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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » It looks as though Mrs. May’s BREXIT strategy isn’t helping co

SystemSystem Posts: 11,003
edited October 2016 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » It looks as though Mrs. May’s BREXIT strategy isn’t helping confidence on the markets

From the markets: Markets rattled by pound’s tumble https://t.co/yV1xyrZWpz pic.twitter.com/26BAOfN86o

Read the full story here


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Comments

  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,373
    1st.
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,373
    2nd.
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,373
    3rd. Clean sweep.
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,243
    edited October 2016
    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?
  • Options
    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,701
    UKIP MEP Mike Hookem denies assaulting Steven Woolfe
    Mr Woolfe, a frontrunner to be the next leader of the UKIP, has said he is happy to "extend the hand of friendship" to his colleague.

    Ah, but how fast?
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-37587814
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606
    If they had a strategy it might help.

    On Wednesday the PM goes on stage and says a bunch of stuff that sounds like we're going to prioritise immigration over trade.

    Today the chancellor is in NY telling Wall Street that actually it's all bullshit for domestic consumption, we're still looking at being in the single market.

    The lack of a coherent position on what we want from the EU is really starting to hurt. It feels like we need to lock Cabinet in chequers for the weekend and not let them out until they agree a unified position on what benefits the nation and how best to deliver the Leave vote.
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    If they had a strategy it might help.

    On Wednesday the PM goes on stage and says a bunch of stuff that sounds like we're going to prioritise immigration over trade.

    Today the chancellor is in NY telling Wall Street that actually it's all bullshit for domestic consumption, we're still looking at being in the single market.

    The lack of a coherent position on what we want from the EU is really starting to hurt. It feels like we need to lock Cabinet in chequers for the weekend and not let them out until they agree a unified position on what benefits the nation and how best to deliver the Leave vote.

    They can't agree a unified position. That's the problem. What benefits the nation is not necessarily what is going to keep the Tories together. And what does "benefits the nation" actually mean?

  • Options
    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    @FerdiGiugliano: Dear Britain,

    Thank you very much for your complaint.We regret to inform you that 'Take Control' did not apply to £.

    Yours,

    Leave Team
  • Options

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    MaxPB said:

    If they had a strategy it might help.

    On Wednesday the PM goes on stage and says a bunch of stuff that sounds like we're going to prioritise immigration over trade.

    Today the chancellor is in NY telling Wall Street that actually it's all bullshit for domestic consumption, we're still looking at being in the single market.

    The lack of a coherent position on what we want from the EU is really starting to hurt. It feels like we need to lock Cabinet in chequers for the weekend and not let them out until they agree a unified position on what benefits the nation and how best to deliver the Leave vote.

    They can't agree a unified position. That's the problem. What benefits the nation is not necessarily what is going to keep the Tories together. And what does "benefits the nation" actually mean?

    That's why they need to be locked up together. It seems like they don't have any answers.
  • Options

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
  • Options
    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,187

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    When's the first post-conference poll due?
  • Options
    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460
    edited October 2016
    We just ran a £12bn current account deficit in August. Something had to give anyway. Brexit or no.

    As an exporter channeling my inner Kevin Keegan "I'm loving it just loving it". Bit of inflation and a rise in interest rates and I shall burst with joy.
  • Options
    JonathanDJonathanD Posts: 2,400
    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Once people start to feel their standard of living suffering things will move quite fast.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570

    Also happened in the gap between New York closing & Tokyo opening so market was very illiquid - but the good news is we get to blame the French!
  • Options
    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,141

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The LDP was screwing up for decades. Under FPTP there's no limit to how long a bad government can keep going, provided the opposition are divided or worse.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570
    Rudd vs Abbott - Hardly 'Predator vs Alien'.....more like 'Dumb vs Dumber'?
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    Scott_P said:

    @FerdiGiugliano: Dear Britain,

    Thank you very much for your complaint.We regret to inform you that 'Take Control' did not apply to £.

    Yours,

    Leave Team

    Don't be a fool. No one has more control of his country than Putin, how much did that help the ruble recently ?
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,964
    Mr. Owl, Carney seems minded to go the other way.

    If rates do rise I suspect the banks won't be as swift to raise their interest on savings as they were to cut them when Carney reduced rates after the vote.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
  • Options
    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,140
    All quiet on reshuffle front. Has Jezza spent the morning make jam?
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570
    Owen Jones tweets: There's plenty of useless, bungling and/or mediocre white male politicians who don't get the bile Diane Abbott does. Why is this exactly?

    So, just to clarify, he thinks the Shadow Home Secretary is 'useless, bungling and/or mediocre'?
  • Options
    geoffwgeoffw Posts: 8,127
    "Of course this makes the UK’s exports cheaper but it also makes imports more expensive. " Well yes doh! That's the way to correct an imbalance in the BoP. Sterling is too high. Besides, we need a bit of inflation and higher interest rates.
  • Options
    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460

    Mr. Owl, Carney seems minded to go the other way.

    If rates do rise I suspect the banks won't be as swift to raise their interest on savings as they were to cut them when Carney reduced rates after the vote.

    Yes Carnage still looks like he's crash diving rates till the rivets pop sadly. You're doubtless right about the banks but it's gilt yields I want to rise. Hopefully foreigners night baulk at buying UK debt and yields might start to surface, despite Kapitan zur See Carney still opening all the stop cocks the other way. I can hope at least. In the meantime must go invoice stuff at new higher prices. Oh goody!
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    Someone posted this link at the end of the last thread, seems to be one of the more important contributions recently, any City/Finance types feel able to comment ?

    http://brexitcentral.com/stanislas-yassukovich-eu-needs-city-city-needs-eu-debunking-myths-single-market-financial-services/

    Those responsible for the dire predictions of job and business losses in the City post-Brexit should reflect on its unique attributes as a global centre, the nature of its wholesale services, the way in which they are accessed, how they are provided to passport-less counterparties all over the world, and how any international institution could function without them.

  • Options

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    When's the first post-conference poll due?
    I'm hopeful we'll see a poll or two this weekend.

    I did partake in an Opinium poll on Wednesday with VI and who'd make the best PM.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,964
    Miss Vance, Jones clearly never read PB's many comments on her predecessor.
  • Options
    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    ''When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour''

    NO wonder Blair wants to get back in. He sniffs an opportunity.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,140

    Owen Jones tweets: There's plenty of useless, bungling and/or mediocre white male politicians who don't get the bile Diane Abbott does. Why is this exactly?

    So, just to clarify, he thinks the Shadow Home Secretary is 'useless, bungling and/or mediocre'?

    Possibly because she is a grade A hypocrite who sends her kids to private school whilst spending her days extolling the virtues of a Marxist state.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    When's the first post-conference poll due?
    I did partake in an Opinium poll on Wednesday with VI and who'd make the best PM.
    How many guesses do we get.....?
  • Options
    Off topic, Jos Buttler is something special isn't he?
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    Would you join his new party along with Chuka and Liz?
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,140
    taffys said:

    ''When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour''

    NO wonder Blair wants to get back in. He sniffs an opportunity.

    There is a huge opportunity, possible a once in a hundred years chance to break the mould.
  • Options
    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    He'll be rIding Shergar with Lord Lucan in attendance if he does. Lazarus doesn't come close.
  • Options

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    When's the first post-conference poll due?
    I did partake in an Opinium poll on Wednesday with VI and who'd make the best PM.
    How many guesses do we get.....?
    The choices were

    1) Jeremy Corbyn

    2) Theresa May

    3) Don't know

    I was also asked to rate Mrs May's performance...
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    Would you join his new party along with Chuka and Liz?
    Unlikely.

    Depends how big his tent is.
  • Options
    brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    That's one of those scary stories they tell children so they behave.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    Would you join his new party along with Chuka and Liz?
    Unlikely.

    Depends how big his tent is.
    I don't think Michael Gove will be invited.
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    FPT Mr Dancer said:
    "Mr. 43, I agree. As per Mr. Submarine's post, it would've been better to have a firmer vision in mind.

    "However, the EU has an idea but nothing else. It's approach is to subvert democracy in favour of the ideal, to make economic policy based on political desire, to erode national sovereignty in favour of the ideal.

    "What is best is to have an idea, and a sense of perspective."

    What is best is to have a vision which provides purpose to the group, in this case the citizens - a purpose with which they agree and to which they can subscribe.

    What those who fling around the terms 'racist' and 'fascist' with gay abandon ignore is that to create a movement you need a culture, and all culture is about identity, which is as much about who you are not as it is about who you are.

    That is why Obama so often says "That is not who we are"

    http://freebeacon.com/politics/46-times-president-obama-told-americans-thats-not-who-we-are/

    Oh, I see. Obama is a racist.
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,243
    edited October 2016
    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    Would you join his new party along with Chuka and Liz?
    Unlikely.

    Depends how big his tent is.
    I don't think Michael Gove will be invited.
    It was Michael Gove who called Tony Blair the master. He's a fan, Gove's education reforms were based on Blair's reforms as Gove openly admits.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
  • Options
    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    edited October 2016
    http://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/718632/Ukip-Hartlepool-by-election-Tim-Fleming-Strassborg-Steven-Woolfe-collapse

    I guess not particularly significant, but interesting nevertheless.

    Must be interesting times, being a labour councillor in the North.
  • Options
    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419
    "The PM’s need to say something strong at her conference seems to have gone down poorly. Announcing the March 2017 invoke Article 50 date, as she did, appears to have undermined what negotiating position that she had."

    I don't get this. As soon as the Brexit vote was in, it was inevitable that A50 would be invoked sooner or later, and almost certainly within a year. The timeframe of 2017Q1 has been on the cards for months now - so what is it that has spooked the markets?

    Similarly, the hard Brexit option was politically close to inevitable. Continued membership of the Single Market was obviously a deal that couldn't be done given the two sides' negotiating positions. how is it that they didn't see it coming?

    I do wonder whether the investment banks could do with employing a half-decent political analyst?
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,879
    Off-topic:

    The company Mrs J works for is having a Christmas Party. So far, so good. Except it is going to be formal attire.

    WTH has a Christmas Party in formal attire? Nothing can stifle fun more than having to look smart. :(
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    TSE If that is indeed the reason for the move, I see a couple of things happening:

    1. A correction to sterling's rate when humans intervene to bring sterling back to a sensible level appropriate to its economy relative to the world economy
    2. A need to correct the trading algorithm so that something so trivial doesn't have such a big impact on trading
    3. A major failure in trading (not necessarily related to sterling) at some point in the future if the algorithm goes uncorrected.
  • Options
    AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Who would have thought that the currency of a country with a large deficit where the deficit reduction plan has just been abandoned without a replacement and with the government taking an increasingly business-unfriendly tone, while seeking to renegotiate its trading arrangements with its closest trading partners at high speed in bad temper might come under pressure?
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,243
    edited October 2016
    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    The question is who? If the orange bookers were running the Lib Dems then I'd definitely feel they could make headway, if the moderates were running Labour then they might. Right now it feels like the opposition is the economically liberal wing of the Tory party. Many of whom are fretting over the idea of big government.
    Tony Blair might make a comeback.
    Would you join his new party along with Chuka and Liz?
    Unlikely.

    Depends how big his tent is.
    I don't think Michael Gove will be invited.
    It was Michael Gove who called Tony Blair the master. He's a fan, Gove's education reforms were based on Blair's reforms as Gove openly admits.
    Yes, but Gove is also a small state supporting conservative in many other aspects. Blair's party would he big government social democracy, very similar to what TMay is proposing tbh.
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    If they had a strategy it might help.

    On Wednesday the PM goes on stage and says a bunch of stuff that sounds like we're going to prioritise immigration over trade.

    Today the chancellor is in NY telling Wall Street that actually it's all bullshit for domestic consumption, we're still looking at being in the single market.

    The lack of a coherent position on what we want from the EU is really starting to hurt. It feels like we need to lock Cabinet in chequers for the weekend and not let them out until they agree a unified position on what benefits the nation and how best to deliver the Leave vote.

    These long times in politics seem to be getting shorter and shorter.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm stating put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    Rolls eyes heavenwards.....
  • Options
    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,141
    MTimT said:


    2. A need to correct the trading algorithm so that something so trivial doesn't have such a big impact on trading

    May has been itching to regulate mathematics ever since she found out about cryptography. She could come up with some kind of licensing system where you have to get the government's permission before you're allowed to use an algorithm.
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    TMay as Chamberlain and Davis as Halifax?
  • Options
    AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Charles Grant of the Centre for European Reform is gloomy about the chances of a favourable Brexit deal for Britain:

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/oct/07/europe-hard-brexit-hurt-british-trade-deal?utm_term=Autofeed&CMP=twt_b-gdnnews
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,964
    Mr. Herdson, I quite agree.

    Some people have decided to complain and are merely waiting for announcements to inform them about what they are complaining.

    Not to say May doesn't deserve scrutiny and, in some cases, criticism. If nothing else, Rudd's rhetoric has been foolish, and I'm still not persuaded by the nuclear policy.
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    Or Heath in 'the great sulk'?
  • Options
    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    TMay as Chamberlain and Davis as Halifax?
    Yah.

    I'm writing a peace on Cameron's legacy, I have reluctantly concluded he's the modern day Stanley Baldwin.

    Like Baldwin, he put party before country to win a general election, and his legacy is truly damaging for the country.
  • Options
    TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    And like churchill who wanted Britain seperate from a European superstate, better example for you would be Blair or clegg.
  • Options
    LennonLennon Posts: 1,729

    Off-topic:

    The company Mrs J works for is having a Christmas Party. So far, so good. Except it is going to be formal attire.

    WTH has a Christmas Party in formal attire? Nothing can stifle fun more than having to look smart. :(

    Formal as in suit, or 'party formal' as in Black Tie? For a Cambridge-based company used to Formal Halls, Matric Dinners, etc. I can see the latter being seen as a 'nice idea' for a Christmas party - no excuse for the former at all in my view.
  • Options
    JohnOJohnO Posts: 4,214
    edited October 2016

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.
  • Options
    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    https://www.poundsterlinglive.com/eur/5552-gbp-to-eur-parity-forecast-ubs-3454

    PBrexiters favourite mantra: the EUR imploding.

    2003: £1= EUR 1.37

    2016:: £1= EUR 1.11

    It really is imploding. Sterling, I mean.
  • Options
    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.

    And if told by an intransigent EU that the choices were either "Full FoM & Full Single Market" or "piss off", what would this party do, and what would it tell the voters ?
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,609

    Owen Jones tweets: There's plenty of useless, bungling and/or mediocre white male politicians who don't get the bile Diane Abbott does. Why is this exactly?

    Because she has a much higher media presence than most of those, and because people try to excuse her patronising, hypocritical approach by asking leading questions like that implying it must be racism.
  • Options
    MarkSeniorMarkSenior Posts: 4,699
    Highland Culloden after Stage 6

    SNP 908
    LDem 703
    Con 515
    Ind MacPherson 414

    Heading for a SNP / LD close finish
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,935
    The majority of the electorate could not care less about the markets, they voted to control immigration which May will do. In any case the low pound helps exports even if it makes imports and foreign travel more expensive. The fall in the pound today was due to Hollande's hard BREXIT statement and automated trading in Asia
  • Options
    LennonLennon Posts: 1,729

    MTimT said:


    2. A need to correct the trading algorithm so that something so trivial doesn't have such a big impact on trading

    May has been itching to regulate mathematics ever since she found out about cryptography. She could come up with some kind of licensing system where you have to get the government's permission before you're allowed to use an algorithm.
    Please stop giving her ideas...
  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606
    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    The tone of Mrs May's speech has worried a lot of people. She needs to row back on some of it and put Rudd on a much tighter leash. The foreign workers register was a huge and unnecessary misstep as was the idea of deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
  • Options
    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    The market is all wrong.

    The EU is going to roll out the red carpet to a single market.

    Remember, "they need us" more than we need them. Something to do with Balance of Payments !
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034

    MTimT said:


    2. A need to correct the trading algorithm so that something so trivial doesn't have such a big impact on trading

    May has been itching to regulate mathematics ever since she found out about cryptography. She could come up with some kind of licensing system where you have to get the government's permission before you're allowed to use an algorithm.
    Perhaps we'll end up with politically correct and un-PC mathematics.

    What I was thinking about was how the risk management algorithms contributed to 2008. Not a matter for government regulation, but good business.
  • Options
    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    surbiton said:

    https://www.poundsterlinglive.com/eur/5552-gbp-to-eur-parity-forecast-ubs-3454

    PBrexiters favourite mantra: the EUR imploding.

    2003: £1= EUR 1.37

    2016:: £1= EUR 1.11

    It really is imploding. Sterling, I mean.

    Hands up, you have a point.

    But the EU left us no choice.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,935

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    Since when is sucking up to the EU remotely Churchillian? Churchill was prepared for Britain to stand alone rather than suck up to Hitler
  • Options
    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    http://www.bbc.com/news/business-37583196

    Oh, dear ! It is not getting any better.
  • Options
    Moses_Moses_ Posts: 4,865
    It's a pig in a poke

    Remainers want the Brexit mob to sort out in 47 days what Remainers took 47 years to build on a sand of lies.......

    Yet when the people were finally asked Remainers still could not carry the popular vote and win the argument after 47 fecking years? They then mope and they weep and they winge and they moan. Perhaps they need to look inwards and see why the majority do not agree.

    FFS .....enough already.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,935
    MaxPB said:

    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    The tone of Mrs May's speech has worried a lot of people. She needs to row back on some of it and put Rudd on a much tighter leash. The foreign workers register was a huge and unnecessary misstep as was the idea of deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
    Yet most voters backed it
  • Options
    MarkSeniorMarkSenior Posts: 4,699
    HYUFD said:

    The majority of the electorate could not care less about the markets, they voted to control immigration which May will do. In any case the low pound helps exports even if it makes imports and foreign travel more expensive. The fall in the pound today was due to Hollande's hard BREXIT statement and automated trading in Asia

    Brexit has turned the UK into a 2nd world nation with a 3rd world currency .
  • Options
    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570
    surbiton said:

    https://www.poundsterlinglive.com/eur/5552-gbp-to-eur-parity-forecast-ubs-3454

    PBrexiters favourite mantra: the EUR imploding.

    2003: £1= EUR 1.37

    2016:: £1= EUR 1.11

    It really is imploding. Sterling, I mean.

    2007: £1 = EUR 1.52
    2008 £1 = EUR 1.03

    I think we can safely say the rate tends to fluctuate......
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124

    Who would have thought that the currency of a country with a large deficit where the deficit reduction plan has just been abandoned without a replacement and with the government taking an increasingly business-unfriendly tone, while seeking to renegotiate its trading arrangements with its closest trading partners at high speed in bad temper might come under pressure?

    If only some 'experts' had been available beforehand to warn us of.....oh waittttttt.......
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    John said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    Indeed, the expectation management game for Mrs May are quite bad. Everyone expects her to beat Corbyn comfortably in a general election, if there's a plethora of polls that puts the Tories ahead of Labour but within in the margin of error then people will start talking.

    One of the things I heard most at conference was the 'absolute monarchy moderated by regicide' quote.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,609
    surbiton said:

    The market is all wrong.

    The EU is going to roll out the red carpet to a single market.

    Remember, "they need us" more than we need them. Something to do with Balance of Payments !

    A deal that works for us is, I am sure, possible, but there is no doubt some had unrealistic expectations. For one, all the talk about it being in the EU's interest to give us things might well be true, but even if they are, that is no guarantee they will do so. For one, a little bit more pain in exchange for not making our exit look too comfortable helps spread the message it isn't worth leaving, might be considered worth the cost for many. For two, who is to say the nations and bureaucracy will act rationally even if it is in their interest to give us things? We were just told things were in our interest and voted the other way, Columbians were told a historic peace deal might flounder if they voted No but did anyway - time will tell on both, if I helped contribute to a mistake for instance, but things a lot of people say are in the interests of others to do does not end up happening.

  • Options
    MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606
    Indigo said:

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.

    And if told by an intransigent EU that the choices were either "Full FoM & Full Single Market" or "piss off", what would this party do, and what would it tell the voters ?
    Take the former and move one circle away from the EU, rebuild our non-EU relationships, use weak Sterling to rebuild our balance of payments and look at moving another circle out in another few years.

    What the PM is proposing is moving from the inside lane of a 6 lane motorway onto a slip road that is fast approaching crossing all the traffic to get there in time. It's not a simple process.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,935

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    The Tories are actually polling better under May than Cameron was when he left
  • Options
    Indigo said:

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.

    And if told by an intransigent EU that the choices were either "Full FoM & Full Single Market" or "piss off", what would this party do, and what would it tell the voters ?
    I'd say well the people have voted against full freedom of movement, and we'd have to make the best of no full single market membership/access deal.

    It isn't like the voters weren't warned about this.
  • Options
    TonyETonyE Posts: 938
    Apparently, despite the massive movement in price there wasn't a great deal of liquidity involved in the Asian market overnight. There may be no political element to this at all.

    There's a very good chance that this was a trader (or a small number of traders) choosing to push the market down for advantage or to mitigate another position.
  • Options
    Chris_AChris_A Posts: 1,237
    edited October 2016
    Moses we'll carry one whingeing and moaning (just like your lot had done for decades) until we can stop the damage being done to our country and ensure vile racists like Rudd are consigned to the back benches where at best she belongs.
  • Options
    HYUFD said:

    MaxPB said:

    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    The tone of Mrs May's speech has worried a lot of people. She needs to row back on some of it and put Rudd on a much tighter leash. The foreign workers register was a huge and unnecessary misstep as was the idea of deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
    Yet most voters backed it
    The voters also backed Gordon Brown's British Jobs for British Workers, then changed their mind.
  • Options
    JohnOJohnO Posts: 4,214
    MaxPB said:

    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    The tone of Mrs May's speech has worried a lot of people. She needs to row back on some of it and put Rudd on a much tighter leash. The foreign workers register was a huge and unnecessary misstep as was the idea of deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
    I agree on both counts....but then I voted Remain. Hard exit here we come: it's immigration, stupid (not directed at you).
  • Options
    MarkSeniorMarkSenior Posts: 4,699
    Highland Culloden after Stage 7

    SNP 970
    LDem 793
    Con 589
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,935

    HYUFD said:

    MaxPB said:

    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    The tone of Mrs May's speech has worried a lot of people. She needs to row back on some of it and put Rudd on a much tighter leash. The foreign workers register was a huge and unnecessary misstep as was the idea of deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
    Yet most voters backed it
    The voters also backed Gordon Brown's British Jobs for British Workers, then changed their mind.
    They did not change their mind as the Leave vote showed, they just preferred Cameron in 2010
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,609
    Moses_ said:

    It's a pig in a poke

    Remainers want the Brexit mob to sort out in 47 days what Remainers took 47 years to build on a sand of lies.......

    Yet when the people were finally asked Remainers still could not carry the popular vote and win the argument after 47 fecking years? They then mope and they weep and they winge and they moan. Perhaps they need to look inwards and see why the majority do not agree.

    FFS .....enough already.

    People have the right to say 'I told you so' of course. But ultimately that point is pretty strong - why were so many outright hostile and so many others apathetic or lukewarm, to the point positive arguments in favour of the EU go barely a look in? Blaming the media, populists and general population idiocy is no excuse given so long to make a benign impression.
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    I for one will gladly give up the running of our country to avoid a temporary dip in the Forex rates.

    Who is with me ?

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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    MaxPB said:

    MaxPB said:

    tlg86 said:

    Sleazy broken Sterling on the slide.

    Just like the Tories under Mrs May?

    This is part of the problem. The Tories cannot lose, so there is no fear factor.

    Of course they can lose. Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum, if the Tories screw up, someone, eventually, will prosper from the Tories screwing up.
    In 2050?
    Hubris old bean.

    What do you think David Lloyd George's reaction would have been in 1918 that he would be the last Liberal Prime Minister?

    Or the reaction of Campbell-Bannerman after winning in 1906 a majority of 120 odd that the Liberals would be screwed forever in a little over a decade.

    When these kind of seismic changes come, they happen very rapidly. Cf Scottish Labour
    So who, or what, will depose the current status quo? Brexit was a seismic event but overall I don't think the political landscape has changed that much. You and I are still in the same party despite voting differently, we are also both wary of the new leadership as well. I'm not going to leave for the Lib Dems and definitely not for Labour. My only choice is to tough it out and if I get the chance vote for a liberal type of leader, even if it means Osborne coming back.

    I also don't see any new party coming along, I'll never support a party with the "safe space" chumps in it and I doubt you would either. So where does that leave us?
    Think of a party that would carry on the Cameron/The coalition's education reforms, that was focused on making the economic cake bigger, not equal.

    Socially liberal, not someone obsessed with 'safe spaces' or naming and shaming companies for the number of Jonny Foreigners they employ.
    That party currently sits on the back benches of the governing one. There is literally zero appetite to split, so where does it leave us?

    Just want to add, I agree with all of those policy goals.
    I'm staying put, we're like Churchill on the backbenchers whilst the appeasers are in charge. Our time will come again.
    As modest as Churchill, I see.
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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    MaxPB said:

    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    The tone of Mrs May's speech has worried a lot of people. She needs to row back on some of it and put Rudd on a much tighter leash. The foreign workers register was a huge and unnecessary misstep as was the idea of deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
    I am sure it was the talk of the No10 Bus in Basildon. Outside the metropolitan circles it will have been met by general approval or at least indifference. We seem to roll from one instance of finance, media and other inner city types feeling that they speak for the population to another. Wasn't that fact that 59% approved of Rudd's list a bit of a clue, and that will be a low result because some people will have been concerned it was the non-PC view.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570
    MaxPB said:

    JohnO said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    deporting foreign doctors in 2025.
    In shackles and orange jump suits no doubt?

    Or will we simply have time limited work permits like much of the rest of the world?

    And as for publishing foreign workers - it could be worse, we could publish their employer, job title, location and nationality, like that other fascist regime.....the USA....
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    GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 20,845

    surbiton said:

    https://www.poundsterlinglive.com/eur/5552-gbp-to-eur-parity-forecast-ubs-3454

    PBrexiters favourite mantra: the EUR imploding.

    2003: £1= EUR 1.37

    2016:: £1= EUR 1.11

    It really is imploding. Sterling, I mean.

    2007: £1 = EUR 1.52
    2008 £1 = EUR 1.03

    I think we can safely say the rate tends to fluctuate......
    I wonder if there was anything happening in 2008 to devalue sterling so much.

    Oh yes, I remember now.

    I'd rather not have that every decade, thanks.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,570

    John said:

    Tranquility, mon brave, senex Johannus ex Hershamo, exhorts moderation in temper and tone. These are not (yet at least) the worst of IDS times. Internal exile is unwarranted.

    One of the things I heard most at conference was the 'absolute monarchy moderated by regicide' quote.
    You went?

    I thought you stayed away?
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