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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Six months on with little information from Mrs May what should

SystemSystem Posts: 11,018
edited December 2016 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Six months on with little information from Mrs May what should Leavers be doing now?

Yesterday I looked at how Remainers should look to the future.  Today I turn to Leavers.  This should be equally bracing.

Read the full story here


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    dr_spyndr_spyn Posts: 11,287
    First out of the door like Jamie Reed.
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Reed standing down is great news for May -almost certain to be a new MP whether red, purple or blue but regardless will surely promise to enact the will of the people and vote to leave the EU.

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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,988
    dr_spyn said:

    First out of the door like Jamie Reed.

    The question is whether any others will follow him.
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    TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Is this thread header a rewrite of Mr Meek's from yesterday ? Bit early for leftover turkey innit ?
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    Conflict News
    BREAKING: Kremlin says nearly all communication channels between U.S. and Russia are frozen: RIA - Reuters
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    Will John Woodcock in Barrow & Furness be tempted to follow Jamie Reed?
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    You say "reactionary backwoodsmen" like it's something to be ashamed of. It's thinking like that which lost Remain the referendum.
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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    We are so not losing Trump's letters to Salmond to the last thread.

    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/811539156149141504
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    TGOHF said:

    Reed standing down is great news for May -almost certain to be a new MP whether red, purple or blue but regardless will surely promise to enact the will of the people and vote to leave the EU.

    It will certainly be an interesting test, but while Leave vs Remain gets the juices flowing on PB, it may well be more prosaic issues as in Sleaford that dominate this election.

    It is, like Sleaford and Richmond, an interesting trend of a dislike of party leadership precipitating the byelection rather than the Old Bill or Grim Reaper.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,988
    PlatoSaid said:

    Conflict News
    BREAKING: Kremlin says nearly all communication channels between U.S. and Russia are frozen: RIA - Reuters

    It's going to make life on board the International Space Station frosty ...
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    BromBrom Posts: 3,760
    So a by election that the Tories would probably prefer a marginal defeat than an outright victory. I'm sure Copeland will offer more proof the Lib Dem/remain vote in Richmond was a regional flash in the pan.
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    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807
    Learning English grammar would be a good start. Shocking use of an apostrophe on their banner.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725
    It's quite simple, doesn't need broad analysis - the government needs to come to an agreement about what it wants and what it thinks it can achieve, and then at some point it needs to tell us all what it has decided, and has decided for all citizens, Leavers and Remainers.

    At that point, Leavers and Remainers need to decide how to respond - whether to attempt to undermine the government's too strict/lenient Leave position, or to accept it. It doesn't matter what Leavers collectively want before then, since the decision what we go for is the government's decision (or parliament, under some scenarios) - it'd be nice if leavers and remainers could settle on some firm views, to enable the government to be clear on what it thinks it can get and then sell to the public, but it's not essential, since we're effectively in a lobbying phase, with preposterous notions abounding either about the feasibility of ignoring the referendum entirely (legal but politically a non-starter) or idiotically insistent that only one path is permissable (and that it, of course, is the path the speaker feels is best/will stick it to leavers the most).

    Leavers specifically therefore need to keep lobbying the government for what they think is the best leave option, and if that option is not even attempted by government, we can throw wobblers later.

    dr_spyn said:

    First out of the door like Jamie Reed.

    The question is whether any others will follow him.
    Not all will have nice jobs lining up, even if they are so inclined. Many more MPs than Carswell and Reckless acted like UKIP in all but name, and still no others followed them, it will likely be similar with jumping ship from parliament.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,604
    "Do they want a constructive relationship with the rest of the EU?"

    I think we should have constructive relationships with the other 27 nation states that currently happen to be members of the EU. That desire is not inconsistent with wanting the EU in its current form to crumble so that all 28 can regain their sovereignty.

    In 100 years time, the EU may be looked back on as a blip in european history, that in its earlier incarnation as the EEC facilitated the transition from a time of war to a time of peace, but then became surplus to requirements.
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    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807
    @Brom

    Why would they prefer a marginal defeat to victory?

    (I am not saying your analysis is necessarily wrong, just that I simply don't grasp your reasons for it)
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,988
    @kle4 : you're probably right on that. Some might just choose to retire though, and other just chance it.

    It may just depend how poisonous the environment is within the party for the moderates, and how much they think they can achieve remaining as an MP.
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    Can't believe Meeks says Leavers have to find a more constructive way of working with Remainers then telling them they are wrong. Look in the mirror mate.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725
    edited December 2016
    Scott_P said:
    Anyone who thought there was to be no economic cost at all to leaving, or no negatives at all to remaining, was willfully deluding themselves. It was always about balancing potential positives and negatives - we can all disagree with others on how much of each there were, and the priority given to specific ones, we may even in time come to disagree with our own assumptions and determinations, depending on how events unfold, but there being no cost at all would be a strange choice for people to make.

    Regardless, people might say that, but would they make the effort, in that case to stop events in their tracks? No. So by their actions if not words they are prepared.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited December 2016

    You say "reactionary backwoodsmen" like it's something to be ashamed of. It's thinking like that which lost Remain the referendum.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FshU58nI0Ts
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    Alistair said:

    We are so not losing Trump's letters to Salmond to the last thread.

    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/811539156149141504

    Why does it look as if it's been signed by 'Donald Immingham'?
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    Jobabob said:

    @Brom

    Why would they prefer a marginal defeat to victory?

    (I am not saying your analysis is necessarily wrong, just that I simply don't grasp your reasons for it)

    More likely to keep Corbyn in place.

    Much like the Eastleigh by-election, where a Con defeat of the Lib Dems would have made coalition working extremely difficult.

    That said, I expect the Tories to go for the win anyway.
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548
    PlatoSaid said:

    You say "reactionary backwoodsmen" like it's something to be ashamed of. It's thinking like that which lost Remain the referendum.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FshU58nI0Ts
    The Lumberjack in that song is anything but a reactionary backwoodsman, indeed he he hops and skips, likes to press wild flowers, put on womens clothing and hangs around in bars.

    He seems the sort of fellow rather keen on Transgendered bathrooms...
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725

    Can't believe Meeks says Leavers have to find a more constructive way of working with Remainers then telling them they are wrong. Look in the mirror mate.

    He's also made repeatedly clear remainers should not have to work with leavers at all because leavers are so wrong, and that it would be undemocratic for, say, proponents of softer leave types to work with presumably more amendable remainers in order to reach a solution acceptable to.a majority of the public while still leaving.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,725
    Scott_P said:
    Given his comments previously, I'm surprised Reed was not blasting Corbyn with both barrels in his resignation statement.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    kle4 said:

    Given his comments previously, I'm surprised Reed was not blasting Corbyn with both barrels in his resignation statement.

    The damage is done...
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    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976
    edited December 2016
    kle4 said:

    Scott_P said:

    ttps://twitter.com/polhomeeditor/status/811589896494338049

    Given his comments previously, I'm surprised Reed was not blasting Corbyn with both barrels in his resignation statement.
    Pretty mild stuff compared to some...

    https://twitter.com/PolhomeEditor/status/811572183650680832
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    Good afternoon, my fellow reactionary backwoodsmen and Hungarian swimming pool-enthusiasts.

    F1: Sergio Marchionne[sp], Ferrari boss, has said "we don't need a Ross Brawn type hero solving all the problems" [or words to that effect].

    ....

    Yes. Yes, you do.

    But hey, you've got an Italian third driver, lost the Spanish driver many regard as the best in the world, are busy alienating a German world class driver and have lost the English excellent technical boss who could've turned your fortunes around, so Project Italia's going great.

    Project Winning, not so much.
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    TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    Happy birhday AndyJS and mr pubgoer.
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,960
    @MaxPB

    Each of the EU countries has subtly different deposit protection rules, and there is nothing in the treaties that prevents the Italian government from extending deposit protection to include savings products issued by banks.
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    old_labourold_labour Posts: 3,238
    Happy Birthday @AndyJS and @Hertsmere_Pubgoer
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    NYC Aviation
    Today, we pause to remember the 28th anniversary of the loss of #PanAm Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. #PanAm103
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    Fortunately the British people are a lot more optimistic (for us, at any rate) than Misery Meeks

    Who is going to have a good 2017 (net)

    The UK: +2
    The EU: -51
    The US: -41

    Also
    May: +16
    Corbyn: -45

    Con: +2
    Lab: -42

    http://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/just-one-in-five-people-think-jeremy-corbyn-will-enjoy-a-successful-2017-poll-shows-a3425406.html
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    JobabobJobabob Posts: 3,807
    @Brom

    Fair point. Hopefully Labour will lose the contest and Corbyn will go. But that is applying logic to the will of the Great Leader. No doubt he will find some pathetic excuse to stay even if Labour do ship the seat.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,988
    edited December 2016

    Good afternoon, my fellow reactionary backwoodsmen and Hungarian swimming pool-enthusiasts.

    F1: Sergio Marchionne[sp], Ferrari boss, has said "we don't need a Ross Brawn type hero solving all the problems" [or words to that effect].

    ....

    Yes. Yes, you do.

    But hey, you've got an Italian third driver, lost the Spanish driver many regard as the best in the world, are busy alienating a German world class driver and have lost the English excellent technical boss who could've turned your fortunes around, so Project Italia's going great.

    Project Winning, not so much.

    Did he really say that? If so, then he's an idiot.

    I think I'm right in saying that whenever Ferrari have gone for an Italy-first team they've done terribly. It's only when they use their pulling power to attract the best from the world that they do well. At least in recent decades.

    Prost tried to build a French-first team, and it didn't go well. The only countries who could perhaps do it are the UK and US: even most of Mercedes' work is done in the UK.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited December 2016
    If you're not yet in the Christmas spirit...

    This was me yesterday

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=iIAO4Htzn8M
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    Mr. Jessop, that's my understanding as well.

    Much on Twitter about the comments, which have generally attracted derision.

    Perhaps he was asleep when a German driver, British technical boss and French team principal gave Ferrari perhaps the greatest period of dominance in the sport's history [that I remember, anyway].
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    kle4 said:

    Can't believe Meeks says Leavers have to find a more constructive way of working with Remainers then telling them they are wrong. Look in the mirror mate.

    He's also made repeatedly clear remainers should not have to work with leavers at all because leavers are so wrong, and that it would be undemocratic for, say, proponents of softer leave types to work with presumably more amendable remainers in order to reach a solution acceptable to.a majority of the public while still leaving.
    There are two points to make here:

    1) In any coalition, the larger part has to accommodate the smaller part, not vice versa. Accordingly, Nick Clegg could ask for Gordon Brown's head as a precondition for negotiating with Labour in 2010. If Leavers want to work with Remainers, they're going to have to consider how they're going to accommodate them. This simple question is one that Leavers seem congenitally incapable of contemplating.

    2) There is no way that Remainers should allow themselves to be set up as fall-guys for implementing the second half of Hannanite Leavers' masterplan of surfing to Leave on a wave of xenophobia then betraying the proles. The Hannanite Leavers will need to consider how they are going to move on from their failed attempt at double betrayal.
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    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098
    @Morris_Dancer

    "... Hungarian swimming pool-enthusiasts"

    You have lost me there, old chap. Care to explain?
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,832
    I certainly think Leavers must and should work with former Remain supporters who are prepared to accept the outcome of the vote as legitimate, eg people like Philip Hammond, Amber Rudd, or of course, the PM.

    I think it's unlikely we can find any common ground with the bitter enders, however, such as Matthew Parris, Gina Miller, or indeed, the author. Those who see the Remain vs Leave campaign as an existential fight between the forces of light and the forces of darkness are likely to prove irreconcilable.
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    Mr. Llama, I believe the thread writer has a swimming pool-equipped home in Hungary. But it's not in the backwoods.
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    Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,327
    edited December 2016
    I want the UK to have the same level of legislative independence as other anglosphere countries, like Canada and Australia, that although also adjacent to much larger economies - in their cases: the US and China, respectively - are largely able to sculpt their own regulatory environment, determine their own immigration mix and limits, set local taxation, vote on social and employment law, adjust regional, agriculture and fisheries policies, decide their own constitutional limits on crime and justice policy, and human rights, and decide how to play their own role in multilateral institutions worldwide whilst having strong bilateral cooperation with their immediate neighbours.

    In terms of negotiations with the EU, I would like the UK to preserve free trade in goods, and agree a sensible balance of services access but I would not trade free movement of people for it. I would concede on budgetary contributions. I think regional security and defence should be unaffected. I would like to continue multilateral cooperation on science, education, space, and cultural exchange programmes. I would consider a degree of inter-UK/european cooperation on transport and energy links, within reason, to facilitate ease of holiday/temporary business visits and economic efficiencies. I would hold UK governments accountable for these choices at national elections. We would be able to review these choices at sensible regular intervals.

    I have my own view on the policy choices I think an independent UK should make with its repatriated powers, which I view as a separate matter. But I would like to see it taking up a global role championing the spread of liberal democracy worldwide, the value of institutions, advocating freedom of thought, and the rights of the individual, openness to trade, and pragmatism/common sense.
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    Beverley_CBeverley_C Posts: 6,256
    I was someone who was always somewhat on the fence about the referendum, but definitely more on the "Leave" side than "Remain". I was even prepared to put up with the economic fallout. What I was not prepared for was the nastiness and various phobias that were put on display.

    It was bad enough being on the same side of the debate as that slimeball Farage, but the racism and xenophobia where enough to push me back over the fence and into the "Remain" camp. I thought we, as a country, were better than that. I did not want to be on the same side as the nutters and haters. In my mind "Leave" had become identified with hate and intolerance - views I will never support or lend my vote to.

    Now I am being told to happily associate myself with an outcome pushed in part by people who seem to have no idea what they want other than "No F***ing foreigners" or "Stuff Brussels"

    "Leave" cannot tell me what I should be enthusiastic about. There is no plan just an act of collective madness. I am just waiting for it to get to the stage of someone telling me to "F off back to wherever you came from"
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,555

    Alistair said:

    We are so not losing Trump's letters to Salmond to the last thread.

    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/811539156149141504

    Why does it look as if it's been signed by 'Donald Immingham'?
    I think that's Truuuump, as in uuuuuuuuuge....
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    brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    edited December 2016

    Alistair said:

    We are so not losing Trump's letters to Salmond to the last thread.

    https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/811539156149141504

    Why does it look as if it's been signed by 'Donald Immingham'?
    Russian handwriting looks like that...
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    foxinsoxukfoxinsoxuk Posts: 23,548

    Fortunately the British people are a lot more optimistic (for us, at any rate) than Misery Meeks

    Who is going to have a good 2017 (net)

    The UK: +2
    The EU: -51
    The US: -41

    Also
    May: +16
    Corbyn: -45

    Con: +2
    Lab: -42

    http://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/just-one-in-five-people-think-jeremy-corbyn-will-enjoy-a-successful-2017-poll-shows-a3425406.html

    On the other hand based on those figures both Labour and EU are likely to surprise on the upside, while May and the UK have more downside.
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    Mrs C, it's fair to say the campaigns were not an edifying spectacle, being cocktails of exaggeration, the odd plain lie, and a lot of contemptible rhetoric.

    There are a lot (a strong majority) of reasonable supporters on both sides, though.
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    My initial thoughts on the Copeland By-election.

    It's historically Labour but it's one of the few Rural Labour seats left, in the current environment of Urban Vs Rural it's a negative for Labour.

    Jamie Reed was also very unpopular in his constituency, last time he recorded a result worse than 1983, replacing him with a popular local is a plus for Labour, however the local damage to Labour by Reed is still present.

    Leave got 62% there, so the LD won't get much traction, though they will retain their deposit.

    UKIP will go down, by how much and to who will determine the victor, in safe Tory seats they moved Tory, in safe Labour seats they moved Labour, but this is a Labour marginal.

    I think it's a 50/50 thing at the moment, the candidates will make the difference.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited December 2016
    dr_spyn said:
    I can't claim snow - but the Sahara is effing cold at night - like 0C from 50C during the day, and it rained one day as I crossed Disney dunes.
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    Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,820
    edited December 2016
    I'm not convinced that, in the general mass of voters, the divide between those who (mostly reluctantly) voted Remain, and those who (mostly with some misgivings) voted Leave is as stark as Alastair and others imply.

    I expect we'll muddle through somehow, albeit with economic damage. The big unknowns are how big that damage will be, who will get the blame, and who will reap any corresponding electoral rewards.
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    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr F,

    "Those who see the Remain vs Leave campaign as an existential fight between the forces of light and the forces of darkness are likely to prove irreconcilable."

    Unfortunately, I suspect you're right.

    Why don't Labour in Copeland put up a pro-Corbyn, fanatical Remain candidate from London to prove they can win anywhere? Just order the serfs to vote the right way - it might work.
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    Sean_F said:

    I certainly think Leavers must and should work with former Remain supporters who are prepared to accept the outcome of the vote as legitimate

    I don't think there are any who regard the outcome of the vote as not legitimate.

    What it is not, of course, is the only vote that can ever be counted for all time as the Brexiteers wish to portray it, nor it is the end of any argument about what Brexit looks like and how it might be delivered.

    You won! Suck it up...
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    isamisam Posts: 40,916
    It was utterly disgraceful of David Cameron not to have a contingency plan for him losing the referendum. It wasn't about him, it was about the country, he was the PM, not leader of a pressure group.

    We were told time and time again on this very website how unwise it would be to make it a referendum about David Cameron, maybe someone should've told him.
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,832
    @Richard Nabavi, I think that's right. Most local authorities saw between 40% and 60% vote either way.

    The one sub-region that does stand out is the former London County Council area where 72% voted Remain. I do think feelings run high there.
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    Mr. Isam, I agree entirely. It was a dereliction of duty on Cameron's part.
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    Billy Hill opens the market with the Tories favourite in Copeland.
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    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,240
    Not sure I agree with the premise of this piece. Even PB doesn't have the power to fix the terms of us leaving the EU (which is a pity since I have seen more intelligent comments on here about the various aspects than anywhere else, in amongst the ranting). It is for the government of the day to decide. That is their duty and I really wish they would get on with it.

    Whatever deal they come to you can guarantee that there will be some who voted Leave who feel betrayed and there will be some who voted Remain who think this is not so bad after all, at least better than they feared. But our individual views don't really matter because the government negotiates and reaches the best deal it can in the national interest and their judgement of that is what we will get.

    I can understand why those who voted Remain are a bit apprehensive about the likes of Fox, Davies and Boris having a big say in that but that is representative democracy for you and in reality May and Hammond will make the bigger calls. Once we have left we will have another election and the next government will be able to enter into new arrangements with the EU if it feels that is in the national interest. Of course the new government just might look rather like the old.

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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453
    isam said:

    It was utterly disgraceful of David Cameron not to have a contingency plan for him losing the referendum.

    There was a plan, executed the morning after the vote.
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    PlatoSaid said:

    Conflict News
    BREAKING: Kremlin says nearly all communication channels between U.S. and Russia are frozen: RIA - Reuters

    It's going to make life on board the International Space Station frosty ...
    Helen Mirren and Roy Scheider in "2010" :)
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,269
    edited December 2016
    Scott_P said:

    Sean_F said:

    I certainly think Leavers must and should work with former Remain supporters who are prepared to accept the outcome of the vote as legitimate

    I don't think there are any who regard the outcome of the vote as not legitimate.

    What it is not, of course, is the only vote that can ever be counted for all time as the Brexiteers wish to portray it, nor it is the end of any argument about what Brexit looks like and how it might be delivered.

    You won! Suck it up...
    LEAVE 52%
    REMAIN 48%

    :innocent:
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    I jumped straight to the comments :)
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    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942
    CD13 said:

    Mr F,

    "Those who see the Remain vs Leave campaign as an existential fight between the forces of light and the forces of darkness are likely to prove irreconcilable."

    Unfortunately, I suspect you're right.

    Why don't Labour in Copeland put up a pro-Corbyn, fanatical Remain candidate from London to prove they can win anywhere? Just order the serfs to vote the right way - it might work.

    A few tweets from visiting Islingtonians with the English flag in them ought to help, right?
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    Fortunately the British people are a lot more optimistic (for us, at any rate) than Misery Meeks

    Who is going to have a good 2017 (net)

    The UK: +2
    The EU: -51
    The US: -41

    Also
    May: +16
    Corbyn: -45

    Con: +2
    Lab: -42

    http://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/just-one-in-five-people-think-jeremy-corbyn-will-enjoy-a-successful-2017-poll-shows-a3425406.html

    On the other hand based on those figures both Labour and EU are likely to surprise on the upside, while May and the UK have more downside.
    From very low bases......
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    F1: Bottas down to 5.5 for the title.

    I wouldn't back that, personally. Requires Mercedes to have the best car (probably, close second at least) and Bottas to beat Hamilton.

    Does suggest Ladbrokes think it's a done deal, which it probably is.
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    isamisam Posts: 40,916
    edited December 2016
    As for "what leavers think", most are sensible grown ups who are just elated at winning, and content that so many of their countrymen feel the same. We are leaving the EU, how glorious! Now the whole country, not just leavers, can elect governments that we can hold to account without them having the free option of making a pledge/promise/ambition then blaming their lack of success/action on the EU.

    Much as staunch remainers like to create strawmen (albeit with help from some staunch leavers) about what Brexit "means" (usually "hard Brexit" so they can extrapolate disastrous consequences), the truth is that it means whatever who happens to be PM at any given time wants it to. From now on it is no different to the UK's relationship with any other foreign country, and PMs of different persuasions will have looser or closer ties to it as is their wont.

    I would have been happy for Cameron to stay on and negotiate a deal only marginally better than the one the voters rejected; if people didn't like it, they can vote for UKIP at the next GE, if they did like it, all is well.
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    TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    isam,maybe his arrogance or cockiness of thinking he was going to win put a stop to that.

    Bet they was no plan on scottish independence if it was to leave.
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    MortimerMortimer Posts: 13,942
    isam said:

    It was utterly disgraceful of David Cameron not to have a contingency plan for him losing the referendum. It wasn't about him, it was about the country, he was the PM, not leader of a pressure group.

    We were told time and time again on this very website how unwise it would be to make it a referendum about David Cameron, maybe someone should've told him.

    It became obvious to me on the Tuesday pm before the vote that it was close - that heartfelt 'appeal to camera' outside No. 10 seemed like a desperate late attempt at a personal swing. What DC didn't realise was that his conduct during the campaign, and Osborne's last budget, had destroyed their favourability with many of the people who voted for them in 2010 and 2015.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    isam said:

    It was utterly disgraceful of David Cameron not to have a contingency plan for him losing the referendum. It wasn't about him, it was about the country, he was the PM, not leader of a pressure group.

    We were told time and time again on this very website how unwise it would be to make it a referendum about David Cameron, maybe someone should've told him.

    For me, his press conference outside Number 10 was the massive red flag - weird and desperate.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/eu-referendum-polls-live-brexit-david-cameron-remain-leave-a7093406.html
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    I'm not convinced that, in the general mass of voters, the divide between those who (mostly reluctantly) voted Remain, and those who (mostly with some misgivings) voted Leave is as stark as Alastair and others imply.

    I expect we'll muddle through somehow, albeit with economic damage. The big unknowns are how big that damage will be, who will get the blame, and who will reap any corresponding electoral rewards.


    Agree - the polling evidence is that the country wants to get on with Brexit and only a minority favour a further referendum. Whether we'll ever really be able to tell from the vicissitudes of international events whether it was a good idea to leave or not - who knows - but Misery Meeks will continue to nurse his wrath to keep it warm - resembling the eponymous hero's wife in more than just that regard......
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,920
    I've backed both the Tories and Labour.
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    FWIW, I don't get this line about Leavers being unhappy, or bitter, about the fact they won: I'm delighted. I also think its clear what Leavers want: national democratic control over the issues that matter to them. For many Leave voters, that was the ability to control immigration, others - like Hannan - placed a higher priority about trade and regulation, but the common link was (and is) national democratic control. I don't see different priorities in the driving the decisions of individual Leave voters as in conflict, they just reflect the personal priorities of the voter.

    What I did underestimate is how bitter and divisive the aftermath would be, because at heart I thought the EU was pretty unloved by the vast majority of the population, and, once the decision had been taken, many Remainers would simply shrug it off, move on and adjust to the new reality. So that has taken some of the shine off it for me.

    I suppose I can be grumpy others are not as happy about it as I am, and defensive when attacked, but that's more a function of the political chasm between some Remainers and Leavers, which is a fault line that was only truly revealed by the referendum result itself. I think such dialogue is pretty civil when it's confined to the constitutional, but pretty bitter when it becomes cultural.

    So, in that respect, it has been educational.

    I would seek to explain to all how we can carry on having a more enhanced version of that age-old debate as an independent Britain. For example, a figleaf for some Remainers might be we could take a higher level of immigration from a more diverse set of countries as an independent UK, and pursue more global internationalist policy (Canada manages this fine) rather than being quite so Eurocentric, but I concede it might be a tough sell to some.
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    Oh please like anyone on team leave would have trusted a plan set up by Cameron. You just wanted a someone else to take the blame for any dirty compromises that leave entails, so you could denounce those who did so as traitors. Sorry Leave needs to own Brexit, so they can't spend the next 20 years saying it would have been alright if they had followed their vision.
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    To illustrate the fine line of the Copeland by-election.

    Average in all By-Elections since 2015 (Batley and Spen excluded):

    LAB +0.5%
    CON -7.9%
    UKIP -1.2%
    LD +11.9%

    In Safe Labour seats:

    LAB +5.4%
    CON -6%
    UKIP +0.1%
    LD 0%

    In Safe Con Seats:

    LAB -6%
    CON -10.3%
    UKIP -4%
    LD +19.7%

    Copeland is a Labour marginal and a heavy Leave Rural seat, it's a first in it's category, so who knows.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,920
    edited December 2016
    Lay UKIP OR the Lib Dems @ 11-2 with Billy Hills here.
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    A wonderfully redundant apostrophe in the thread picture. one would think that the production of a poster such as this would pass through a number of hands before actually being printed and that someone would have the basic nous to correct such a howler.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,888
    A good day to bury bad news?
    Cabinet SpAd salary list just published as Jamie Reed resigns.
    http://order-order.com/2016/12/21/taking-trash-day-nick-fi-140000/
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    ArtistArtist Posts: 1,882
    UKIP would have to crush Labour and make in roads into the Tory rural vote to win Copeland, seems very unlikely.

    I'd price it at something like
    Tories 5/6
    Labour 6/4
    UKIP 8/1
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    Scott_PScott_P Posts: 51,453

    Oh please like anyone on team leave would have trusted a plan set up by Cameron. You just wanted a someone else to take the blame for any dirty compromises that leave entails, so you could denounce those who did so as traitors. Sorry Leave needs to own Brexit, so they can't spend the next 20 years saying it would have been alright if they had followed their vision.

    The determination of the Brexiteers to lay blame at the door of the man who said don't do it and campaigned against it is revealing
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    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr Plan,

    "Oh please like anyone on team leave would have trusted a plan set up by Cameron."

    I believe Mrs May voted Remain and I wish her luck in her negotiations. I would have wished Cameron luck too. As my wife said ... "Typical public schoolboy. An amateur dabbler who took umbrage at not being allowed to have his own way."

    True, but being an amateur, he might have tried to negotiate a good deal just to prove a point. But no, he was never in politics for the long run. "I think I might be rather good at it."

    No, Dave, you weren't. When the going went against you ... you fucked off.
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    CD13 said:

    Mr F,

    "Those who see the Remain vs Leave campaign as an existential fight between the forces of light and the forces of darkness are likely to prove irreconcilable."

    Unfortunately, I suspect you're right.

    Why don't Labour in Copeland put up a pro-Corbyn, fanatical Remain candidate from London to prove they can win anywhere? Just order the serfs to vote the right way - it might work.

    John Rentoul has written that Paul Mason is looking for a seat ...

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/could-labour-lose-a-seat-to-a-tory-government-for-the-first-time-since-1982-a7488781.html
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    HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098
    Crikey, this site is getting tedious. We have some real political news today, with real betting opportunities and the thread is dominated by yet another re-run of of a discussion about a vote that happened nearly six months ago.
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    TykejohnnoTykejohnno Posts: 7,362
    edited December 2016
    Scott , he was the PM.
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100
    In a 50/50 race they are the value bet in my opinion too.

    Being a rural leave seat might be canceled by Jamie Reed not being the Labour candidate.
    If Labour put a decent local candidate they would edge ahead.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,888
    edited December 2016
    Betfair get going, with Lab the odds-on early doors. 1.8 Lab, 2.1 Con.
    https://www.betfair.com/exchange/#/politics/event/28056513/market?marketId=1.128848952
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    nunununu Posts: 6,024
    How many more MP's are going to quit to pursue business interests? Suspect a few more Labour MP's will quit Parliament as they realise Labour will be out of power for a generation.
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    I'm on the Tories only.

    Not as bold as Pulpstar.
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    SpeedySpeedy Posts: 12,100

    CD13 said:

    Mr F,

    "Those who see the Remain vs Leave campaign as an existential fight between the forces of light and the forces of darkness are likely to prove irreconcilable."

    Unfortunately, I suspect you're right.

    Why don't Labour in Copeland put up a pro-Corbyn, fanatical Remain candidate from London to prove they can win anywhere? Just order the serfs to vote the right way - it might work.

    John Rentoul has written that Paul Mason is looking for a seat ...

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/could-labour-lose-a-seat-to-a-tory-government-for-the-first-time-since-1982-a7488781.html
    Paul Mason won't win in Rural seats, in an inner city seat probably.

    Labour needs candidates that fit the local profile.
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    mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    rcs1000 said:

    @MaxPB

    Each of the EU countries has subtly different deposit protection rules, and there is nothing in the treaties that prevents the Italian government from extending deposit protection to include savings products issued by banks.

    There's a competition and state aid argument there waiting to happen, I suspect.
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    Michael Crick tweets: Copeland could well be first by-election GAINED by a governing party since the Tories won Mitcham & Morden in 1982 - 35 years ago
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    When will the by-election be? In cold, soggy January, might favour Conservative turnout over Labour (if the stereotype is right).
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited December 2016

    Crikey, this site is getting tedious. We have some real political news today, with real betting opportunities and the thread is dominated by yet another re-run of of a discussion about a vote that happened nearly six months ago.

    :+1:

    MrMeeks.com
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    PlatoSaid said:

    isam said:

    It was utterly disgraceful of David Cameron not to have a contingency plan for him losing the referendum. It wasn't about him, it was about the country, he was the PM, not leader of a pressure group.

    We were told time and time again on this very website how unwise it would be to make it a referendum about David Cameron, maybe someone should've told him.

    For me, his press conference outside Number 10 was the massive red flag - weird and desperate.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/eu-referendum-polls-live-brexit-david-cameron-remain-leave-a7093406.html
    Hugely so. It wasn't much more than Cameron saying 'think of your kids', with a pained expression on his face.

    There are always signs. That press conference. The huge focus on spending/campaigning in the final weeks London, Canary Wharf, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Gibraltar. And the whopping Leave leads with c.2 weeks to go, which I didn't quite believe.

    So we knew it would be close.

    My mistake was to believe the final polls on polling day were showing a late swing back to Remain, to seal a very narrow win, which is why I predicted Remain by 51.5% to 48.5% Leave.

    My mistake was unmade by this site, and AndyJS in particular.
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,888

    When will the by-election be? In cold, soggy January, might favour Conservative turnout over Labour (if the stereotype is right).

    If he resigns at the end of January, could it be the middle of March before we actually get to the by-election?
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,056
    edited December 2016

    What I did underestimate is how bitter and divisive the aftermath would be, because at heart I thought the EU was pretty unloved by the vast majority of the population, and, once the decision had been taken, many Remainers would simply shrug it off, move on and adjust to the new reality. So that has taken some of the shine off it for me.

    Yes, this seems to be a common feeling among Leavers. Just wait until you see what 2017 has in store for you.

    Crikey, this site is getting tedious. We have some real political news today, with real betting opportunities and the thread is dominated by yet another re-run of of a discussion about a vote that happened nearly six months ago.

    The by election will be fought against the backdrop of the chaotic attempts to prepare to invoke Article 50. It's highly relevant.
This discussion has been closed.