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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » New YouGov England & Wales polling has LAB down at 18.7% if th

SystemSystem Posts: 11,009
edited October 2016 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » New YouGov England & Wales polling has LAB down at 18.7% if there was a STOP BREXIT candidate on the ballot

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  • Options
    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    Not a surprise. I'd be one of them.
  • Options
    MTimTMTimT Posts: 7,034
    This, presumably, would game out as a massive Tory majority in E&W.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924
    It could happen.

    *But* only if:

    (a) The next two years were to see a very serious recession, that was blamed on Brexit
    (b) Jeremy Corbyn were to be removed the head of Labour, and someone conducive to Stop Brexit became leader
    (c) It were to be backed by the bulk of Labour, LibDem MPs and a minority number of Conservative politicians

    The first is a reasonable possibility. (Note that the recession could be caused by any number of factors - China, war in the Middle East, etc. - but it would inevitably be blamed upon Brexit.)

    The second is not.

    And the third is remote.

    So, I'd give it a greater than one in a hundred chance. But only just.
  • Options
    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    It would be interesting to see what the conventional figures (i.e. without the pretend party) came out like, but the thing that most strikes me from those published above is Ukip on 14.8%. This is slightly higher than (though effectively the same as, allowing for margin of error,) their actual performance in the 2015 general election. This is also broadly consistent with the bulk of recent polls - the fluctuating and rather odd series of Mori phone polls excepted - which show them moving nowhere, despite the fact that Farage appears to have gone for good this time and the rest of the party is busy tearing itself to pieces. A quite extraordinary state of affairs.

    If a hypothetical election were held in which these vote shares were actually obtained, then this would be very hard to model correctly given the effect of the new party. However, you would have to guess that Labour would hold its deep heartlands, the Remain Party would probably behave similarly to the Lib Dems and get a relatively poor reward of mostly southern English seats, and Ukip would be left with little or nothing again. So, Conservatives by a landslide, with Labour a very distant second.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924
    @another_richard

    Didn't John Stevens beat Nigel Farage in 2010 in Buckingham?

    (Looked at Wikipedia, and yes he did...)
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924

    It would be interesting to see what the conventional figures (i.e. without the pretend party) came out like, but the thing that most strikes me from those published above is Ukip on 14.8%. This is slightly higher than (though effectively the same as, allowing for margin of error,) their actual performance in the 2015 general election. This is also broadly consistent with the bulk of recent polls - the fluctuating and rather odd series of Mori phone polls excepted - which show them moving nowhere, despite the fact that Farage appears to have gone for good this time and the rest of the party is busy tearing itself to pieces. A quite extraordinary state of affairs.

    If a hypothetical election were held in which these vote shares were actually obtained, then this would be very hard to model correctly given the effect of the new party. However, you would have to guess that Labour would hold its deep heartlands, the Remain Party would probably behave similarly to the Lib Dems and get a relatively poor reward of mostly southern English seats, and Ukip would be left with little or nothing again. So, Conservatives by a landslide, with Labour a very distant second.

    I would have thought, and this is just a guess, that the existence of a Stop Brexit Party could regalvanise UKIP.
  • Options
    MarkHopkinsMarkHopkins Posts: 5,584

    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

  • Options
    rcs1000 said:

    @another_richard

    Didn't John Stevens beat Nigel Farage in 2010 in Buckingham?

    (Looked at Wikipedia, and yes he did...)

    But he wasn't standing for the PECP.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    So... the Conservatives should found one? :p
  • Options
    MTimT said:

    This, presumably, would game out as a massive Tory majority in E&W.

    See 1983.

    Like then you would see some Conservative gains in highly unexpected places.
  • Options
    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    justin124 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    justin124 said:

    Is it not the case that because of their very weak performance in 2015 the LibDems will be denied the same level of coverage by the BBC and other broadcasters in 2020? Fewer PPBs too!

    I think that depends on their opinion polling in the next few years.
    I don't think it does - on that basis UKIP would have been entitled to at least the same coverage as the LibDems back in 2015. I am pretty sure the key determinant is performance at the previous General Election.
    You may have a point; if the 2020 debates take place, they’re likely to be between Con, Lab & SNP. - Now there's a thought...
    And a perfectly valid one. Unless something dramatic changes between now and then (admittedly not impossible given the circumstances) then these three parties will not only be the dominant players in the current Parliament, but likely to remain so in the next one. Or, to put it another way, whilst the Prime Minister will only realistically come from one of two parties, Labour at least is unlikely to be able to return to power again without SNP support. It has therefore become a lot more relevant to the whole of the UK that, when the election campaign comes, we hear what the SNP have to say about everything.

    I doubt that Mrs May would be particularly upset at this prospect...
    I would guess the SNP will probably lost 5-15 seats at the next GE, mostly on the back of Unionist tactical voting. The borders seats should all fall to the Tories, as should one of the Edinburgh ones, while Edinburgh West and Fife should go to the LDs, and there should be a couple that go Labour too.
    Hmmm... five at a push, fifteen seems way too ambitious. First, the SNP vote shows no sign of weakening. Second, presumably there was no shortage of Unionist tactical voting last time, and a fat lot of good it did. Third, boundary change.
    Look at the last Holyrood elections, the SNP lost constituency seats to Unionist tactical voting, despite their vote share actually rising 1.1%.

    Edit to add: the SNP, of course, took a whole bunch of constituency seats off Labour in Glasgow.
    What SNP Edinburgh seat do you expect to fall to the Tories? There is no Edinburgh central at Westminster and they only took Ed Central at Holyrood due to a combination of incumbent retiring, highly favourable candidate and a Greens spoiler siphoning off thousands of pro Indy votes from the SNP to get a win by 600 odd votes.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924


    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

    It would campaign presumably on the basis that, like a battered spouse, it had seen the error of its ways.
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    MikeSmithsonMikeSmithson Posts: 7,382
    The reason that UKIP is higher here than other polls is that the sample was confined to England & Wales. UKIP polls poorly north of the border.
  • Options
    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    @another_richard

    Didn't John Stevens beat Nigel Farage in 2010 in Buckingham?

    (Looked at Wikipedia, and yes he did...)

    But he wasn't standing for the PECP.
    True. What - if anything - were the John Stevens policies in Buckingham in 2010?
    That he wasn't Bercow and he wasn't Farage.
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    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976
    50% of June 23rd REMAIN voters say they’d back such a new party.

    Brilliant idea, they could hold a protest march across the country, lead by an idiot in drag where only 3,000 of the 16 million who voted to remain bother to turn up....
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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    edited October 2016
    ooh, actually I hadn't realised quite what had happened with Edinburgh south and south west.
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,034

    The reason that UKIP is higher here than other polls is that the sample was confined to England & Wales. UKIP polls poorly north of the border.

    The UK is to UKIP as Democratic is to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924
    Oops.

    I just erased a bunch of comments by accident.

    Sorry.
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    MattWMattW Posts: 18,402
    edited October 2016
    Time for the Lib Dems to rename themselves for 6 months as a stump (or stumped!) tactic.

    The "We Know Better Than The Majority" party. But that is all of them.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    Mr. 1000, you sound like a drunk Winston Smith :p
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    Dear Voter, would you like to join our Trumpist Boo-hoo-hoo We-was-robbed-by-Democracy Party. No? Why ever not?
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924

    Mr. 1000, you sound like a drunk Winston Smith :p

    Not drunk (yet).

    Last time I tried to talk to my children and do site admin at the same time, I accidentally erased the entire server...
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    nunununu Posts: 6,024
    John Harwood – Verified account ‏@JohnJHarwood

    senior GOP Senate strategist: "Trump now tied in Indiana. down 11 in PA and 14 in NH. going down hard"
  • Options
    MonikerDiCanioMonikerDiCanio Posts: 5,792
    edited October 2016
    A Stop Brexit Party could attract Labouristes who can't accept Corbyn, for sure. A witches' brew of frustrated self-righteous anti-democratic losers.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924
    nunu said:

    John Harwood – Verified account ‏@JohnJHarwood

    senior GOP Senate strategist: "Trump now tied in Indiana. down 11 in PA and 14 in NH. going down hard"

    The polls could be wrong.
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    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976
    50% of June 23rd REMAIN voters say they’d back such a new party

    Brilliant idea, they could hold a protest march across the country like the one lead by an idiot in drag where only 3,000 of the 16 million who voted to remain, bothered to turn up...

  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    Mr. StClare, the Pink Beret Brigade?
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    The SNP lost the referendum but won the post referendum election.
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    CookieCookie Posts: 11,365
    rcs1000 said:

    It could happen.

    *But* only if:

    (a) The next two years were to see a very serious recession, that was blamed on Brexit
    (b) Jeremy Corbyn were to be removed the head of Labour, and someone conducive to Stop Brexit became leader
    (c) It were to be backed by the bulk of Labour, LibDem MPs and a minority number of Conservative politicians

    The first is a reasonable possibility. (Note that the recession could be caused by any number of factors - China, war in the Middle East, etc. - but it would inevitably be blamed upon Brexit.)

    The second is not.

    And the third is remote.

    So, I'd give it a greater than one in a hundred chance. But only just.

    Doesn't this depend on Corbyn not being removed? i.e. isn't this a hypothetical SDP Mk2 with the Chuka/Tristram wing of the party splitting off and merging with the Lib Dems? For such a party, stop-Brexit would be pretty much their single big issue to coalesce around - but in general, they'd have more in common in terms of world view than Chuka or Tistram currently have with Corbyn, or, indeed, with many of their own voters in small town England (who, of course, have little in common with Corby either).

    All very sensible, I would have thought, if elelectorally suicidal. But no more electorally suicidal than staying in a party led by Jeremy Corbyn..

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    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    rcs1000 said:


    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

    It would campaign presumably on the basis that, like a battered spouse, it had seen the error of its ways.
    A thesis liable to have strictly limited appeal amongst the wider electorate...

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/eu-brexit-theresa-may-negotiations-will-win-a7375376.html

    "Remainers should not fool themselves that the referendum decision can be reversed, or that the Prime Minister will lose popularity if the Brexit talks go badly. They are right to point out that there will be an economic cost to Brexit. The harder the Brexit deal, the greater the cost. Indeed it may as much as £66bn a year, as the Treasury estimated. But that is over the long term, by 2034, and it would not be the loss of money we already have, it would be how much poorer the country would be than it would otherwise have been.

    The voters heard the economic argument but the majority voted to leave anyway. Some may have done so refusing to believe there would be a price to pay. But when the bill is presented – to the extent that it is noticeable at all – they will not decide they were wrong. They will decide that the EU’s attempt to punish us for leaving confirms that we were right to do so. This is one argument that Theresa May cannot lose."

    Sums up why both EU attempts to arm twist Britain, and pro-EU screaming about the economic damage of Brexit, is likely to energise none bar a committed Europhile rump in this country. If the Government doesn't get a decent deal out of the EU, then both it and most of the press will blame the EU for being unreasonable, and they will be believed. The more difficult circumstances get, the more the public's streak of cussedness will bolster Theresa May and the more unpopular the EU will become. Hardly propitious circumstances in which to campaign as the anti-Ukip.
  • Options
    A backlash against brexit is inevitable. you
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,280
    So 48.9% of voters would vote for avowedly pro-Brexit parties, and there'd be a Tory landslide.

    Got it.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....
  • Options
    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,936
    edited October 2016

    So... the Conservatives should found one? :p

    rcs1000 said:


    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

    It would campaign presumably on the basis that, like a battered spouse, it had seen the error of its ways.
    To do so it would have to be fronted by a leaver, presumably?
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,280


    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

    It would stand for staying in the EU.

    Their argument would be they respected the original result but it was only a very narrow victory based on lies and, now people have seen the error of their ways borne out through economic reality, there is now a clear majority for staying in.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    edited October 2016
    FPT
    rcs1000 said:

    ' Opinion polls are a factor, it's not an "if".

    But it's all a bit hand-wavy. If the LibDems get 20% in the local elections in 2019 and are polling a similar amount, they will get similar coverage to 2015.

    If you want to understand how the weightings are calculated, here's the Ofcom review ahead of GE2015 - https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0016/72142/major_parties_statement.pdf''

    Thanks for that document. I have just read it.Having done so , it seems highly unlikely that a party will obtain much consideration from Ofcom in respect of a last minute surge as Polling Day approaches - ie the last 12 months of the Parliament. Performance at the previous General Election will clearly weigh heavily.
  • Options
    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976

    Mr. StClare, the Pink Beret Brigade?

    For the last time, it wasn’t PINK, - it was Charisse – these things matter. :lol:
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    Mr. 124, the approach taken towards UKIP (which surged in popularity in the latter end of the previous Parliament) would have to be the one taken, surely?
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    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    FPT
    Black_Rook said:

    ' Hmmm... five at a push, fifteen seems way too ambitious. First, the SNP vote shows no sign of weakening. Second, presumably there was no shortage of Unionist tactical voting last time, and a fat lot of good it did. Third, boundary change.'

    Holyrood elections did provide some evidence of SNP support falling back a bit. On the basis of the constituency vote their support was 46.5% - compared with almost 50% a year earlier for Westminster. In the past, the SNP has tended to overperform at Holyrood in relation to Westminster so ,on that basis, I suspect the SNP would have struggled to poll 45% had a Westminster election taken place last May.
    I don't think we should assume anything about new Boundaries until they have been approved. Personally , I am not expecting that to happen!
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    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924

    rcs1000 said:


    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

    It would campaign presumably on the basis that, like a battered spouse, it had seen the error of its ways.
    A thesis liable to have strictly limited appeal amongst the wider electorate...

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/eu-brexit-theresa-may-negotiations-will-win-a7375376.html

    "Remainers should not fool themselves that the referendum decision can be reversed, or that the Prime Minister will lose popularity if the Brexit talks go badly. They are right to point out that there will be an economic cost to Brexit. The harder the Brexit deal, the greater the cost. Indeed it may as much as £66bn a year, as the Treasury estimated. But that is over the long term, by 2034, and it would not be the loss of money we already have, it would be how much poorer the country would be than it would otherwise have been.

    The voters heard the economic argument but the majority voted to leave anyway. Some may have done so refusing to believe there would be a price to pay. But when the bill is presented – to the extent that it is noticeable at all – they will not decide they were wrong. They will decide that the EU’s attempt to punish us for leaving confirms that we were right to do so. This is one argument that Theresa May cannot lose."

    Sums up why both EU attempts to arm twist Britain, and pro-EU screaming about the economic damage of Brexit, is likely to energise none bar a committed Europhile rump in this country. If the Government doesn't get a decent deal out of the EU, then both it and most of the press will blame the EU for being unreasonable, and they will be believed. The more difficult circumstances get, the more the public's streak of cussedness will bolster Theresa May and the more unpopular the EU will become. Hardly propitious circumstances in which to campaign as the anti-Ukip.
    While I hope you're right, if unemployment begins to soar, and house prices tank, then Brexit could become rapidly unpopular. How people say they'll behave, and how they behave if they think their livelihood is threatened are two different things.

    I'd note that such a scenario might have nothing to do with Brexit. Imagine a war in the Middle East that pushed oil (and by extension natural gas and coal) prices up 3x. (Likely? Not very, but perfectly possible.)

    Given the weakness of Sterling, we'd see our energy import bill go through the roof. Cars would cost a lot to drive, electricity prices would increase markedly. And our current account deficit would soar towards 10%.

    Brexit, rightly or wrongly, would probably take the blame.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,034

    Mr. StClare, the Pink Beret Brigade?

    For the last time, it wasn’t PINK, - it was Charisse – these things matter. :lol:
    Tell Cyd.
  • Options
    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924
    justin124 said:

    FPT
    rcs1000 said:

    ' Opinion polls are a factor, it's not an "if".

    But it's all a bit hand-wavy. If the LibDems get 20% in the local elections in 2019 and are polling a similar amount, they will get similar coverage to 2015.

    If you want to understand how the weightings are calculated, here's the Ofcom review ahead of GE2015 - https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0016/72142/major_parties_statement.pdf''

    Thanks for that document. I have just read it.Having done so , it seems highly unlikely that a party will obtain much consideration from Ofcom in respect of a last minute surge as Polling Day approaches - ie the last 12 months of the Parliament. Performance at the previous General Election will clearly weigh heavily.

    Well, we'll see.

    It's all a bit counterfactual, really, as their current polling is still sub 10%.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    F1: Vettel having a sudden loss of power. In an earlier practice session, he had to drive one-handed due to holding onto a bit of bodywork (might have been a wobbly wing mirror).
  • Options
    ChrisChris Posts: 11,100
    nunu said:

    John Harwood – Verified account ‏@JohnJHarwood

    senior GOP Senate strategist: "Trump now tied in Indiana. down 11 in PA and 14 in NH. going down hard"

    If this refers to the Google Consumer Surveys poll that showed Clinton ahead in Indiana, I think it needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Some of the Google state polls are widely different from the consensus, sometimes in Trump's favour and sometimes in Clinton's.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Mr. StClare, the Pink Beret Brigade?

    For the last time, it wasn’t PINK, - it was Charisse – these things matter. :lol:
    Tell Cyd.
    ....it was cerise!
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,122

    F1: Vettel having a sudden loss of power. In an earlier practice session, he had to drive one-handed due to holding onto a bit of bodywork (might have been a wobbly wing mirror).

    Never heard it called that before :wink:
  • Options
    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,280

    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    Mr. Doethur, it takes a real man to drive an F1 car with just one hand, whilst the other's clutching his bodywork.
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    Whether or not any realignment takes place over the next couple of years (I find this a bit dubious due to Labour's inherent tribalism), surely what this indicates is that there is explosive potential for growth in the Lib Dem poll rating. A by election win could trigger a surge in pro-European voters opting for the Lib Dems, as in Orpington in the early '60s when the win led to enough voters taking a fresh look at the Liberals for the party to briefly top the polls.

    In response to David Herdson's thoughtful post on the LD approach to campaigning - Brexit changes things a bit. We put this front and centre in the Witney campaign, being pro-EU relates directly to basic liberal principles and surely offers the most realistic route to building a core vote.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    Mr. Chamberlain, welcome to the site.

    But from where would the explosion come? Some from UKIP (as protesters rather than EU enthusiasts), but the only other real source would be Labour. At a certain point, that split becomes a Goldilocks Zone for the Conservatives.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,280
    rcs1000 said:

    rcs1000 said:


    What would a Stop Brexit party stand for?

    1. Ignore referendum and continue as now.
    2. Leave, but do a deal that's so close that we might as well have stayed.
    3. EEA, but add other EU regs back in again.

    It would be split before it began.

    It would campaign presumably on the basis that, like a battered spouse, it had seen the error of its ways.
    A thesis liable to have strictly limited appeal amongst the wider electorate...

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/eu-brexit-theresa-may-negotiations-will-win-a7375376.html

    "Remainers

    The voters heard the economic argument but the majority voted to leave anyway. Some may have done so refusing to believe there would be a price to pay. But when the bill is presented – to the extent that it is noticeable at all – they will not decide they were wrong. They will decide that the EU’s attempt to punish us for leaving confirms that we were right to do so. This is one argument that Theresa May cannot lose."

    Sums up why both EU attempts to arm twist Britain, and pro-EU screaming about the economic damage of Brexit, is likely to energise none bar a committed Europhile rump in this country. If the Government doesn't get a decent deal out of the EU, then both it and most of the press will blame the EU for being unreasonable, and they will be believed. The more difficult circumstances get, the more the public's streak of cussedness will bolster Theresa May and the more unpopular the EU will become. Hardly propitious circumstances in which to campaign as the anti-Ukip.
    While I hope you're right, if unemployment begins to soar, and house prices tank, then Brexit could become rapidly unpopular. How people say they'll behave, and how they behave if they think their livelihood is threatened are two different things.

    I'd note that such a scenario might have nothing to do with Brexit. Imagine a war in the Middle East that pushed oil (and by extension natural gas and coal) prices up 3x. (Likely? Not very, but perfectly possible.)

    Given the weakness of Sterling, we'd see our energy import bill go through the roof. Cars would cost a lot to drive, electricity prices would increase markedly. And our current account deficit would soar towards 10%.

    Brexit, rightly or wrongly, would probably take the blame.
    Even if that were proved to be correct, it would solve nothing.

    The EU wouldn't reform to accommodate us, and all the underlying issues that led to Brexit would remain unresolved, and probably strengthen in salience.

    A sullen, chastened Britain remaining a member, whilst also losing respect in the process for folding, would not be a happy place.
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    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,280

    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
    Brexit is as much of a game changer as either of those two things, just in different ways.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924



    Even if that were proved to be correct, it would solve nothing.

    The EU wouldn't reform to accommodate us, and all the underlying issues that led to Brexit would remain unresolved, and probably strengthen in salience.

    A sullen, chastened Britain remaining a member, whilst also losing respect in the process for folding, would not be a happy place.

    I am merely putting forward one scenario where a Stop Brexit party might thrive.

    Not a scenario I relish at all.
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    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
    Brexit is as much of a game changer as either of those two things, just in different ways.

    Not for the Establishment.

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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,230
    edited October 2016

    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
    Soon the focus will turn back to Labour IMO. The party can't continue indefinitely trying to ride both horses at once (or, more accurately, trying to ride one of the horses unobtrusively whilst keeping the other within jumping distance).
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    Mr. Chamberlain, welcome to the site.

    But from where would the explosion come? Some from UKIP (as protesters rather than EU enthusiasts), but the only other real source would be Labour. At a certain point, that split becomes a Goldilocks Zone for the Conservatives.

    Thank you! I think there's significant potential for switching from moderate Conservatives who are turned off by the harsh anti-immigrant tone that May's allowed to envelope the Tory party and who are vehemently opposed to leaving the single market. There were plenty of these types in Witney and I suspect many more in London and the university towns.
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    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905

    Mr. Chamberlain, welcome to the site.

    But from where would the explosion come? Some from UKIP (as protesters rather than EU enthusiasts), but the only other real source would be Labour. At a certain point, that split becomes a Goldilocks Zone for the Conservatives.

    I'm not going to believe that the Lib Dems are heading anywhere until there's a big, sustained and consistent revival in the polls. There's been no sign of this so far, and there's nothing particularly encouraging from the Witney result, either. Looks like a combination of a very large LD get out the vote drive (which they don't have the resources to conduct across dozens of target seats in a general election,) combined with traditional mid-term protest against the governing party, a lot of Tories (who care more about elections that have proper consequences, rather than by-elections) staying at home, and a probably quite limited amount of Continuity Remain activism.

    The most noticeable thing for me, however, is that the Labour vote in Witney did not collapse - suggesting that much of the loss of left-leaning votes caused by disgust at the Coalition has been long-lasting and might be permanent. Without being able to consolidate the "progressive" vote behind them (in seats that are straight Con-LD fights) to the same extent as they did pre-2010, the LDs will struggle to make much progress in a general election in most of the seats that they lost to the Tories last time - and that's without taking into account the numbers of potential right-leaning voters who might otherwise have given them a go, but will be put off by Farron's drift leftwards and by the thought that he would probably be willing to prop-up a very left-wing Lab/Nat coalition in the next Parliament, were the option to present itself.
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    IanB2 said:

    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
    Soon the focus will turn back to Labour IMO. The party can't continue indefinitely trying to ride both horses at once (or, more accurately, trying to ride one of the horses unobtrusively whilst keeping the other within jumping distance).

    Labour is utterly irrelevant under its current leadership. That's going to take a bit of time to play out.

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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited October 2016
    FPT:

    No. As our new PM has said so often, "Brexit means Brexit". Nothing more. Nothing less. If we end up leaving the European Union, we have achieved what was voted for, no matter whether we're in the EEA, in EFTA, with Swiss-style bilateral treaties, in a Customs Union, with a CETA-style treaty, in NAFTA somehow, in the WTO with no other treaties, outside the WTO, or in a personal union with North Korea, practicing juche.

    Except you are missing the politics. May needs to get re-elected in 2020, preferably with a nice fat majority on the basis of what she has done, and she can see 4 million ex-UKIP votes, and maybe a couple of million Blue Labour votes gamboling through the meadows looking for a new party to vote for. The vast majority of 2015 Tory voters either voted Leave, or voted Remain because they believed in Dave, showing some immigration leg is going to lose her very few of those and potentially net her another 4-5 million voters, many of whom will be quite forgiving of short term economic problems if they see immigration going firmly downward, and an complete landslide in 2020.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,280

    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
    Brexit is as much of a game changer as either of those two things, just in different ways.

    Not for the Establishment.

    The Establishment was unambiguously for Remain.

    But we may have to agree to disagree on whether its a setback for them or not.
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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,287
    edited October 2016
    Polis busy in Newton Abbot - Sky and BBC claim finds are related to North Greenwich bomb kit.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-37740590
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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    50% of June 23rd REMAIN voters say they’d back such a new party.

    Brilliant idea, they could hold a protest march across the country, lead by an idiot in drag where only 3,000 of the 16 million who voted to remain bother to turn up....

    and only half of those bother to vote.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
  • Options

    We Leavers thought the extreme joy of the night of 24th June could not be beaten.

    We were wrong.

    The delight that has come from hearing the wailing of an Establishment that held four aces secreted up its sleeve, being beaten by our six-high running flush, for month after month - that has been positively tantric....

    The Establishment is still in charge and will remain in charge. If you really want to stick it up them raise their taxes, close down their public schools, give everyone the freedom to roam on their land and support Scottish independence.

    Under your thesis, the Establishment would still hold sway in a rUK, despite voting to eviscerate the nation.

    The Establishment is still in charge and has been shaken out of nothing. Brexit has made a few people grumpy and that's about it. Nothing has changed at all. If you want to shake things up, vote for Corbyn Labour and support Scotland leaving the UK. These really would be game-changers.
    Brexit is as much of a game changer as either of those two things, just in different ways.

    Not for the Establishment.

    The Establishment was unambiguously for Remain.

    But we may have to agree to disagree on whether its a setback for them or not.

    Hmm. Two parts of the Establishment went head to head. One side won. Both sides are in exactly the same place as they were previously.

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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,163
    Trump on again about a rigged election and dishonest mainstream media.

    This is a man who has lost and is so not used to losing.
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    Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 4,814
    Posted on the Previous Thread 'cos I didn't see the new one while I was catching up:
    Indigo said:

    I had already said that prior to the vote. I would have believed it a mistake and actually would have been confident in.my predictions that the EU was converging so fast that we would have been forced out far more painfully within a decade. But I would not personally have continue to campaign as I would have considered it disrespectful to try to revisit the question for a decade or so.

    Is wanting to stay in the single market not in some sense revisiting the question? The people voted out in response to a disreputable campaign which was centred on immigration. If you think we can pick and chose which bits of the EU we should leave your democratic moral conscience is no purer than anyone else's.
    If as you say the leave campaign was centred on immigration, it is reasonable to conclude that people voted out because they wanted to change immigration numbers, something we can't do with four freedoms, and ergo something we can't do in the single market.
    Given that the win was by 51.9%, unless any particular issue was so great as to be certainly a deciding factor for more than 96% of those who voted Leave, citing that particular issue as being the expressed will of the people is not supported.

    "Brexit means closing the borders"
    "Brexit means leaving the Single Market"
    "Brexit means blue passports"
    "Brexit means leaving all our existing treaties with everyone because all infringe on our sovereignty"
    "Brexit means whatever I favour"
    ...

    No. As our new PM has said so often, "Brexit means Brexit". Nothing more. Nothing less. If we end up leaving the European Union, we have achieved what was voted for, no matter whether we're in the EEA, in EFTA, with Swiss-style bilateral treaties, in a Customs Union, with a CETA-style treaty, in NAFTA somehow, in the WTO with no other treaties, outside the WTO, or in a personal union with North Korea, practicing juche.

    Brexit does not mean hard Brexit, or soft Brexit, or flaccid Brexit, or tumescent Brexit, or waxing Brexit, or waning Brexit, or crumbling Brexit, or diamond Brexit. Brexit means Brexit, and claiming it means any particular flavour of Brexit is simply the claimer trying to assert an unproven democratic support for whatever position he or she happens to hold.
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,163
    Trump says he will sue all the woman who have come forward about groping.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    dr_spyn said:

    Polis busy in Newton Abbot - Sky and BBC claim finds are related to North Greenwich bomb kit.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-37740590

    "A police statement said officers from the Metropolitan Police attended an address in Tudor Road and "found an item they deemed suspicious"."

    In Newton Abbot, that could cover anything manufactured since 1800....
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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    PlatoSaid said:
    Sounds low energy. Sad.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Trump on again about a rigged election and dishonest mainstream media.

    This is a man who has lost and is so not used to losing.

    Remoaner?
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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited October 2016

    Mr. Chamberlain, welcome to the site.

    But from where would the explosion come? Some from UKIP (as protesters rather than EU enthusiasts), but the only other real source would be Labour. At a certain point, that split becomes a Goldilocks Zone for the Conservatives.

    Thank you! I think there's significant potential for switching from moderate Conservatives who are turned off by the harsh anti-immigrant tone that May's allowed to envelope the Tory party and who are vehemently opposed to leaving the single market. There were plenty of these types in Witney and I suspect many more in London and the university towns.
    The idea of a "harsh anti-immigration tone" is a fantasy of left-leaning activists, nothing is being discussed or even floated as a possibility that isn't completely standard practise and uncontroversial in 120+ countries of the world. Voters watching their TVs and seeing 30 year old children with blankets over their heads being waved through Dover, are going to be completely unsympathetic to that view, especially if one of them in due course blows something up.
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    nunununu Posts: 6,024
    Chris said:

    nunu said:

    John Harwood – Verified account ‏@JohnJHarwood

    senior GOP Senate strategist: "Trump now tied in Indiana. down 11 in PA and 14 in NH. going down hard"

    If this refers to the Google Consumer Surveys poll that showed Clinton ahead in Indiana, I think it needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Some of the Google state polls are widely different from the consensus, sometimes in Trump's favour and sometimes in Clinton's.
    No, its internal GOP polling.
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,163

    Trump on again about a rigged election and dishonest mainstream media.

    This is a man who has lost and is so not used to losing.

    Remoaner?
    Me or Trump?
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    CookieCookie Posts: 11,365

    Posted on the Previous Thread 'cos I didn't see the new one while I was catching up:

    Indigo said:

    I had already said that prior to the vote. I would have believed it a mistake and actually would have been confident in.my predictions that the EU was converging so fast that we would have been forced out far more painfully within a decade. But I would not personally have continue to campaign as I would have considered it disrespectful to try to revisit the question for a decade or so.

    Is wanting to stay in the single market not in some sense revisiting the question? The people voted out in response to a disreputable campaign which was centred on immigration. If you think we can pick and chose which bits of the EU we should leave your democratic moral conscience is no purer than anyone else's.
    If as you say the leave campaign was centred on immigration, it is reasonable to conclude that people voted out because they wanted to change immigration numbers, something we can't do with four freedoms, and ergo something we can't do in the single market.
    Given that the win was by 51.9%, unless any particular issue was so great as to be certainly a deciding factor for more than 96% of those who voted Leave, citing that particular issue as being the expressed will of the people is not supported.

    "Brexit means closing the borders"
    "Brexit means leaving the Single Market"
    "Brexit means blue passports"
    "Brexit means leaving all our existing treaties with everyone because all infringe on our sovereignty"
    "Brexit means whatever I favour"
    ...

    No. As our new PM has said so often, "Brexit means Brexit". Nothing more. Nothing less. If we end up leaving the European Union, we have achieved what was voted for, no matter whether we're in the EEA, in EFTA, with Swiss-style bilateral treaties, in a Customs Union, with a CETA-style treaty, in NAFTA somehow, in the WTO with no other treaties, outside the WTO, or in a personal union with North Korea, practicing juche.

    Brexit does not mean hard Brexit, or soft Brexit, or flaccid Brexit, or tumescent Brexit, or waxing Brexit, or waning Brexit, or crumbling Brexit, or diamond Brexit. Brexit means Brexit, and claiming it means any particular flavour of Brexit is simply the claimer trying to assert an unproven democratic support for whatever position he or she happens to hold.
    Good post Andy. Well put.
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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966

    Brexit does not mean hard Brexit, or soft Brexit, or flaccid Brexit, or tumescent Brexit, or waxing Brexit, or waning Brexit, or crumbling Brexit, or diamond Brexit. Brexit means Brexit, and claiming it means any particular flavour of Brexit is simply the claimer trying to assert an unproven democratic support for whatever position he or she happens to hold.

    As I replied up this thread:

    Except you are missing the politics. May needs to get re-elected in 2020, preferably with a nice fat majority on the basis of what she has done, and she can see 4 million ex-UKIP votes, and maybe a couple of million Blue Labour votes gamboling through the meadows looking for a new party to vote for. The vast majority of 2015 Tory voters either voted Leave, or voted Remain because they believed in Dave, showing some immigration leg is going to lose her very few of those and potentially net her another 4-5 million voters, many of whom will be quite forgiving of short term economic problems if they see immigration going firmly downward, and an complete landslide in 2020.
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    619619 Posts: 1,784

    Trump says he will sue all the woman who have come forward about groping.

    is that before or after the NYT lawsuit?
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    619619 Posts: 1,784
    619 said:

    Trump says he will sue all the woman who have come forward about groping.

    is that before or after the NYT lawsuit?
    also, went REALLY badly when Bill cosby tried that
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,163
    Trump proposes new amendment to introduce term limits for congress and senate.
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    SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095

    The SNP lost the referendum but won the post referendum election.

    The SNP lost... period.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    Mr. Chamberlain, welcome to the site.

    But from where would the explosion come? Some from UKIP (as protesters rather than EU enthusiasts), but the only other real source would be Labour. At a certain point, that split becomes a Goldilocks Zone for the Conservatives.

    Thank you! I think there's significant potential for switching from moderate Conservatives who are turned off by the harsh anti-immigrant tone that May's allowed to envelope the Tory party and who are vehemently opposed to leaving the single market. There were plenty of these types in Witney and I suspect many more in London and the university towns.
    Will that be those parts of London and the university towns that don't return Tory MPs?
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    Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 4,814
    Indigo said:

    Brexit does not mean hard Brexit, or soft Brexit, or flaccid Brexit, or tumescent Brexit, or waxing Brexit, or waning Brexit, or crumbling Brexit, or diamond Brexit. Brexit means Brexit, and claiming it means any particular flavour of Brexit is simply the claimer trying to assert an unproven democratic support for whatever position he or she happens to hold.

    As I replied up this thread:

    Except you are missing the politics. May needs to get re-elected in 2020, preferably with a nice fat majority on the basis of what she has done, and she can see 4 million ex-UKIP votes, and maybe a couple of million Blue Labour votes gamboling through the meadows looking for a new party to vote for. The vast majority of 2015 Tory voters either voted Leave, or voted Remain because they believed in Dave, showing some immigration leg is going to lose her very few of those and potentially net her another 4-5 million voters, many of whom will be quite forgiving of short term economic problems if they see immigration going firmly downward, and an complete landslide in 2020.
    And that's a different argument entirely to the one I've seen being used repeatedly that anything other than X-Brexit (where the "X" is a variable dependent on whatever the person making the argument decides it to be) is violating the expressed will of the public because "Well, without doing X, we won't really be doing Brexit at all", or "Most people probably voted on grounds of X, so not doing that is undemocratic".

    Saying that May might see electoral benefit in doing X is very different from doing X being necessary because that's what the people have chosen.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,230
    edited October 2016

    Mr. Chamberlain, welcome to the site.

    But from where would the explosion come? Some from UKIP (as protesters rather than EU enthusiasts), but the only other real source would be Labour. At a certain point, that split becomes a Goldilocks Zone for the Conservatives.

    I'm not going to believe that the Lib Dems are heading anywhere until there's a big, sustained and consistent revival in the polls. There's been no sign of this so far, and there's nothing particularly encouraging from the Witney result, either. Looks like a combination of a very large LD get out the vote drive (which they don't have the resources to conduct across dozens of target seats in a general election,) combined with traditional mid-term protest against the governing party, a lot of Tories (who care more about elections that have proper consequences, rather than by-elections) staying at home, and a probably quite limited amount of Continuity Remain activism.

    The most noticeable thing for me, however, is that the Labour vote in Witney did not collapse - suggesting that much of the loss of left-leaning votes caused by disgust at the Coalition has been long-lasting and might be permanent. Without being able to consolidate the "progressive" vote behind them (in seats that are straight Con-LD fights) to the same extent as they did pre-2010, the LDs will struggle to make much progress in a general election in most of the seats that they lost to the Tories last time - and that's without taking into account the numbers of potential right-leaning voters who might otherwise have given them a go, but will be put off by Farron's drift leftwards and by the thought that he would probably be willing to prop-up a very left-wing Lab/Nat coalition in the next Parliament, were the option to present itself.
    "(in seats that are straight Con-LD fights)"

    Those crucial words of yours, in brackets, defeat your point

    Witney has had a Labour MP (if thru defection), never a LibDem one. Labour outpolled the LibDems in most previous elections (see the header). Labour didnt sit back in Witney but majored on their starting position as challenger as well as trying to exploit the aftermath of the coalition years.

    That makes the LibDem achievement in coming from fourth to clear second more significant. Replicating the same campaign in a seat where Labour starts down-and-out will be so much easier.
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    DixieDixie Posts: 1,221
    Lib Dems should have key manifesto commitment to going back into EU. They will pick up a good slug of autocrats and win back many of their voters. Could hit 25% share of 2020 election. London would be great for them as many Labour areas were strong remain. Much I despise autocratic remainers and Libs, it is the best strategy.

    Labour will survive Corbyn. Their tribe hold their nose and vote rRd at all costs. Libs offering pro-remain might knock them below 20%. Good for us Tories.

    Of course in 2018 elections in London Libs will knock Tories as being Brexiters. Hopefully it won't work but it might.
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    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,255
    Hmmm A Stop Brexit Party

    Hmmmm

    Option A:

    The One Europe Party. Slogan "One Europe, One People, One Party". Big rallies in Sheffield? "We need a strong leader, not this nonsense with Democracy. The people must be Lead!". Party rallies at Wembley. Searchlights to the clouds.....

    Option B:

    Politics rebuilt in early Victorian style. An upper house of parliament consisting of Senators - CEO's, Academics, Senior Think tankers. Right thinking people. Not hereditary, but it would just work out that way

    A lower house voted for on a property qualification and/or a degree from a decent university... red brick colleges.. no, I think not. Strict control of the lower orders. If they show signs of UKIPism, then They Will Be Dealt With - exported to Australia?
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    F1: putting together the pre-qualifying piece. Wrestling with a potential bet, trying to decide which way to jump.
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    Trump on again about a rigged election and dishonest mainstream media.

    This is a man who has lost and is so not used to losing.

    It's all about protecting Brand Trump. It is destroyed if he acknowledges defeat. Not that it's in a healthy place right now.

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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited October 2016

    Saying that May might see electoral benefit in doing X is very different from doing X being necessary because that's what the people have chosen.

    It logically follows from your position. May has a mandate for an unspecified type of BrExit, which sort is she likely to pick what with her being a politician and all, the one with the most electoral upside would be a reasonable bet. In the mindset of most Tory politicians that would be what is best both for party and country, because the worst thing for the country would be a Labour government - since even the worse BrExit economic projections are more benign that the complete horlicks of the economy that Gordon Brown made, there is some truth in that ;)

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    rcs1000 said:


    While I hope you're right, if unemployment begins to soar, and house prices tank, then Brexit could become rapidly unpopular. How people say they'll behave, and how they behave if they think their livelihood is threatened are two different things.

    I'd note that such a scenario might have nothing to do with Brexit. Imagine a war in the Middle East that pushed oil (and by extension natural gas and coal) prices up 3x. (Likely? Not very, but perfectly possible.)

    Given the weakness of Sterling, we'd see our energy import bill go through the roof. Cars would cost a lot to drive, electricity prices would increase markedly. And our current account deficit would soar towards 10%.

    Brexit, rightly or wrongly, would probably take the blame.

    Nah. Whilst I wouldn't like it to happen, some sort of external event like that would help rather than hinder Brexit. It would be a perfect place to park any bad effects of Brexit and to divert any blame. The scenario you imagine would be horrible but it would make Brexit much easier.
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    Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 4,814
    Dixie said:

    Lib Dems should have key manifesto commitment to going back into EU. They will pick up a good slug of autocrats and win back many of their voters. Could hit 25% share of 2020 election. London would be great for them as many Labour areas were strong remain. Much I despise autocratic remainers and Libs, it is the best strategy.

    Labour will survive Corbyn. Their tribe hold their nose and vote rRd at all costs. Libs offering pro-remain might knock them below 20%. Good for us Tories.

    Of course in 2018 elections in London Libs will knock Tories as being Brexiters. Hopefully it won't work but it might.

    Disagree.
    They've been changing their position (rightly, in my opinion), to pushing for the maximum possible level of international co-operation with the EU consonant with any level of Brexit. That is, if Brexit must happen, let it be as soft a Brexit as possible.

    Rejoining the EU would require a massive amount of successful negotiations to recover our opt-outs and rebate, and I'd see that as not plausible. Which means rejoining would have to be on significantly worse grounds than we were in when we voted to leave.

    That would only be attractive if post-Brexit Britain turned into an economic ruin, otherwise it would not be inarguably worse than being in.

    They should promote the softest possible Brexit (that is still a Brexit) and push for maximum international co-operation - but not rejoining the EU.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    F1: no bet, though I was intrigued by the Red Bulls. My pre-qualifying ramble is here:
    http://enormo-haddock.blogspot.co.uk/2016/10/united-states-pre-qualifying-2016.html

    Qualifying's at 7pm.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,971
    F1: also, for some reason my blog (which usually gets single digit hits between race weekends and double digit hits on race weekends) is now getting hundreds of hits a day. Seems odd.
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    Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 4,814
    Indigo said:

    Saying that May might see electoral benefit in doing X is very different from doing X being necessary because that's what the people have chosen.

    It logically follows from your position. May has a mandate for an unspecified type of BrExit, which sort is she likely to pick what with her being a politician and all, the one with the most electoral upside would be a reasonable bet. In the mindset of most Tory politicians that would be what is best both for party and country, because the worst thing for the country would be a Labour government - since even the worse BrExit economic projections are more benign that the complete horlicks of the economy that Gordon Brown made, there is some truth in that ;)

    No it doesn't.
    My position is that claiming the 23rd June vote was a specific endorsement for any particular type of Brexit over any other is mendacious.
    That some politicians may see electoral benefit in following a specific route does not make the claim that the people voted for their particular choice of Brexit true in the slightest.

    Political stances don't rely for their effectiveness on being true, effective, efficient, plausible or even possible.
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    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,818

    The SNP lost the referendum but won the post referendum election.

    The SNP lost... period.
    Get a life loser
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,924

    rcs1000 said:


    While I hope you're right, if unemployment begins to soar, and house prices tank, then Brexit could become rapidly unpopular. How people say they'll behave, and how they behave if they think their livelihood is threatened are two different things.

    I'd note that such a scenario might have nothing to do with Brexit. Imagine a war in the Middle East that pushed oil (and by extension natural gas and coal) prices up 3x. (Likely? Not very, but perfectly possible.)

    Given the weakness of Sterling, we'd see our energy import bill go through the roof. Cars would cost a lot to drive, electricity prices would increase markedly. And our current account deficit would soar towards 10%.

    Brexit, rightly or wrongly, would probably take the blame.

    Nah. Whilst I wouldn't like it to happen, some sort of external event like that would help rather than hinder Brexit. It would be a perfect place to park any bad effects of Brexit and to divert any blame. The scenario you imagine would be horrible but it would make Brexit much easier.
    Let's hope it remains a counter factual :)
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,230

    F1: also, for some reason my blog (which usually gets single digit hits between race weekends and double digit hits on race weekends) is now getting hundreds of hits a day. Seems odd.

    Maybe, just like the event itself, it's the same people coming round and round? ;-)
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    Trump proposes new amendment to introduce term limits for congress and senate.

    Finally an idea I can support :)
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    Indigo said:

    Saying that May might see electoral benefit in doing X is very different from doing X being necessary because that's what the people have chosen.

    It logically follows from your position. May has a mandate for an unspecified type of BrExit, which sort is she likely to pick what with her being a politician and all, the one with the most electoral upside would be a reasonable bet. In the mindset of most Tory politicians that would be what is best both for party and country, because the worst thing for the country would be a Labour government - since even the worse BrExit economic projections are more benign that the complete horlicks of the economy that Gordon Brown made, there is some truth in that ;)

    What do you see as the advantage(s) of keeping Labour as a legal Party?

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    IndigoIndigo Posts: 9,966
    edited October 2016

    Indigo said:

    Saying that May might see electoral benefit in doing X is very different from doing X being necessary because that's what the people have chosen.

    It logically follows from your position. May has a mandate for an unspecified type of BrExit, which sort is she likely to pick what with her being a politician and all, the one with the most electoral upside would be a reasonable bet. In the mindset of most Tory politicians that would be what is best both for party and country, because the worst thing for the country would be a Labour government - since even the worse BrExit economic projections are more benign that the complete horlicks of the economy that Gordon Brown made, there is some truth in that ;)

    What do you see as the advantage(s) of keeping Labour as a legal Party?

    Any political party that doesn't break the law, or seek to procure that others should, should be legal. The public have an absolute right to elect idiots ;)
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