU being involved creatively in the programme. Those things are irrelevant. The only things you need to believe for my statement to be true are points 1 through 3. And you openly admit you don't know at least two of those points. But despite not knowing the facts, you insult someone that does know the facts for the conclusion that results from them.
I don't actually care if you deride me. There are a great number of informed voices on this board from all over the political shop, whose opinions I respect. But then there are a handful of individuals like yourself, Dair or malcolmg who allow emotion to overflow critical thinking, and when challenged start name-calling.0 -
FPT Charles, I always find Edith Cavell's story moving.
I think it's wrong to view her as victim and martyr, as wartime propaganda portrayed her; rather as a woman of exceptional courage and resourcefulness, who knew very well that she was gambling her life, in order to rescue her countrymen.0 -
But not funded with taxpayer's money.antifrank said:
We get the text version of that on pb every day.isam said:Would be interesting to hear what 'les indecideds' made of an Arron Banks funded film shown on the BBC that depicted a post EU Britain of social harmony, flourishing economy, zero crime and constant sunshine
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Your "argument", as you choose to call it, is that EU funding tentacles into the BBC are tainting the debate. The evidence that you've produced? The production company of one film that ultimately appeared on the BBC may have received EU funding - though there's no evidence that it had anything to do with the content and the funding may well have been for entirely technical matters.JEO said:
Once again, you completely fail to engage with my arguments or the facts of the debate. As soon as the argument paints you into a corner, where you're forced to either deny something obviously true or concede the argument, you just avoid answering and start insulting the other person.antifrank said:
What rot. You sought to taint the BBC's neutrality with wild accusations and minimal evidence. If you don't want derision heaped on you, don't conjure up absurd conspiracy theories.JEO said:
FPT You keep on arguing against strawman arguments I haven't said, like the BBC bidding for EU grants, or the EU being involved creatively in the programme. Those things are irrelevant. The only things you need to believe for my statement to be true are points 1 through 3. And you openly admit you don't know at least two of those points. But despite not knowing the facts, you insult someone that does know the facts for the conclusion that results from them.
I don't actually care if you deride me. There are a great number of informed voices on this board from all over the political shop, whose opinions I respect. But then there are a handful of individuals like yourself, Dair or malcolmg who allow emotion to overflow critical thinking, and when challenged start name-calling.
And you wonder why I deride you?0 -
That's really what I was saying. Just because Americans speak a kind of English we think we understand them much more than we do.MTimT said:
I think they are wholly unreliable. On average, I'd say that in political markets, people tend to bet on outcomes they want, rather than on what really will happen (of course, PB betters excepted). That is bad enough when the betters are voters. But when they are not even citizens of the country in which the election is to be held, and cannot have that gut feeling for elections that comes with living in the country, I'd strongly caution against placing much credence in them at all as predictors.antifrank said:On topic, the UK betting markets on the US seem to me to be lagging rather than leading.
I'd not be comfortable betting against Ted Cruz at present.0 -
This is why Cameron's renegotiation is so important. If we mange to get the critical reforms needed to the EU, it will show that an Anglo-German axis can overcome the historic Franco-German one.Pulpstar said:
Because the French will say "NON"JEO said:
The Common Agricultural Policy is 40% of the entire EU budget. I don't see how we can possibly justify taking money away from people suffering in Africa, yet still leave wealthy French farmers untouched.HurstLlama said:
By the same token why cannot the EU take the money it needs from existing budgets, perhaps spend less in one area in order to increase spending in another? Why is it that the EU's seemingly only solution to any problem is to demand more cash from its members' taxpayers.Richard_Nabavi said:
It could come out of the aid budget, so it needn't mean a net increase in our spending.DavidL said:But this is an EU problem, not a Greek or Hungary or Italy problem and we will need to help to clean up the mess. As you say it is in our interests to do so.
It is a "Little Europe" policy that is well past it's sell by date.0 -
============================DavidL said:To me, Rubio looks the obvious choice for the Republicans. I think he would have an excellent chance of beating Hillary.
But I am quite a long way from a republican voter, let alone the average republican voter, and find it very hard to judge their thinking. What I can't help thinking is that these markets are getting driven more by people like me (who thinks Trump is a joke, more so than Corbyn even) than the people who are actually going to vote.
Or to put it another way, the markets are running dangerously far ahead of the polling. They may be right, I think they probably are, but it assumes not just common sense but a common frame of reference and I think that is missing.
I lived in America for 25 yrs in 8 western states and have followed US politics extensively
RUBIO is indeed the obvious choice for the Republicans with at least a 50/50 chance of beating Hillary ..he's probably the only one who can beat her ; he's young , dynamic and ''Kennedy-esque ''and offers the best contrast to the aging establishment figure (Hillary) who has a smug and preening sense of entitlement that is sure to tempt fate
He is in some ways a Republican Obama and Obama beat Hillary ...American politics are intertwined with Hollywood and Rubio looks and sounds like someone from the entertainment industry ...sounds like a recipe for success to me
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When does the renegotiation start btw ?0
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=========================antifrank said:On topic, the UK betting markets on the US seem to me to be lagging rather than leading.
I'd not be comfortable betting against Ted Cruz at present.
If Rubio fails then Cruz is the backup , but Cruz seems too provincial and Texan , too Elmore Gantry for the under 40 crowd in the swing states
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Rubio and Cruz are the same age !Cromwell said:
=========================antifrank said:On topic, the UK betting markets on the US seem to me to be lagging rather than leading.
I'd not be comfortable betting against Ted Cruz at present.
If Rubio fails then Cruz is the backup , but Cruz seems too provincial and Texan , too Elmore Gantry for the under 40 crowd in the swing states
I do like Cruz's plans for US space exploration tho ;p0 -
Well that's good to hear but why is he not polling better, fundraising better and organising better?Cromwell said:
============================DavidL said:To me, Rubio looks the obvious choice for the Republicans. I think he would have an excellent chance of beating Hillary.
But I am quite a long way from a republican voter, let alone the average republican voter, and find it very hard to judge their thinking. What I can't help thinking is that these markets are getting driven more by people like me (who thinks Trump is a joke, more so than Corbyn even) than the people who are actually going to vote.
Or to put it another way, the markets are running dangerously far ahead of the polling. They may be right, I think they probably are, but it assumes not just common sense but a common frame of reference and I think that is missing.
I lived in America for 25 yrs in 8 western states and have followed US politics extensively
RUBIO is indeed the obvious choice for the Republicans with at least a 50/50 chance of beating Hillary ..he's probably the only one who can beat her ; he's young , dynamic and ''Kennedy-esque ''and offers the best contrast to the aging establishment figure (Hillary) who has a smug and preening sense of entitlement that is sure to tempt fate
He is in some ways a Republican Obama and Obama beat Hillary ...American politics are intertwined with Hollywood and Rubio looks and sounds like someone from the entertainment industry ...sounds like a recipe for success to me0 -
I suspect that the Republicans will win Florida , Ohio , Iowa , Nevada and Colorado ...they could possibly even win Penn ...the Dems must win either Florida , Ohio or Penn0
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Rubio may not be the beneficiary if Bush withdraws. Someone like Kasich is more likely (imo) to pick up his support. Rubio and Bush may both come from Florida but that is where it ends, so far as I can see. Kasich is more like Bush politically, representing centrist pragmatism, so may pick up Bush voters and more importantly, Establishment and donor support.0
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Sure, a fake documentary showing how the collapse of the EU caused catastrophe for Europe was funded by the EU for entirely technical matters.antifrank said:
Your "argument", as you choose to call it, is that EU funding tentacles into the BBC are tainting the debate. The evidence that you've produced? The production company of one film that ultimately appeared on the BBC may have received EU funding - though there's no evidence that it had anything to do with the content and the funding may well have been for entirely technical matters.
And you wonder why I deride you?
I know why you deride me. You have a habit of deriding everyone that disagrees with you. It substitutes for critical thinking.0 -
Kasich definitely seemed slightly to the left of Bush from what I could pick up in the debates.DecrepitJohnL said:Rubio may not be the beneficiary if Bush withdraws. Someone like Kasich is more likely (imo) to pick up his support. Rubio and Bush may both come from Florida but that is where it ends, so far as I can see. Kasich is more like Bush politically, representing centrist pragmatism, so may pick up Bush voters and more importantly, Establishment and donor support.
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On American politics I really like to read Chris Cillizza. This was his piece on Ryan becoming speaker: https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/ryan-has-a-lot-going-for-him-but-hes-still-unlikely-to-heal-a-broken-house/2015/11/01/6e73549a-80a9-11e5-9afb-0c971f713d0c_story.html
He says:
"A 2014 study by the Pew Research Center showed that 92 percent of Republicans are more ideologically conservative than the median Democrat, and that 94 percent of Democrats are more liberal than the mean Republican. Compare that with a 1994 Pew study that found that the median Democrat was to the left of 64 percent of Republicans, and the median Republican to the right of 70 percent of Democrats. There is just not much middle ground left in America anymore."
I think this is right and it gives more extreme candidates in both parties a considerable edge that they would not have with the population as a whole. Like antifrank, and for this reason, I would not rule out Cruz.0 -
As I said previously, you're welcome to your conspiracy theories but I won't be subscribing to your newsletter.JEO said:
Sure, a fake documentary showing how the collapse of the EU causing catastrophe for Europe was funded by the EU for entirely technical matters.antifrank said:
Your "argument", as you choose to call it, is that EU funding tentacles into the BBC are tainting the debate. The evidence that you've produced? The production company of one film that ultimately appeared on the BBC may have received EU funding - though there's no evidence that it had anything to do with the content and the funding may well have been for entirely technical matters.
And you wonder why I deride you?
I know why you deride me. You have a habit of deriding everyone that disagrees with you. It substitutes for critical thinking.0 -
Mr. JEO, nonsense.
I also enjoyed this FIFA documentary:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Passions0 -
I think the reason why the BBC has lost so much in reputation is that they simply don't care about thruth in evidence. A dozen years ago the BBC Panorama team came to Bournemouth to cover a story on rough sleepers under one of the Bournemouth piers. They presented a 23 year old man as one of the rough sleepers - but he had a council flat, on benefits with alcholism - the BBC interviewed him in the road outside his flat and paid for the interview with bottles of vodka. The program made me question the BBC's honesty.
Whether or not there is/was a problem with rough sleepers in Bournemouth I don't know.0 -
Indeed, that already appears to be happening.DecrepitJohnL said:Rubio may not be the beneficiary if Bush withdraws. Someone like Kasich is more likely (imo) to pick up his support. Rubio and Bush may both come from Florida but that is where it ends, so far as I can see. Kasich is more like Bush politically, representing centrist pragmatism, so may pick up Bush voters and more importantly, Establishment and donor support.
I'd still like to see a Kasich/Rubio ticket, but at this stage it is more likely to be Rubio at the top, and someone else on the bottom. Probably a woman.0 -
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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Rubio has had a slow start due to the fact that he has been overshadowed by Jeb who has most of the financial support but the big donors are quickly losing confidence in Jeb and are about to abandon ship and support Rubio ..Sheldon Adelson is about to back Rubio
Trump is just a lot of noise and bluster , while the hapless Carson seems like he is promoting his books ; neither have any real intentions of becoming President ...I suspect that Rubio will win New Hampshire0 -
I'm sure FIFA chose to fund that documentary for technical reasons, and it was nothing to do with showing FIFA in a positive light.Morris_Dancer said:Mr. JEO, nonsense.
I also enjoyed this FIFA documentary:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Passions0 -
Regan?Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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That sounds about right , but it could be Rubio/Kasich as a way to win ohioMTimT said:
Indeed, that already appears to be happening.DecrepitJohnL said:Rubio may not be the beneficiary if Bush withdraws. Someone like Kasich is more likely (imo) to pick up his support. Rubio and Bush may both come from Florida but that is where it ends, so far as I can see. Kasich is more like Bush politically, representing centrist pragmatism, so may pick up Bush voters and more importantly, Establishment and donor support.
I'd still like to see a Kasich/Rubio ticket, but at this stage it is more likely to be Rubio at the top, and someone else on the bottom. Probably a woman.
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0
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Kasich makes sense as a VP due to his Ohio links.0
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Reagan had George HW Bush as VP.HurstLlama said:
Regan?Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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No Rod Crosby to tell us Rubio isn't eligible?0
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Don't know much about Rubio yet.
He doesn't look too rabid, though.
http://votesmart.org/candidate/political-courage-test/1601/marco-rubio/#.VjjjQPnhDcs0 -
Appreciate it's a satirical question, but Herbert Hoover, 1928Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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Ah, sorry.Sunil_Prasannan said:
Reagan had George HW Bush as VP.HurstLlama said:
Regan?Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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Ford/Rockefeller ?0
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Herbert Hoover, 1928 (VP was Charles Curtis)Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
EDIT: got beaten to it!0 -
Reagan didn't do too badly. I doubt Bush on the bottom of the ticket helped in the slightest.Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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That turns out to be a smart question and as the answer shows, its getting on for 100 yearsAlistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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Hillary Clinton Will Be The Forty Fifth President Of The United States.
HCWBTFFPOTUS0 -
I agree with you, but I'm guessing part of the problem is the way the bbc farms its programmes out to independent production companies who have sensationalism as a motive.PAW said:I think the reason why the BBC has lost so much in reputation is that they simply don't care about thruth in evidence. A dozen years ago the BBC Panorama team came to Bournemouth to cover a story on rough sleepers under one of the Bournemouth piers. They presented a 23 year old man as one of the rough sleepers - but he had a council flat, on benefits with alcholism - the BBC interviewed him in the road outside his flat and paid for the interview with bottles of vodka. The program made me question the BBC's honesty.
Whether or not there is/was a problem with rough sleepers in Bournemouth I don't know.
The BBC is also obsessed with ratings when it should not be. As a mega multi billion pound organisation with no requirement to make a profit the BBC is at leisure to pay itself very comfortable salaries indeed.0 -
Not sure that Nixon on the bottom of Eisenhower's ticket was really necessary to winning either...MTimT said:
Reagan didn't do too badly. I doubt Bush on the bottom of the ticket helped in the slightest.Alistair said:
I'm not really being serious but when was the last time the Republicans won a presidential election without a Nixon or Bush on the ticket?MTimT said:
Not sure I follow. Can you expand?Alistair said:
The argument is unless the republicans pull out a candidate with a surname of Nixon then their amazing record will continue.Danny565 said:It's very hard to see what the argument for Jeb Bush is. Not conservative enough to get the core vote enthused, has a last name which is toxic for swing voters, little charisma or likability to compensate for any of that.
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I thought they had. Do you think that when various bodies finally gather around the table they will not have actually sorted out the main points before hand?Pulpstar said:When does the renegotiation start btw ?
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OMG. Shock resignation of one of UKIP's leading and most valuable members:
Winston McKenzie
http://www.itv.com/news/london/2015-11-03/high-profile-ukip-member-quits-party/
The question is, who will he join next?0 -
The EU funds this really brilliant stuff as well
http://www.captaineuro.eu/comic-strips/david-cameron-and-the-f-word/
http://www.captaineuro.eu/comic-strips/the-norway-option-is-not-an-option/
Note the second one in particular..0 -
Jeb has greater hopes for his son than himself. The establishment persuaded him to run. When you look at the rag tag and bobtail if the other candidates you can see why.MTimT said:rottenborough said:
There's been speculation in some newspapers that he doesn't actually want it. Just going through the motions for family reasons.TheScreamingEagles said:Jeb is running a truly dire campaign. You'd think Ed Miliband was his campaign chief.
I think that is re-writing history. Barbara Bush, who rules the family like an old-fashioned matriarch, was strongly opposed to Jeb running and had to be persuaded by him to give her blessing. He did not announce until he got it.
You also have to question why the GOP think it clever to line up a dozen or more prospective candidates, half of them self publicists, on national TV to make the party look stupid in public.0 -
Britain Elects @britainelects 31 mins31 minutes ago
EU referendum poll:
Remain: 44% (-1)
Leave: 38% (-)
(via ICM / Oct 30 - 01 Nov)0 -
All to play for.chestnut said:Britain Elects @britainelects 31 mins31 minutes ago
EU referendum poll:
Remain: 44% (-1)
Leave: 38% (-)
(via ICM / Oct 30 - 01 Nov)0 -
Broken, sleazy Remain on the slide?chestnut said:Britain Elects @britainelects 31 mins31 minutes ago
EU referendum poll:
Remain: 44% (-1)
Leave: 38% (-)
(via ICM / Oct 30 - 01 Nov)0 -
Listen to your Arse, Jack. Your Hillary prediction is your Ass speaking. That ghastly woman will never be President.JackW said:Hillary Clinton Will Be The Forty Fifth President Of The United States.
HCWBTFFPOTUS0 -
Time for a sequel to the "Great European Disaster Movie"?chestnut said:Britain Elects @britainelects 31 mins31 minutes ago
EU referendum poll:
Remain: 44% (-1)
Leave: 38% (-)
(via ICM / Oct 30 - 01 Nov)
Maybe this time instead of race riots w Farage and Le Pen in charge of England and France they can make it even more scary
The Ghost of Adolf Hitler and Nick Griffin agree to increase Global Warming?0 -
Paraphrasing someone formerly of this parish: An utterly sensational poll for Leave. Their highest poll ever received by ICM on the first day of a month!MP_SE said:
All to play for.chestnut said:Britain Elects @britainelects 31 mins31 minutes ago
EU referendum poll:
Remain: 44% (-1)
Leave: 38% (-)
(via ICM / Oct 30 - 01 Nov)
I'll get my coat....0