politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Latest ICM EURef tracker edges to REMAIN in line with other

In what’s likely to be the last EURef poll of 2015 ICM online reports an increase in the REMAIN lead from 1% a week ago to 7% now. This is the same direction that we’ve seen in all EURef polls over past week.
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From the ONS website:
"Due to the volatility of the monthly data, the cumulative financial year-to-date borrowing figuresprovide a better indication of the progress of the public finances than the individual months."
"Public sector net borrowing excluding public sector banks decreased by £6.6 billion to £66.9
billion in the current financial year-to-date (April 2015 to November 2015) compared with the
same period in 2014"
but you may know better.
With Challenger they should have aborted given the unknown effect of the sub-zero temperatures on a whole load of systems, especially but not solely the O-rings on the SRBs that caused the accident. There was too much pressure applied given previous aborts to the mission, especially with the Teacher in Space program making the mission more high profile than usual.
With Columbia they had 20 years of data that showed tiles missing and various damage caused to the Orbiters by foam debris. The whole design was a ticking time bomb but again the risk was thought to be acceptable - until the day of the inevitable accident. George W Bush, addressing the nation on the day of the Columbia tragedy.
Even to those involved, it had become routine, when in reality nothing could be further from the truth. This IS rocket science after all.
Dan Hodges
Corbyn: "I’m quite concerned that if I spend time in the office someone will always find something for you to do".
http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0001yB
It's being so cheerful, wot keeps you going.
That was the beginning of the end of the shuttle.
What does Labour do when polls show immigration / terrorism no. 1 issue? Produce an email poll of members saying they are wrong? Daft.
They would have required everything to go their way. NASA are good, but not that good.
(1) http://arstechnica.com/science/2014/02/the-audacious-rescue-plan-that-might-have-saved-space-shuttle-columbia/
George not being the next Tory leader makes me cheerful, he will repel floating voters in droves.
One good thing to come out of the Columbia accident - video of the launches. Ultra slo-mo, HD video.
45 minutes of rocket-p0rn. Enjoy!
https://youtube.com/vFwqZ4qAUkE
But hey, they won Oldham so...
It was strangely controversial in blue-chip land. I could almost feel the relief wash over the audience when I said I didn't have a single slide for them to endure. I had to rely on being interesting and knowing my subject like the back of my hand. My worst experience was sitting in a BT site in Oswestry - on a BH weekend Friday afternoon when the host stood up and clicked... 1/176 in the corner. Of network diagrams.
Do we have any breakdown on the polling? Who are traitorous MFCSes that want to betray us to the Borg Collective?
Gareth Siddorn
In which Polly Toynbee warns of the dangers of being a splitter https://t.co/Un3nLhMqvo https://t.co/iZCu1bFVCl
Corbyn is poison outside his comfort zone of safe seats. The attacks on him haven't started yet as far as the general public are concerned.
I used the old Tell Them What You're Going To Tell Them, Tell Them, Tell Them What You Told Them structure. Once you've got the structure for the story - the rest is much easier than it sounds. I gave short hand-outs at the end as a reminder if that fitted the subject, but not too often. The Q&As were much more useful.
I was the PR to the CTO of BT Exact and endured more network diagrams than is healthy. I don't mind them, but 176 on a Friday afternoon with a 5hr drive home was beyond even me. Oh, and he liked clip art...
For instance, on this site, two recent headers have used the IPSOS MORI polling; one to say that Immigration being the most potent issue isn't evidence that immigration is a big issue and another to say that the EU being least potent is evidence that it is not an issue
To coin a phrase.
A drop in Labour's vote from any council election held in May 2015 (on a day when they were already 7% behind nationally) is very worrying indeed. But a drop back from a council election held in May 2012 (their midterm peak where they were well ahead in national polls) is to be expected.
Cameron really is an electoral asset for Cons and every referendum he's been on.
We'll see whether the renegotiation is more Softsword or Lionheart.
I'm doing the Sunday thread and I'm stuck on an analogy.
During the Labour leadership election, was Andy Burnham Varro or Paullus?
IMHO treat with considerable caution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Minucius_Rufus
As a flip-flopper, King John is actually a decent comparison, though he's rather more vindictive than I could imagine Burnham ever being.
General Elphinstone, maybe?
Severely ill Myrtle Cothill told she must leave her daughter’s care and return to her birth country of South Africa, where she has no relatives"
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/dec/22/widow-faces-deportation-from-uk-despite-being-92-and-frail
The GE polls were absolutely spot for everything apart from the one thing that actually mattered.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/us/general_election_trump_vs_clinton-5491.html
The latest polling has Cruz closing on Trump.
WATCH: ISF learn to assemble the SAME bridges used today in Ramadi during Coalition training earlier this month. https://t.co/cAUMRy3D6x
Eastern (average Labour vote share -4.1%)
Bourn (S Cambridgeshire) +2.9%
Chedgrave & Thurton (S Norfolk) -0.8%
Dedham & Langham (Colchester) -4.3%
Hertford Heath (E Herts) -1.7%
Huntingdon East (Huntingdonshire) -2.9%
Loddon (Norfolk) -8.4%
Rochford (Rochford) -16.0%
Shenfield (Brentwood) -0.7%
S Smallborough (Norfolk) -5.3%
Watton (Norfolk) -5.4%
West (Peterborough) -2.1%
East Midlands (average -5.6%)
Belvoir (S Kesteven) -15.1%
Coal Ashton (NE Derbyshire) -6.7%
Derwent Valley (Derbyshire) -1.7%
Holmewood & Heath (NE Derbyshire) +7.4%
Market Logan (Harborough) -5.9%
Selston (Ashfield) -4.3%
Selston (Nottinghamshire) -13.2%
London (average +3.3%)
Boleyn (Newham) +7.9%
Bryanston & Dorset Square (Westminster) -5.7%
Kensal Green (Brent) -1.0%
Noel Park (Haringey) +7.5%
S Camberwell (Southwark) +9.0%
Woodside (Haringey) +1.9%
North
Howgate (Cumbria) -12.9%
North West (average -5.5%)
Carnforth & Millhead (Lancaster) -2.8%
Clifton (Fylde) -9.6%
Congleton E (E Cheshire) +1.4%
Euxton N (Chorley) +12.7%
Risedale (Barrow in Furness) -24.1%
Tottington (Bury) -10.5%
Scotland (average -8.8%)
Ayr E (S Ayrshire) -7.3%
Blantyre (S Lanarkshire) -7.0%
Dunfermline N (Fife) -18.7%
George Street/Harbour (Aberdeen) -5.4%
Glenrothes W & Kinglassie -9.3%
Irvine Valley (E Ayrshire) -6.3%
Linlithgow (W Lothian) +2.6%
Midstocket/Rosemount (Aberdeen) -11.2%
Rosyth (Fife) -13.2%
Stirling E (Stirling) -11.9%
South East (average -2.6%)
Ash South & Tongham (Guildford) -5.1%
Aylesford Green (Ashford) -32.4%
Chandler’s Ford (Hampshire) +1.9%
Epsom W (Surrey) +2.1%
Goldsworth E (Woking) -1.0%
Goldsworth W (Woking) +1.3%
Grimsbury & Castle (Cherwell) +5.9%
Northfield Brook (Oxford) +2.1%
Sandford & the Wittenhams (S Oxfordshire) -3.7%
Shepperton Town (Spelthorne) -4.8%
Sonning Common (S Oxfordshire) +4.7%
South West (average no change in Labour vote)
Clifton with Maidenway (Torbay) -9.0%
Kinson South (Bournemouth) +7.0%
Rodwell (Dorset) -7.3%
Salisbury St Edmund & Milford (Wiltshire) +5.6%
Totnes (South Hams) +3.7%
Wales (average +0.1%)
Bettws (Newport) +6.8%
Dewi (Gwynedd) -0.2%
Gogarth (Conwy) +1.4%
Kidwelly (Carmarthenshire) -10.6%
Ogmore Vale (Bridgend) +3.7%
Riverside (Cardiff) -0.8%
West Midlands (average -10.6%)
Belle Vue (Shropshire) -28.7%
Blakebrook & S Habberley -1.7%
Meole (Shropshire) -11.0%
Stourport-on-Severn (Worcs) -0.8%
Yorkshire & Humberside
Pontefract N (Wakefield) +0.1%
http://labourlist.org/2015/12/the-electoral-challenge-how-are-labour-performing-in-by-elections-since-corbyn-became-leader/
Yes polls are right even when they are wrong. Dewey actually beat Truman as well.
I hope the guys going into Ramadi have a lot of luck. ISIS have a tactic of setting many things to blow as they leave. IEDs everywhere.
His main polling rival, Ted Cruz is unlikely to prove overly popular away from southern/bible facing states. I'm not saying Cruz can't win, but it is difficult for an evangelical candidate to do so.
The early front runner (Yes he was at one very, very early point) and grandee favourite Jeb Bush has tanked completely. He STILL has the most endorsements from the party grandees though - see http://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2016-endorsement-primary/.
He is sitting at a not quite low enough to drop out but enough to be unthreatening in the polls ~ 7-9% or so.
Mark Rubio, the establishment's great white* NEW hope is meanwhile stuck at around 12 - 16%. Why he's 2-1 in the betting right now I'll never know. He's running a top down model and trying to get the broad support needed to sweep all before him. Except we all know how Giuliani's "Florida strategy" worked out..
Meanwhile Chris Christie is trying very hard in New Hampshire. It probably won't be enough to win, but he'll keep going and along with Jeb Bush's residual support it'll be enough to make sure Rubio probably is nowhere near Trump there. He might even finish second, SECOND ! in New Hampshire if he focusses enough effrot on it... which could gain him endorsements and cash which may otherwise head Rubio's way from Jeb's failed campaign.
Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, Rand Paul, Rick Santorum and whoever else is still in it are complete no hopers meanwhile, although if Carson fades further it may yet boost Cruz - cementing him even further as Trump's main rival ... but the Iowa/other bible belt main candidate is always second favourite to the less religous other contender (See Romney/Santorum).
It is all workingly amazingly well for Donald Trump.
*Sort of !
Although there has not been a referendum on an Exit before, there have been referendums in a number of countries (Denmark, Ireland, Greece, etc) on Treaty ratifications, or increased European integration or acceptance of EU bailout terms, and so on.
Of course, Irish voters famously rejected the Treaties of Nice and Lisbon first time.
In general, my impression is that the polls have always underestimated the hostility to the EU. For example, the opinion polls on the Irish 2008 referendum grossly overstated the 'in favour of acceptance' side (according to wiki)
It would be interesting to see that quantified. If there is a systematic effect, I would expect to see it replicated in UK polls for the Brexit.
(I would guess the origin of the effect is in how the Don't Knows actually break).
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/12064532/Jeremy-Vine-BBC-equality-breach-for-saying-he-had-man-flu.html
Thanks for that Mr. Pulpstar.
A report I read suggested Hillary's recent assault on Trump for being a gift to ISIS recruiters appeared to backfire badly.
In some respects Rodhers is a deeply flawed candidate.
The last Cardiff local election was in May 2012, when nationally Labour were 8% higher than in May 2015. Therefore, a 1% drop from 2012 is 7% above Labour's equivalent performance at this year's GE.
If things like "man flu" become taboo, Vine's brother is going to be out of a job pretty quickly.
As an aside, Orléans is named after Emperor Aurelian.
And here's a prediction, offered free of charge: January receipts will surprise on the upside. You read it here first.
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/oct/30/galloper-windfarm-suffolk-new-backers
Doug
It seems only right that I should point out this error. https://t.co/9ApBwlyyqk
I agree that self assessment receipts will be stronger than most expect, the level of self-employment is much higher than most models take into account.
Also, my point is that the trend in normal receipts vs normal spending (excluding stuff like the APF and EU money) is better than the headline figure, but at the moment it is Osborne and the government who look like they are not going to meet the reduction target this year. I think we are in some form of agreement!
I have tried to believe Jeremy Corbyn can win the 2020 election, but more and more it feels like believing in Father Christmas"
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/dec/22/labour-people-optimists-see-no-hope-jeremy-corbyn