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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Big moves in the referendum betting – follow the changes LI

SystemSystem Posts: 11,008
edited June 2016 in General

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  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,298
    First like Remain. I hope
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,645
    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.
  • Options
    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    edited June 2016
    There's always the possibility that Thomas Mair might call himself 'Britain Stronger in Europe'
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,298
    It's real money. £40 million matched so far, which makes me wonder if this is an indicator for high turnout ?
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,298
    edited June 2016
    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,267
    If there is a big change, I'd really like to know how and to where all those sizeable Leave leads of a week ago have gone to.

    Remainers firming up? Defectors? Swingback?

    We need details. And some supplementaries would be good too.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    First like Remain. I hope

    It's the hope that hurts.

    On both sides.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,577
    Full moon tonight......just sayin'......
  • Options
    PongPong Posts: 4,693
    Roger said:

    There's always the possibility that Thomas Mair might call himself 'Britain Stronger in Europe'

    "On reflection, I've decided to abstain"
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,645
    Roger said:

    There's always the possibility that Thomas Mair might call himself 'Britain Stronger in Europe'

    LOL
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,645

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    After such big swings the other way it makes sense - but personally I think the direction of travel overall remains clear.
  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum
  • Options
    nunununu Posts: 6,024
    I don't see how there can be anything other than a big Remain poll lead today or tomorrow. Perhaps 7 points.
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    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,187

    It's real money. £40 million matched so far, which makes me wonder if this is an indicator for high turnout ?

    How many punters?
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,645

    First like Remain. I hope

    It's the hope that hurts.

    On both sides.
    Could be worse - as a more pessimistic Leaver, I'm pretty sure it'll be awful in the short term no matter what happens!
  • Options
    Private polling is a possibility. Boris's damascene conversion to the plight of immigrants yesterday and Warsi's "defection" today suggest the actions of people who have seen data we haven't. Boris, especially, appears to see a need to attract people who may have been turned off by last week's events. Add in today's strengthening of the pound makes private polling data a real suspect here.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    On the question of postal votes from the previous thread, no doubt postals will represent a higher proportion of the Electoral Register now that all the dead and moved away and duplicates have been stripped out. (Although if there was large-scale abuse of the postal vote system, maybe some of that abuse has been weeded out too, which would travel in the opposite direction.)
  • Options
    Marco1Marco1 Posts: 34
    The establishment will never allow a Leave vote
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    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    After such big swings the other way it makes sense - but personally I think the direction of travel overall remains clear.
    Are you still going to vote Leave despite accepting the economic chaos it will visit on a generation?

    I had hoped you would have seen sense by now.
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    Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    There may be an undercurrent of hard headed realism that will appear in the ballot box rather than the natural sympathy for the murdered MP
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251

    If there is a big change, I'd really like to know how and to where all those sizeable Leave leads of a week ago have gone to.

    Remainers firming up? Defectors? Swingback?

    We need details. And some supplementaries would be good too.

    The movement today is very surprising as apart from a couple of polls I do not see what is accounting for it. Markets across Europe up over 3% and strong rises in currencies and oil. I would like to know what is driving this sudden change
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633

    If there is a big change, I'd really like to know how and to where all those sizeable Leave leads of a week ago have gone to.

    Remainers firming up? Defectors? Swingback?

    We need details. And some supplementaries would be good too.

    From overt to shy given the events of last week I suspect.

    Could be a Bismark..
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    nunu said:

    I don't see how there can be anything other than a big Remain poll lead today or tomorrow. Perhaps 7 points.

    Telephone?
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    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807
    TGOHF said:

    If there is a big change, I'd really like to know how and to where all those sizeable Leave leads of a week ago have gone to.

    Remainers firming up? Defectors? Swingback?

    We need details. And some supplementaries would be good too.

    From overt to shy given the events of last week I suspect.

    Could be a Bismark..
    How is mayor Zac working out for you? LOL.
  • Options
    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,313
    Jobabob said:

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    After such big swings the other way it makes sense - but personally I think the direction of travel overall remains clear.
    Are you still going to vote Leave despite accepting the economic chaos it will visit on a generation?

    I had hoped you would have seen sense by now.
    Remind us which party you support again?
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,267

    If there is a big change, I'd really like to know how and to where all those sizeable Leave leads of a week ago have gone to.

    Remainers firming up? Defectors? Swingback?

    We need details. And some supplementaries would be good too.

    The movement today is very surprising as apart from a couple of polls I do not see what is accounting for it. Markets across Europe up over 3% and strong rises in currencies and oil. I would like to know what is driving this sudden change
    This is starting to feel a bit Rubio-y.

    I may top up on Leave.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. P, I'm not sure a democratic vote to leave to leave a supra-national political organisation is necessarily the moral equivalent of annexing another country.
  • Options
    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807
    So we have Marquee Mark forecasting mass dismissals from the Times newsdesk and Plato quoting from comments from a Katie Hopkins article.

    DYOR.
  • Options
    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,799
    edited June 2016

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    Although both the headline numbers and the supplementaries in last week's Sunday Times poll, and this week's Sunday Times poll were almost identical. What was surprising was the Yougov poll jumping from level pegging (where it's been more or less throughout the campaign) to a 7% Leave lead on Monday night.
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,267
    TGOHF said:

    If there is a big change, I'd really like to know how and to where all those sizeable Leave leads of a week ago have gone to.

    Remainers firming up? Defectors? Swingback?

    We need details. And some supplementaries would be good too.

    From overt to shy given the events of last week I suspect.

    Could be a Bismark..
    The big change (only one) I've detected since last week is previously unenthusiastic/soft Remainers suddenly firming up and going full-on on social media, and sticking up Remain posters in their windows.

    At the same time, I have scaled back due to the amount of heat and flak I was getting. And so have other Leavers.
  • Options
    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    edited June 2016
    4.25 4.15 - odds lurching round like a drunken sailor.

    (Only the leave midpoint needs to be given in all honesty)
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    edited June 2016
    FPT
    MikeL said:

    2015 GE electorate = 46.4m

    2015 GE Votes Cast = 30.7m

    Postal votes issued = 7.6m

    Postal votes cast = 0.858 * 7.6m = 6.5m

    Postal votes cast = 6.5/30.7 = 21% of votes cast

    Postal votes cast = 6.5/46.4 = 14% of electorate

    No chance whatsoever that the proportion of postal votes has doubled between 2015 GE and EU Ref 2016.

    The overall size of the electorate isn't especially pertinent; it's the proportion of those who actually vote that is.

    Besides, the electorate itself was down nearly three million in December, and there are also two or three million ineligible EU citizens in the national electorate, mostly in London.

    Adjusting for lower registration and barring by citizenship, it is conceivable that close to a quarter of the vote is already in.

    Postal Vote by Region last May (nearest percentage point):

    North East 35%
    Yorkshire and Humber 24%
    North West 23%
    Wales 22%
    Scotland 21%
    East Mids 21%
    South West 21%
    South East 20%
    East England 19%
    London 18%
    West Mids 17%
    Northern Ireland 2%


  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Roger said:

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good

    Maybe she should take up writing...
  • Options
    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807

    Jobabob said:

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    After such big swings the other way it makes sense - but personally I think the direction of travel overall remains clear.
    Are you still going to vote Leave despite accepting the economic chaos it will visit on a generation?

    I had hoped you would have seen sense by now.
    Remind us which party you support again?
    None of them. I'd spoil my ballot if there were a general election tomorrow.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    "Most of us" have got the direction of travel hopelessly wrong throughout this campaign...why should the endgame be any different?

    It does seem that the Remain camp are investing everything in the hope that the Farage poster/death of Jo Fox has swung things. That the innate goodness of people will make people turn away from Leave in their millions because of a weird piece of fatal coincidence and linked to that, an unfortunate piece of timing from Farage's ego.

    But really? It has just meant that people who were uncertain and were looking for facts have lost five days of opportunity to learn more.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,645

    Private polling is a possibility. Boris's damascene conversion to the plight of immigrants yesterday and Warsi's "defection" today suggest the actions of people who have seen data we haven't. Boris, especially, appears to see a need to attract people who may have been turned off by last week's events. Add in today's strengthening of the pound makes private polling data a real suspect here.

    Jobabob said:

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    After such big swings the other way it makes sense - but personally I think the direction of travel overall remains clear.
    Are you still going to vote Leave despite accepting the economic chaos it will visit on a generation?

    I had hoped you would have seen sense by now.
    I think there will be a lot of chaos regardless. It will be a hit, if not as much as Remainers fear, but still a big hit. I'm even more worried given it looks like out politics is effed as well, but it would be hypocritical of me to vote Remain when fundamentally I don't like where the EU is heading and don't believe it will change. It is not capable of genuinely changing.

    Taking a longer term view, better to take some hits now than we suffer more later and at the same time upset the EU in doing what it wants to do.

    The options are not very palatable, but disruption, chaos and pain will come anyway - the fact 50% give or take a few want to leave, and the reasons behind that, will not go away. Staying in won't fix that, ergo there will be continued pain.

    It's not easy for me. But that's why I have tried to look at it more abstractly.

    But hold out hope - there's still time for me to waver further!
  • Options
    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919
    edited June 2016
    Roger said:

    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good
    She should try telling that to the Mexicans getting rid of the Spanish or the Americans getting rid of the British. I am sure they would agree that life would be so much better if they were still ruled by a distant unelected elite.
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    4.05
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    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,793
    It looks like the betting markets think the referendum is all over.
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    madasafishmadasafish Posts: 659
    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    It's all rather 1930s.
    Big economic crash.
    Weak economic growth.
    Rise of anti establishment parties..

    Usually ends in tears..
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,298

    First like Remain. I hope

    It's the hope that hurts.

    On both sides.
    It'll be fine, whatever the result, on Friday morning I shall still be an Englishman and a citizen of Le Royaume-Uni, that's all I need in life.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    Roger said:

    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good
    Typical. She is taking no responsibility for having created the Dementers and the Death-Eaters in the first place...
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,581
    Scott_P said:

    Roger said:

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good

    Maybe she should take up writing...
    Perhaps she could offer a thread header to PB?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    Did we just see Peak Remain in the betting markets ?
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    Baroness Warsi's leading the 1.00 pm News. If only she could have reached these heights when she was alive
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    Roger said:

    Baroness Warsi's leading the 1.00 pm News. If only she could have reached these heights when she was alive

    LOL
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,267

    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    It's all rather 1930s.
    Big economic crash.
    Weak economic growth.
    Rise of anti establishment parties..

    Usually ends in tears..
    Articles like JK Rowling's demonstrate to me that Remainers will learn nothing and forget nothing from this referendum result, if they win.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    First like Remain. I hope

    It's the hope that hurts.

    On both sides.
    It'll be fine, whatever the result, on Friday morning I shall still be an Englishman and a citizen of Le Royaume-Uni, that's all I need in life.
    You will still hold a winning lottery ticket in life. Just the Lotto if it is Remain, when it could have been Euromillions!
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251
    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,577
    Scott_P said:

    Roger said:

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good

    Maybe she should take up writing...
    @GeneralBoles:

    'People in this country have had enough of experts' - Michael Gove (co-founder of Policy Exchange)
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    KentRisingKentRising Posts: 2,850
    edited June 2016

    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    It's all rather 1930s.
    Big economic crash.
    Weak economic growth.
    Rise of anti establishment parties..

    Usually ends in tears..
    Nationalism isn't the problem. Nationalism means putting your own country's priorities before another's.

    Imperialism is the problem, is what started two world wars. I don't see much of that across Europe, apart from in the far east of it, where Russia wants bits of the old SU back.
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251
    GIN1138 said:

    It looks like the betting markets think the referendum is all over.

    Assume they are not going to pay out yet
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,267

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,919

    First like Remain. I hope

    It's the hope that hurts.

    On both sides.
    It'll be fine, whatever the result, on Friday morning I shall still be an Englishman and a citizen of Le Royaume-Uni, that's all I need in life.
    No you won't. You will have sold your country out like a common Frenchman.
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,298
    edited June 2016
    You know the EURef is still too close to call.

    Publicity Shy Paddy Power have yet to do an early payout.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,577
    Curious....Roy Greenslade has spotted that The Times amended their Warsi headline before finally going to press:

    http://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2016/jun/20/why-did-the-times-change-its-mind-over-a-brexit-headline
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,267

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
    Nothing we can do about it mate.

    I have a feeling this is going to be a looooong week.
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    Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 25,313
    Scott_P said:

    Roger said:

    That's the longest piece I've ever read by JK. It's very good

    Maybe she should take up writing...
    That would make a change.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Curious....Roy Greenslade has spotted that The Times amended their Warsi headline before finally going to press:

    http://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2016/jun/20/why-did-the-times-change-its-mind-over-a-brexit-headline

    Surely the headline should have been "Brexit united in going "Huh? Who?"
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    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    So Warsi, who didn't campaign for Leave, is switching sides to not campaign for Remain?

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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383

    Scott_P said:

    Nationalism is on the march across the Western world, feeding upon the terrors it seeks to inflame. Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different, a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the Other!

    http://www.jkrowling.com/en_GB/#/timeline/on-monsters-villains-and-the-EU-referendum

    It's all rather 1930s.
    Big economic crash.
    Weak economic growth.
    Rise of anti establishment parties..

    Usually ends in tears..
    Nationalism isn't the problem. Nationalism means putting your own country's priorities over another's.

    Imperialism is the problem, is what started two world wars. I don't see much of that across Europe, apart from in the far east of it, where Russia wants bits of the old SU back.
    Some ages ago described the Eurocrats as "imperialists who lack self-confidence".

    I thought it was spot on and very perceptive. Same desires - but use rules and regs to squash other nations instead.
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,298
    Donald Tusk has just tweeted

    Whatever the UK vote is, we must take long hard look on the future of the Union. Would be foolish to ignore such a warning signal
  • Options
    RochdalePioneersRochdalePioneers Posts: 27,177
    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,943

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
    Farage of course would probably secretly prefer a very narrow Remain win, ideally dependent on Scotland, than an actual Leave win as a narrow Remain win ensures he becomes even more the centre of attention and UKIP leads the resistance!
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383

    Curious....Roy Greenslade has spotted that The Times amended their Warsi headline before finally going to press:

    http://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2016/jun/20/why-did-the-times-change-its-mind-over-a-brexit-headline

    Curious? We were all over it on here by 10pm last night. Even Sky paper review noted it.
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251


    So Warsi, who didn't campaign for Leave, is switching sides to not campaign for Remain?

    She is campaigning to remain and explains her change on Sky news at 1.00
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Donald Tusk has just tweeted

    Whatever the UK vote is, we must take long hard look on the future of the Union. Would be foolish to ignore such a warning signal

    So let's send him - and the whole EU - a message that really CAN'T be ignored.

    It's your duty - your duty to your fellow Europeans. They need help. Only we can give them that help, in their hour of need.

    As bloody usual...
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754

    Donald Tusk has just tweeted

    Whatever the UK vote is, we must take long hard look on the future of the Union. Would be foolish to ignore such a warning signal

    They will any way
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    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @PlatoSaid

    'Jean Asselborn, Luxembourg’s foreign minister, yesterday described David Cameron’s decision to hold an in/out referendum as a “historic mistake” that could tear apart the EU.'


    Amazing how much they hate democracy..
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited June 2016

    Donald Tusk has just tweeted

    Whatever the UK vote is, we must take long hard look on the future of the Union. Would be foolish to ignore such a warning signal

    So let's send him - and the whole EU - a message that really CAN'T be ignored.

    It's your duty - your duty to your fellow Europeans. They need help. Only we can give them that help, in their hour of need.

    As bloody usual...
    "Whatever the UK vote is, we must take long hard look on the future of the Union. Would be foolish to ignore such a warning signal"

    Yes, by making it virtually impossible for another member state to hold a referendum on exit again.
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251

    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.

    I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    john_zims said:

    @PlatoSaid

    'Jean Asselborn, Luxembourg’s foreign minister, yesterday described David Cameron’s decision to hold an in/out referendum as a “historic mistake” that could tear apart the EU.'


    Amazing how much they hate democracy..

    There are some great quotes in that article. :lol:
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    MP_SEMP_SE Posts: 3,642
    The poster unveiled by Farage was incredibly idiotic. I know many accuse politicians in the Remain camp of not "getting it". However, I think Farage equally doesn't "get it".

    UKIP could have gone with a poster showing Greeks rioting in Greece or French farmers rioting in France. It would still make the point of the EU not working without being so repellant.
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    FF43FF43 Posts: 15,692

    kle4 said:

    Can't see what would drive that. The mood, despite the histrionics, does not seem that different - the only massive movement was last week to leave, and other than that it's just ebbs and flows. That being the case, and in my view Leave being stronger in support where it will count (ie older people), should see them win. I should get more money on this.

    YouGov saying the fundamentals were moving back to Remain even before Thursday's events might explain it.

    Most of us were existing a swing back to Remain.
    "Most of us" have got the direction of travel hopelessly wrong throughout this campaign...why should the endgame be any different?

    It does seem that the Remain camp are investing everything in the hope that the Farage poster/death of Jo Fox has swung things. That the innate goodness of people will make people turn away from Leave in their millions because of a weird piece of fatal coincidence and linked to that, an unfortunate piece of timing from Farage's ego.

    But really? It has just meant that people who were uncertain and were looking for facts have lost five days of opportunity to learn more.
    Funnily enough I think this turned onto a referendum that was Leave's to lose. If they do lose it, I think it will mainly be because of three intertwined reasons:

    1. They don't believe Leave on immigration. Cameron has been caught out with his never could be achieved pledge to reduce immigration. Michael Gove repeats the claim for Leave. Why should we believe you just because the other side lied about the same thing?

    2. Leave leadership don't have a plan. EEA? FTA? WTO? Immigrants can stay? More non-EU immigrants?

    3. Cameron and Osborne are dreary prospects, but Johnson, Gove and maybe Farage inspire no confidence at all. This referendum is fundamentally an internal Tory fight. For the rest of the political spectrum you are substituting the intolerable for the just about tolerable.
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754

    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.

    I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know
    Oh don't be daft, the multinats have all been lined up to release statements. Ford's is perhaps the most stupid Ive seen.

    This is simply coreographed by Remain.

    And later they'll call in the favour.
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    KentRisingKentRising Posts: 2,850
    edited June 2016

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
    Nothing we can do about it mate.

    I have a feeling this is going to be a looooong week.
    I think Leave's lead evaporated last Thursday. With inevitable swingback in the hours leading up to vote, it might even be 65/35 Remain in the end. Just gut feel. As a result, all this Farage/Warsi stuff is inconsequential in my mind. Gallows humour's already kicked in. It's a great shame, but alas the referendum's probably come 2-3 years too early.
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    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    The Tories can't win.
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    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,703
    FTSE now up 195 points, 3.23%!
    Why so much confidence in Remain all of a sudden?
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    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.

    I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know

    "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." - Benjamin Franklin
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @LadPolitics: Ladbrokes: 95% of money staked today has been for REMAIN #EUref https://t.co/lkiIg0en5G
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
    Nothing we can do about it mate.

    I have a feeling this is going to be a looooong week.
    I think Leave's lead evaporated last Thursday. With inevitable swingback in the hours leading up to vote, it might even be 65/35 Remain in the end. Just gut feel. As a result, all this Farage/Warsi stuff is inconsequential in my mind. Gallows humour's already kicked in. It's a great shame, but alas the referendum's probably come 2-3 years too early.
    65 - 35 ?! Doubt it.
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    tysontyson Posts: 6,049

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.

    Listen Casino- the nature of the beast. Farage had to one big, blundering gaffe. It's a pity for leave it was just as they were gathering momentum, and on the day of the Jo Cox tragedy. But it was a beautiful gaffe, you have to credit him for that.

    Just as leave stood on the cusp of shaking up Europe, in stepped Nigel.

    I would say I'm laughing all the way to the bank, but I'm not since I'm on the losing market on betfair. Oh well, I'm just laughing.
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    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    I've just received a leaflet telling me my neighbours will be voting Remain.

    I'd be surprised if they are voting for anyone as they are Bulgarian.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,943

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
    Nothing we can do about it mate.

    I have a feeling this is going to be a looooong week.
    I think Leave's lead evaporated last Thursday. With inevitable swingback in the hours leading up to vote, it might even be 65/35 Remain in the end. Just gut feel. As a result, all this Farage/Warsi stuff is inconsequential in my mind. Gallows humour's already kicked in. It's a great shame, but alas the referendum's probably come 2-3 years too early.
    I can't see Remain winning much more than 52% 48%. The committed Leavers are at least 40%+
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251

    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.

    I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know
    Oh don't be daft, the multinats have all been lined up to release statements. Ford's is perhaps the most stupid Ive seen.

    This is simply coreographed by Remain.

    And later they'll call in the favour.
    Why daft - and why blame remain - leave use Bamford and Dyson for their case. Remember David Cameron plays to win and that is why you have a referendum in the first place
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,577
    Last EURef Ashcroft focus group:

    “My mum always said if you don’t know what to do, don’t do anything. I’ve lived by that.” How did you vote at the general election? “Liberal Democrat.”

    http://www.conservativehome.com/platform/2016/06/lord-ashcroft-my-final-eu-referendum-focus-groups-i-cant-make-my-mind-up-its-a-lot-of-responsibility-and-i-really-want-to-get-it-right.html
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    NoEasyDayNoEasyDay Posts: 454
    Stock market is also up around 3.5 % so something is in the air.
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    It's not entirely one way traffic on Betfair. After LEAVE eased out to 4.9 around 11.30a.m., it has since come back in to 4.1, suggesting there's at least some element of herding involved in the betting markets Baaa ..... Baaa!
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    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    edited June 2016
    @TheScreamingEagles

    'Donald Tusk has just tweeted

    Whatever the UK vote is, we must take long hard look on the future of the Union. Would be foolish to ignore such a warning signal'


    Yeah ,yeah how many times and years have we heard that one before ?

    Remember the long hard look after Holland & France rejected the constitution,that went well.

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    FeersumEnjineeyaFeersumEnjineeya Posts: 3,896
    edited June 2016

    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.

    I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know

    "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." - Benjamin Franklin
    Which applies very well to those who would give up the liberty of our youth to seek their fortunes across Europe in order to purchase the illusion of safety from the immigrant hordes.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    chestnut said:

    The Tories can't win.

    :lol:

    I'm trying incredibly hard to be sanguine. A good poll for Leave or Remain naturally lifts or dents my moods a bit - but given how many pollsters have fiddled about with their methodologies, I'm not taking any to heart.

    Whatever the result, I'll remain amazed at how tight it's all been. I didn't think we had a scooby. Now we're a contender.
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    Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 60,251
    And just to help leavers mood - Sky now switching to the HOC tribute to Jo Cox, no doubt televised in full before they start setting up their cameras in Trafalgar Square for the Jo Cox International tribute on Wednesday afternoon !!
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    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    ''I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know ''

    Yes but Mr G. a few months ago you claimed Obama's 'back of the queue' comments were a knockout blow for Remain.

    They were actually a boost for Leave, and Obama has now been rebuked by Congress for his comments, which it turns out were an empty and untrue threat.

    On that occasion you really could not have been more wrong in your instincts. You have to admit, your track record is not good.
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    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341

    Well if Farage did intend sinking leave he could't have chosen a better poster to stand in front off. Both Sky and BBC leading with it and tying in the Warsi story and, knowing the media they will keep going on and on about it. Is this Farage's 'Ed Stone' moment

    I am furious with Farage.
    There's a reason that two months ago we were saying Farage needed to be locked in a cellar for two months.

    It's always me-me-fucking-me with him.....
    Nothing we can do about it mate.

    I have a feeling this is going to be a looooong week.
    I think Leave's lead evaporated last Thursday. With inevitable swingback in the hours leading up to vote, it might even be 65/35 Remain in the end. Just gut feel. As a result, all this Farage/Warsi stuff is inconsequential in my mind. Gallows humour's already kicked in. It's a great shame, but alas the referendum's probably come 2-3 years too early.
    The polling industry would be dead if it were 65-35.

    Those type of numbers are nowhere to be seen. They are not in the headlines, the 10/10s, the the follow-ups. Nowhere.

    I know they have their failings, but the pollsters aren't that bad.
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    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    I am sceptical of the sudden rush to Remain. We had the awful slaying of Jo Cox and then the bonkers statements from the suspect. We had campaigns formally suspended but Remain informally pinning her death directly on Farage. So on paper the momentum is now with Remain.

    But really? This referendum has never been based on facts its about people's instinctive views on (partially) what the EU does and (mainly) how they feel about modern life and the UK. The macro factors driving their decision making haven't changed because of a micro factor event late on. What has changed is their social ability to state their intention.

    We've talked about shy Tories in previous elections, we must have shy Leavers now. If you vote Leave you are Stupid you are Racist you are with Farage and his Nazi poster and with Mair who Murdered that MP and all the experts say you are Mad are you really That Stupid. I wouldn't volunteer it up right now either.

    I think the most dangerous thing for leave today is the statement by all the car manufacturers they need to stay in Europe coupled with the huge rise in markets at the expectation of a remain win. It's the economy you know

    "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." - Benjamin Franklin
    Which applies very well to those who would give up the liberty of our youth to seek their fortunes across Europe in order to purchase the illusion of safety from the immigrant hordes.

    Because no-one ever went anywhere in the world before the EU existed to 'permit' us to. Right.

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    I am surprised no one is bringing up the fact that Brexit could initiate a catastrophic destabilization within Europe, encouraging other countries to pander to their 'Nationalistic characteristics'. I should imagine Putin, ISIS and other bodies are delighted to see this country pulling the region apart to their benefit. Putin's cohorts are attempting to disrupt the Euros - how satisfying it must be for them to witness the UK attempting to do the same to Europe on their behalf. If I lived in the Baltic States or Eastern Europe I would be most concerned.
    Incidentally, despite the French being part of the Eurozone for many years, who would deny that the French are still adamantly French - and all the better for it. No-one loses their National identity, but now is the time to look at security amongst friends rather than attempting to carve out an isolated future in a fragmenting world.
This discussion has been closed.