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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Forget the 70s, new voters can’t even remember the 90s

SystemSystem Posts: 11,019
edited September 2013 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Forget the 70s, new voters can’t even remember the 90s

We’ve seen a plenty column inches devoted to Ed Miliband wanting to take Britain back to the 1970s by committing to freeze energy prices for two years. The title of Dominic Sandbrook’s article in the Daily Mail, ‘Miliband’s Marxist father and the real reason he wants us to drag us back to the nightmare 70s’ has a full house in the bingo game seeminlgy played by right wing journalists.

Read the full story here


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    Yet voters we keep on getting told remember the 80s and Thatcher.
  • Options
    FluffyThoughtsFluffyThoughts Posts: 2,420
    edited September 2013
    Are dem-dahr Ed's "man-boobs" in dat foto? Or a dey like dem dat Brighton-Possie teacher's dat 'ave on dat EN-AH-ES...?

    :llok-towards-the-bright-side-master-walker...:
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    RandomRandom Posts: 107

    Yet voters we keep on getting told remember the 80s and Thatcher.

    By the same people who tell us Damien McBride and Gordon Brown are ancient history, of course.

    On topic, I wish Henry was wrong but unfortunately I don't think he is - there hasn't been anything like enough time to repair the damage caused by the last Labour government for us to withstand the damage another one will do so soon.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,115
    Those who vote are disproportionately those who remember Socialism - and remember that it is a busted flush.

    Henry might go on about targeting the demographic who would have been LibDem in the past. But I still can't for the life of me think why Ed Miliband is going for the demographic who would have been Socialist Worker in the past....

    Ed Miliband will never be Prime Minister.
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    “The typical media commentator in this country seems wilfully blind to the changing times we’re in and not interested in exploring views contrary to their own.”

    From that I gather you find the analogy of Ed’s leftward lurch back to the 70’s as ‘problematic’ ?
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,115
    And the people who would take photos of Ed Miliband on their iPhone are the sort of people who would photograph people who would audition for X-Factor.

    The delete function is a cruel thing.....
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    EasterrossEasterross Posts: 1,915
    Wishful thinking Henry. We don't need voters to remember the 90s. We need voters to remember 2008. We need voters to remember the unmitigated disaster which was Gordon Brown and the fact that Bland the Younger was his left butt cheek and Balls his right butt cheek. Labour can fantasise about LibDem 2010 voters. A great many will do what Tory 1992 voters did in 1997. They wont switch, they will stay at home.

    Barring a major cockup by the Tories, Bland the Younger will never be PM of the UK.
  • Options
    That's a good argument, and one that I don't think can be easily refuted.
    Whether it's a good policy or not ( I don't know, either way), Milliband's energy price freeze is bound to be popular, after all, who doesn't moan about the cost of running a house?
    At the least, it makes Milliband appear that he knows what make the public tick, never a bad thing for the LOTO.
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    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    Random said:

    Yet voters we keep on getting told remember the 80s and Thatcher.

    By the same people who tell us Damien McBride and Gordon Brown are ancient history, of course.

    On topic, I wish Henry was wrong but unfortunately I don't think he is - there hasn't been anything like enough time to repair the damage caused by the last Labour government for us to withstand the damage another one will do so soon.
    Absolutely agree. But I do not assume that there are a large number of previous labour abstainers now ready to man the barricades in 2015. I also doubt if all the LD switchers will stay with Labour particularly in the seats which matter.
    It's interesting also that recent polling has suggested that the under 30s are less pro Labour than they were.
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    These new voters, sound suspiciously like all those new voters that were behind the Cleggasm.

    My final point would be this, the voters who do remember the 1970s, are the older voters, if you're going to 60 in 2015, you would have been 23 in 1978 during the winter of discontent.

    Now which of these voters are more likely to vote?
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Sorry Henry but there are many of us over 40 who do recall the 70s and early 80s with its militancy, coming home from school to do homework by candlelight or the telly being on strike plus all the other horrors.

    There may be lots of voters who are too young to recall it - but the older ones vote more frequently and also pass on our influence to others as grey beards. And of course the Left are still dancing on Thatcher's grave.

    You can't have it both ways. Grabbing privately owned land, price fixing and State intervention is deeply repellent to many of us who did vote for Tony but who recoiled from Michael Foot.

    The comparison between Foot's manifesto and EdM's is rather too close for comfort. http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/tobyyoung/100237733/milibands-cunning-plan-republish-labours-1983-manifesto/
  • Options

    Are dem-dahr Ed's "man-boobs" in dat foto? Or a dey like dem dat Brighton-Possie teacher's dat 'ave on dat EN-AH-ES...?

    :llok-towards-the-bright-side-master-walker...:


    Fluffy, I never, ever understand a damned thing that you post.

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    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    I think the energy price issue is interesting - I have friends in Spain where it is much more expensive than the UK. It also used to have govt controls and now everyone has to pay additional charges to cover the cost of the earlier govt subsidies. I realise there is a perception that it's expensive in the UK but I think that reflects the residual dependency culture prevalent here - it may take decades to change that.
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724

    Are dem-dahr Ed's "man-boobs" in dat foto? Or a dey like dem dat Brighton-Possie teacher's dat 'ave on dat EN-AH-ES...?

    :llok-towards-the-bright-side-master-walker...:


    Fluffy, I never, ever understand a damned thing that you post.

    Me neither - but I enjoy trying to pronounce it phonetically :^ )
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    RBS agrees to £600m sale of 315 branches to a consortium backed by the Church of England
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    On topic, taking differential turnout into account, how old will the median voter be in 2015? The 70s had a whole mythology around them in the 80s, so anybody above 40 should be aware of what the pundits are getting at. Not that I think it's a particularly good angle of attack on Ed Miliband.

    On the "moneyball" point I think there is something in the Nate Silver comparison. The pundits always want a close race that could go either way, even when objectively it's not what the evidence shows. The objective indicators right now are pointing at the closest to a tie for the popular vote, but even that makes Ed Miliband PM. To the extent that punters let themselves get drawn in by the media narratives as well as the numbers, that puts the value on the Labour / Labour-NOM side.
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    VerulamiusVerulamius Posts: 1,435
    What proportion of the voting electorate are over, say, 50? That would make them at least 20 in 1983 and in their teen aged years at least during the late 70s?
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    TwistedFireStopperTwistedFireStopper Posts: 2,538
    edited September 2013
    Plato said:

    Sorry Henry but there are many of us over 40 who do recall the 70s and early 80s with its militancy, coming home from school to do homework by candlelight or the telly being on strike plus all the other horrors.

    There may be lots of voters who are too young to recall it - but the older ones vote more frequently and also pass on our influence to others as grey beards. And of course the Left are still dancing on Thatcher's grave.

    You can't have it both ways. Grabbing privately owned land, price fixing and State intervention is deeply repellent to many of us who did vote for Tony but who recoiled from Michael Foot.

    The comparison between Foot's manifesto and EdM's is rather too close for comfort. http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/tobyyoung/100237733/milibands-cunning-plan-republish-labours-1983-manifesto/

    The 70's are the decade best forgotten. We were poor, in a council house with no central heating, just a coal fire, watching black and white TV, with only 3 channels, wearing flared trousers, wide collared shirts, and bad haircuts.

    The 80s, on the other hand, was the time of my life. Dad had a decent job, the council house had a Parkray boiler and central heating, we had colour TV, clothes were great, I had a David Sylvian hairstyle, music was brilliant, and I discovered girls, drinking, and computer games. Happy days.

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    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,150
    edited September 2013


    Whether it's a good policy or not ( I don't know, either way), Milliband's energy price freeze is bound to be popular, after all, who doesn't moan about the cost of running a house?
    At the least, it makes Milliband appear that he knows what make the public tick, never a bad thing for the LOTO.

    On the other hand the Tories now get their chance to respond with free petrol for members of the neigbourhood watch, or whatever populist pandering their focus groups come up with to counter Labour's populist pander. With very little actual substantive difference between the parties and some apparently very dim-witted floating voters, the country is in for a deeply stupid 18 months.
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    AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    Carney supports Osborne's Help to Buy schemes

    The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee has issued a statement on the housing market following its recent policy meeting.

    The key section is as follows:

    In the United Kingdom, the continued recovery of the banking sector had been associated with a further easing in credit conditions. Against that backdrop, the recovery in the housing market appeared to have gained momentum and to be broadening. Mortgage approvals in July were 30% higher than a year earlier and average house prices in August were 5% higher than a year earlier and had risen more in some parts of the country, particularly London.

    Nevertheless, activity in the housing market and loan-to-value ratios on new mortgage lending remained below their historic averages. Households’ debt servicing costs were low and the ratio of house prices to earnings was at its level of a decade ago.

    In view of that, the Committee judged that it should closely monitor developments in the housing market and banks' underwriting standards. The Committee would be vigilant to potential emerging vulnerabilities.

    The Committee noted that if risks to the stability of the financial system were to emerge from the housing market, both it and the microprudential regulators had a range of tools available to address those risks. These included, amongst others, supervisory guidance on underwriting standards, sectoral capital requirements and recommendations to the regulators on tightening of affordability tests.

    The Committee agreed that, if it became necessary to deploy its tools, they would be used in a way that was proportionate to the risks and consistent with a graduated response.


    [to be continued...]
  • Options

    Plato said:

    Sorry Henry but there are many of us over 40 who do recall the 70s and early 80s with its militancy, coming home from school to do homework by candlelight or the telly being on strike plus all the other horrors.

    There may be lots of voters who are too young to recall it - but the older ones vote more frequently and also pass on our influence to others as grey beards. And of course the Left are still dancing on Thatcher's grave.

    You can't have it both ways. Grabbing privately owned land, price fixing and State intervention is deeply repellent to many of us who did vote for Tony but who recoiled from Michael Foot.

    The comparison between Foot's manifesto and EdM's is rather too close for comfort. http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/tobyyoung/100237733/milibands-cunning-plan-republish-labours-1983-manifesto/

    The 70's are the decade best forgotten. We were poor, in a council house with no central heating, just a coal fire, watching black and white TV, with only 3 channels, wearing flared trousers, wide collared shirts, and bad haircuts.

    The 80s, on the other hand, was the time of my life. Dad had a decent job, the council house had a Parkray boiler and central heating, we had colour TV, clothes were great, I had a David Sylvian hairstyle, music was brilliant, and I discovered girls, drinking, and computer games. Happy days.

    Similar story for me... The 80s was a really good decade for us as a family. And I had a blast ;-)
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    AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    [...continued]

    The Bank of England has also agreed with the Treasury that the FPC will conduct a formal review of the Help to Buy schemes every September and that any extension to the schemes beyond their planned three year term will require prior FPC approval. The recent statement by the BoE follows this year's FPC review and there is unlikely to be any further comment by the BoE before Help to Buy moves into its next phase on 1st January 2014.

    The conclusion of all this officialese is that the BoE has given the Help to Buy scheme a clean bill of health. The Bank has reassured market and political critics by establishing a regular review process and by highlighting their powers and options to control credit supply and lending policy if conditions in the housing market start to present an unacceptable financial risk.

    For anyone looking at the current mortgage lending statistics (from the CML, BBA and BoE) would immediate agree with Danny Alexander that "we are a million miles away from a housing bubble". For example, the BBA reported new mortgage lending in August to be £9.3 billion matched by an equivalent £9.3 billion of capital repayments. So far this year, net lending has fallen by -£1.6 bn. This should be compared to average annual increases in net lending between 2001-07 of £57.3 bn.
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    FensterFenster Posts: 2,115
    edited September 2013
    I remember the 90s. What a great decade to be a teenager in.

    Jobs and money were aplenty. We had great films, great music and scruffy haircuts, bars were full from Thursday to Sunday and there was a real sense of optimism about the place. And I viewed a three bed house which cost £28,000.

    I remember doing two weeks in Magaluf for £300. And only spending £500 out there, most of it on my back surrounded by beautiful young women. Having breakfast and a pint for 3 pesetas.

    What happened to those days when we could afford stuff?

    Then the noughties began. Labour started spending money we hadn't earned yet, 9/11 happened, the Mail got nastier, footballers started costing zillions, bling and fake tans arrived and the internet stole all our time and sense of serenity.

    I'd take the 90s over now any day of the week.
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    edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,150
    edited September 2013
    To answer my own question from up-thread:
    The median ‘actual’ voter was aged 49 in 2010, three years older than the median ‘potential’ voter. The median actual voter will be 52 by 2021, rising to 54 by 2051.

    http://www.opendemocracy.net/ourkingdom/craig-berry/how-growing-grey-vote-could-undermine-british-democracy
    [Edited to use "actual" not "potential" voters]
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724

    Plato said:

    Sorry Henry but there are many of us over 40 who do recall the 70s and early 80s with its militancy, coming home from school to do homework by candlelight or the telly being on strike plus all the other horrors.

    There may be lots of voters who are too young to recall it - but the older ones vote more frequently and also pass on our influence to others as grey beards. And of course the Left are still dancing on Thatcher's grave.

    You can't have it both ways. Grabbing privately owned land, price fixing and State intervention is deeply repellent to many of us who did vote for Tony but who recoiled from Michael Foot.

    The comparison between Foot's manifesto and EdM's is rather too close for comfort. http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/tobyyoung/100237733/milibands-cunning-plan-republish-labours-1983-manifesto/

    The 70's are the decade best forgotten. We were poor, in a council house with no central heating, just a coal fire, watching black and white TV, with only 3 channels, wearing flared trousers, wide collared shirts, and bad haircuts.

    The 80s, on the other hand, was the time of my life. Dad had a decent job, the council house had a Parkray boiler and central heating, we had colour TV, clothes were great, I had a David Sylvian hairstyle, music was brilliant, and I discovered girls, drinking, and computer games. Happy days.

    My first proper job was in Croydon during the 80s - it was yuppy time and we'd order in pizza/carry back trays of pints from the pub next door and get plastered. It was a brilliant time - and then the bubble burst... oops.
  • Options
    Hmm, not impressed by the Marcus Roberts essay.

    What his argument boils down is that IF Labour keep their 2010 voters (allowing for death churn) AND get 6.5% from the LibDems AND get 1% from the Tories they'll get 40% and therefore a nice majority.

    Whilst it makes a pleasant change to find a Labour supporter who can do basic arithmetic, albeit on vote shares if not on the public finances, this is a very long-winded way of stating the obvious. But we don't need to state the obvious, we can just look at the opinion polls, which currently show Labour doing a shade worse than this, and with the lead sliding by 1% a month over the last five months. If Labour can stop this slide and do as well as, or a bit better than, the polls are currently showing, they'll get a majority. If, on the other hand, the trend continues and there's a bit more swingback as the reality of the 2015 choice comes into focus, they won't.

    Of course everyone knows that the cards are stacked heavily in Labour's favour. But extrapolating from polls now to 2015 as though nothing is likely to change in the interim is an extrapolation too far.
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    Thanks Henry.

    Good to see there are still reasons to visit PB if you're interested in betting on politics.
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    It is dispiriting to see Labour go back to 1970s socialism, but Ed has made his move. We are now likely to see a polarised GE with clear red vs blue water between the main two parties. The waters parted in a Moses type of event and a GE turned into ..
    More Government intervention + Larger Public Sector vs Welfare Cuts and an EC referendum

    The centre and right wing newspapers (FT, Mail, Times, Sun), have in the past decades flirted with Labour, but they do remember the 1970s and even with a diminished influence they could mount a major effort against Red Ed and his motley crew.

    But Labour still have to get through the Scottish referendum.
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    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    LOL http://www.lbc.co.uk/tesco-sorry-over-gay-best-friend-doll-78813

    Tesco has withdrawn an inflatable figure labelled "gay best friend" and apologised for selling it.

    It comes a day after the retailer was forced to remove a Halloween costume called "Psycho Ward" from its shelves after it sparked widespread criticism. On its website Tesco said "The Inflatable g*y Best Friend" was suitable for children aged three to four and was an "amusing gift".

    "If SEX in the City and Will & Grace taught us anything, it's that g*y best friends are in this season," the description of the product said. "We've had the manbag, we've had leg warmers and iPhone fever, now it's time for the new craze.

    "Although not much can be said for his own attire, your Inflatable g*y Best Friend is ready to give you fashion advice, tell you if your bum looks big and b**ch about everyone who doesn't wear Jimmy Choo's." A Tesco spokesperson said: "This product was uploaded to the website by a third party seller but was removed from sale immediately because we found it offensive.
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    AveryLP said:

    Carney supports Osborne's Help to Buy schemes

    The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee has issued a statement on the housing market following its recent policy meeting.

    The key section is as follows:

    In the United Kingdom, the continued recovery of the banking sector had been associated with a further easing in credit conditions. Against that backdrop, the recovery in the housing market appeared to have gained momentum and to be broadening. Mortgage approvals in July were 30% higher than a year earlier and average house prices in August were 5% higher than a year earlier and had risen more in some parts of the country, particularly London.

    Nevertheless, activity in the housing market and loan-to-value ratios on new mortgage lending remained below their historic averages. Households’ debt servicing costs were low and the ratio of house prices to earnings was at its level of a decade ago.

    In view of that, the Committee judged that it should closely monitor developments in the housing market and banks' underwriting standards. The Committee would be vigilant to potential emerging vulnerabilities.

    The Committee noted that if risks to the stability of the financial system were to emerge from the housing market, both it and the microprudential regulators had a range of tools available to address those risks. These included, amongst others, supervisory guidance on underwriting standards, sectoral capital requirements and recommendations to the regulators on tightening of affordability tests.

    The Committee agreed that, if it became necessary to deploy its tools, they would be used in a way that was proportionate to the risks and consistent with a graduated response.


    [to be continued...]

    foppy master strategist Osbrowne in omnishambles housing bubble.

    Porpoise.
  • Options
    MikeLMikeL Posts: 7,287
    Anyone betting on a Lab majority may be advised to remember that Peter Kellner thinks Lab needs a vote lead of 7% for a majority.

    I know many people on here can't understand it because Lab got a majority of 66 with a 3% vote lead in 2005 but that is what Kellner thinks.

    Now Kellner may be wrong but I suspect he is a better judge of this than anyone posting on here.

    And I suspect that one thing most people on here would agree about is that Lab getting a vote lead of 7% in 2015 is not odds on.

    Kellner analysis:

    http://labourmajority.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Majority-Rules1.pdf
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    PolruanPolruan Posts: 2,083

    What proportion of the voting electorate are over, say, 50? That would make them at least 20 in 1983 and in their teen aged years at least during the late 70s?

    Last ONS figures for Engalnd and Wales estimate 23.8m over 44s (being generous, I'm assuming that those who were at least 9 when Maggie was elected remember socialism). That's out of 43m over 19s. I don't have figures for Scotland but believe that the skew there is slightly younger due to the lower life expectancy.
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    So *slave labour* is going ahead with LD seal of approval - this should be fun

    Andy Bell @andybell5news
    Lib Dem source; plan to help those who have been out of work for 2 years with compulsory work prog "has been agreed" in government @5_News
  • Options
    The comparison between Foot's manifesto and EdM's is rather too close for comfort.
    I quoted a passage from Blair's 1997 manifesto the other day. It could have been read verbatim by Miliband in his speech earlier in the week without anyone noticing. Pretty much it was in places. And there's not a huge difference between a temporary price freeze and the windfall tax in their effect on the energy companies.

    Why would the right-wing Press denounce Blairism as 70's socialism?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926

    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Oooh errr

    "The Evening Standard reports on Conservative plans to restrict trade union power. They cover reducing taxpayer subsidies to the trade unions and preventing strikes unless at least 40 per cent of members have taken part in the ballot approving it.

    The plans, for a post-2015 Conservative government, will be signalled by chairman Grant Shapps when he accuses Labour leader Ed Miliband of caving in to union pressure to drop reform.

    It details the plans as follows:

    Requiring unions to be charged a full commercial rent for using public buildings and facilities.

    Ending the right to free time off for trade union duties, including for “pilgrims” who work as full-time union officials at the taxpayers’ expense.

    Banning “check-off” of fees from salaries, which some public sector unions use to maintain membership.

    Increasing the threshold before a union can apply for statutory recognition from 10 per cent of a workforce to 30 per cent.

    Insisting that strike ballots do not count unless at least 40 per cent of members vote for it.

    Axing taxpayer funding of the Union Learning Fund, currently £15.5 million, which pays for union officials to be trained.

    >>http://www.conservativehome.com/leftwatch/2013/09/new-laws-planned-to-cut-strikes-and-union-subsidies-but-will-the-lib-dems-block-them.html
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    Good post, and very timely. The idea that everything in "the 70s" was universally bad is nonsense, even to those who lived through it (like me). Yes there were strikes and high inflation but there was also greater job security and rising living standards for everyone. Society was less individualistic, the cult of celebrity had not yet reached today's absurd levels and individuals suffering misfortune did not present themselves as victims on TV every few minutes. As a teenager you could sneak into a pub without anyone asking you to prove your age, parents did not feel it necessary to keep their children within sight at all times and you could still stand - and smoke! - on the terraces at football grounds and get in without having to take out a mortgage to pay for the ticket. And the UK led the world in railway technology with the HST (still in use today). It was certainly not all bad.



    .
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,414
    edited September 2013
    Pulpstar said:

    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?
    I did, a while back, only a small bet, generally I've been advising against backing a Tory majority, for this reason

    http://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2013/08/22/history-suggests-the-tories-will-see-their-share-of-the-vote-decline-in-2015-2/
  • Options

    AveryLP said:

    Carney supports Osborne's Help to Buy schemes

    The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee has issued a statement on the housing market following its recent policy meeting.

    The key section is as follows:

    In the United Kingdom, the continued recovery of the banking sector had been associated with a further easing in credit conditions. Against that backdrop, the recovery in the housing market appeared to have gained momentum and to be broadening. Mortgage approvals in July were 30% higher than a year earlier and average house prices in August were 5% higher than a year earlier and had risen more in some parts of the country, particularly London.

    Nevertheless, activity in the housing market and loan-to-value ratios on new mortgage lending remained below their historic averages. Households’ debt servicing costs were low and the ratio of house prices to earnings was at its level of a decade ago.

    In view of that, the Committee judged that it should closely monitor developments in the housing market and banks' underwriting standards. The Committee would be vigilant to potential emerging vulnerabilities.

    The Committee noted that if risks to the stability of the financial system were to emerge from the housing market, both it and the microprudential regulators had a range of tools available to address those risks. These included, amongst others, supervisory guidance on underwriting standards, sectoral capital requirements and recommendations to the regulators on tightening of affordability tests.

    The Committee agreed that, if it became necessary to deploy its tools, they would be used in a way that was proportionate to the risks and consistent with a graduated response.


    [to be continued...]

    foppy master strategist Osbrowne in omnishambles housing bubble.

    Porpoise.
    Whenever 'Porpose' is mentioned, I feel an urge to link to the following:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPe8ge6pS6I

    Takes me back to my youth, and skiving off school to attend parties near Nottingham. ;-)
  • Options
    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    edited September 2013

    Pulpstar said:

    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?
    I did, a while back, only a small bet, generally I've been advising back a Tory majority, for this reason

    http://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2013/08/22/history-suggests-the-tories-will-see-their-share-of-the-vote-decline-in-2015-2/
    "Overall, this analysis makes me think, if you’re not already laying a Tory majority, you should be doing so, their share of the vote will not be going up and Labour’s won’t be decreasing if recent history repeats itself, a Tory majority seems a remote prospect, even without the electoral system favouring Labour.

    No wonder Dave is planning for a second coalition rather than planning for an outright majority.

    TSE"

    Err I said Bet (Meaning Back) Not Lay TSE ^^;
  • Options
    Pulpstar said:

    Pulpstar said:

    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?
    I did, a while back, only a small bet, generally I've been advising back a Tory majority, for this reason

    http://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2013/08/22/history-suggests-the-tories-will-see-their-share-of-the-vote-decline-in-2015-2/
    "Overall, this analysis makes me think, if you’re not already laying a Tory majority, you should be doing so, their share of the vote will not be going up and Labour’s won’t be decreasing if recent history repeats itself, a Tory majority seems a remote prospect, even without the electoral system favouring Labour.

    No wonder Dave is planning for a second coalition rather than planning for an outright majority.

    TSE"

    Err ?
    Sorry, I made a small typo, has been corrected now.
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    RichardNabaviRichardNabavi Posts: 3,413
    edited September 2013
    Pulpstar said:


    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?

    My position on the main result is currently:

    Lab Maj +265
    NOM, Lab Most Seats +629
    NOM, Con Most Seats +457
    Con Maj +562

    That excludes some bets on individual constituencies and bets on other markets such as SNP and LibDem seat totals. You do have to be a bit careful to take into account the correlations between all the various bets to make sure you're not more exposed to any particular scenario than you might think at first sight.
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    felix said:

    I think the energy price issue is interesting - I have friends in Spain where it is much more expensive than the UK. It also used to have govt controls and now everyone has to pay additional charges to cover the cost of the earlier govt subsidies. I realise there is a perception that it's expensive in the UK but I think that reflects the residual dependency culture prevalent here - it may take decades to change that.

    The perception of energy being expensive is relative to what it used to cost in the UK.

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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    That's just called having a great book Richard Nabavi !
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    'Cause I'm on my mobile, what are the bookies rules on the 2015 betting markets if this scenario were to happen.

    Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election?
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    Scrapheap_as_wasScrapheap_as_was Posts: 10,059
    edited September 2013

    Pulpstar said:

    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?
    I did, a while back, only a small bet, generally I've been advising against backing a Tory majority, for this reason

    http://www1.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2013/08/22/history-suggests-the-tories-will-see-their-share-of-the-vote-decline-in-2015-2/
    I have - even more than on Yvette replacing Ed..... in fact I think I'm the Romney 'trader' distorting the market.

    I'm "Balls deep" (for tse) in to Tory Maj (plus a bit on NOM).... using my winnings from Maria in Eastleigh....oops or not on that one!
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    I'm firmly in the NOMAJ category. Labour overall is next most likely in my view, but a very distant second for me.
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    A very good article from Henry.

    In this context it is worth pondering the voters from the 1992 general election. The youngest eligible to vote in that election will be 41 by the time of the 2015 general election, and anyone who was already in their fifties would now be in their seventies.

    Anyone eligible to vote in 1979 will be 54 or older by 2015. They will make up about 28.3% of the eligible electorate.

    All that said I completely disagree with Henry's conclusion that a Labour majority is an odds-on likelihood. Another Hung Parliament is, in my view, overwhelmingly likely.
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    Pulpstar said:


    Question - I have seen excellent posters and gamblers split amongst Lab Maj and NOM Maj - But Is there anyone here who is actually BETTING on a Conservative majority ?

    My position on the main result is currently:

    Lab Maj +265
    NOM, Lab Most Seats +629
    NOM, Con Most Seats +457
    Con Maj +562

    That excludes some bets on individual constituencies and bets on other markets such as SNP and LibDem seat totals. You do have to be a bit careful to take into account the correlations between all the various bets to make sure you're not more exposed to any particular scenario than you might think at first sight.
    Richard

    It's a bit early to be getting overerly excited about individual seats but one small word of warning. NickP (of this parish) is no shoo-in for Broxtowe, despite odds of 1/3 suggesting otherwise. He's the more likely winner, for sure, but 4/6 would be much nearer the mark.

    A word to the wise...OK?

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    AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815
    edited September 2013
    On topic

    HenryG's argument is that, provided Labour are guaranteed a majority in 2015, the party and its leader has a licence to pursue policies which have been proved by academic theory and historical experience to damage the economy.

    And that, notwithstanding such policies, the party will be elected because voters are too young to remember the mistakes of the past and the discrediting of socialism.

    And that those political commentators who bear witness to past mistakes and who speak out today to warn us today are "out of touch with public understanding and sentiment".

    We don't need to go back to 1997 or the 1970s to recognise the evil in this argument: it is no more than McBridist lack of moral principle continuing to course through the veins of Labour's body politic.

    Miliband's policies to impose price controls on the energy industry and to incent house building through land confiscation are wrong because they conflict with economic law and have been shown to fail when implemented in the past.

    Henry. The policies are wrong. Miliband knows that. We know that. Almost all economists and political commentators know that. But you argue that he is justified in promising to implement them because the electorate is too young to realise they are wrong and that he will win the election anyway.

    What happened to the moral compass, Henry?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926

    'Cause I'm on my mobile, what are the bookies rules on the 2015 betting markets if this scenario were to happen.

    Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election?

    Even if the referendum passes isn't the timetable for independence past May 2015 ?
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    Pulpstar said:

    'Cause I'm on my mobile, what are the bookies rules on the 2015 betting markets if this scenario were to happen.

    Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election?

    Even if the referendum passes isn't the timetable for independence past May 2015 ?
    It is, but Dave might think, getting rid of a net 58 non Tory MPs a year early could be beneficial to him.

    Just imagine what would happen, if say Ed were to get a majority in 2015, but that majority gets wiped out in May 2016, when Scotland finally leaves.
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    "Relatively soon after Tony Blair became prime minister a new question started doing the rounds at Westminster. “When oh when,” people began asking, “is the real Tony Blair going to stand up?”

    When I say “people”, I actually mean those commentators, MPs and activists who could broadly be described as the soft Left. People like me, in fact. I think Polly Toynbee started it. The basic thrust of her line of questioning was: “OK, we know Tony is quite Left-wing really, but he keeps confusing the issue by talking and acting in this Right-wing way. So when will the Left-wing bit of him start to assert itself?”

    The trouble was, it didn’t. So a new argument was constructed to reassure ourselves everything was going to be OK. Labour's strategy was to “talk Right, but act Left”. Tony would carry on saying lots of fairly Right-wing things, but that would just be cover to enable him to do lots of Left-wing things when no one was looking.

    But he didn’t. As his premiership went on, and as we got further away from the first term manifesto, Tony kept talking Right and acting Right. > http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/danhodges/100238405/when-ed-miliband-said-he-planned-to-bring-back-socialism-it-wasnt-a-slip-of-the-tongue/
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836
    If Labour can't achieve 40% at this stage of the Parliament, I certainly can't see them dong so in May 2015.
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    Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 30,939
    edited September 2013

    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Hardly.

    I may disagree with most of what Henry says and with his conclusions but the idea that Mike only brings him out as a 'yes man' is idiotic. Henry has a long standing slot on the site and uses it to put his own particular Labour supporting slant on the threads. Almost everyone recognises that and accepts it.

    If the idea is to stimulate discussion and keep the site ticking along merrily then I would say Henry is a great success.

    And as I mentioned. I say that from a position of disagreeing with most of what he normally writes.

    (Edited for a typo)
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926

    Pulpstar said:

    'Cause I'm on my mobile, what are the bookies rules on the 2015 betting markets if this scenario were to happen.

    Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election?

    Even if the referendum passes isn't the timetable for independence past May 2015 ?
    It is, but Dave might think, getting rid of a net 58 non Tory MPs a year early could be beneficial to him.

    Just imagine what would happen, if say Ed were to get a majority in 2015, but that majority gets wiped out in May 2016, when Scotland finally leaves.
    Then I'd be quids in with a sensible Gov't. Happy days.
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    Anyone eligible to vote in 1979 will be 54 or older by 2015. They will make up about 28.3% of the eligible electorate.

    ...but nearly half the actual electorate...

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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836
    antifrank said:

    I'm firmly in the NOMAJ category. Labour overall is next most likely in my view, but a very distant second for me.

    NOMAJ, but the Conservatives as the largest party seems likeliest to me.

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    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election?

    Would Dave be able to get that through?
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    @Peter_the_Punter - Thanks for that. Broxtowe is one where I haven't taken a position. It didn't seem worth backing Anna Soubry with her very small majority when you could get better odds in Kingswood, and yes, I thought Nick's odds were not particularly appealing.
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    O/T but wanted to let people know about our new exhibition - 31 Jan through 27 April at 2 Temple Place. It's a collaboration with the Museums of Cambridge. Below is from the press release so apologies for the marketing speak!

    Discoveries is an exhibition about imagination and knowledge, about the pleasures of looking, and the power of objects to generate wonder as well as new ideas. Presenting singular objects and unearthing little-known treasures in the extraordinary interiors of Two Temple Place on London’s Embankment, Discoveries is the first major exhibition to bring together the fascinating collections of the eight University of Cambridge Museums.

    ...

    The exhibition challenges and responds to the very notion of ‘discovery’ as it explores the limits as well as the frontiers of knowledge and the connections between visionary thinking and scientifically- observed vision. The ornate and atmospheric spaces of Two Temple Place are cabinets of curiosities, displaying objects that span millennia, from the majestic to the minuscule: Charles Darwin’s recently re-discovered Tinamou Egg, the only surviving egg from the HMS Beagle voyage, accidentally cracked by Darwin himself; a surprising juxtaposition of art works from the First Millennium BC to the present day; and rare zoological specimens such as a complete skeleton of a dodo.

    Visitors are invited to experience the exhibits as peculiar objects with stories to be unravelled and to encounter the idea of museums, not just as repositories of things, but active places of learning and revelation. 19th Century religious prints attempt to counteract the progress of science by demonstrating the Earth as the centre of the universe, while Inuit snow goggles crafted from wood point the way towards today’s polarised version. Historic instruments sit alongside cutting edge technology — The Discovery telescope used in Victorian explorations to the North and South Poles, and which in 1984 was taken aboard the Space Shuttle ‘Discovery’ travelling some 2.5 million miles, keeps company with the ‘Triwizard Tournament’ Digital Optical module, a ground-breaking instrument at the forefront of 21st Century cosmological and astrophysical polar research.
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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836

    Good post, and very timely. The idea that everything in "the 70s" was universally bad is nonsense, even to those who lived through it (like me). Yes there were strikes and high inflation but there was also greater job security and rising living standards for everyone. Society was less individualistic, the cult of celebrity had not yet reached today's absurd levels and individuals suffering misfortune did not present themselves as victims on TV every few minutes. As a teenager you could sneak into a pub without anyone asking you to prove your age, parents did not feel it necessary to keep their children within sight at all times and you could still stand - and smoke! - on the terraces at football grounds and get in without having to take out a mortgage to pay for the ticket. And the UK led the world in railway technology with the HST (still in use today). It was certainly not all bad.



    .

    Growing up in the Seventies was great. My parents had plenty of money, and children were largely left to their own devices, as people weren't paranoid about paedophiles.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    Which punter was going to have the Murcielago paid up front by backing CON Maj in 2010 :D by the way ?
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    Sean_F said:

    If Labour can't achieve 40% at this stage of the Parliament, I certainly can't see them dong so in May 2015.

    Agreed, and if they do it's because UKIP have imploded, which is even better for Con than it is for Lab.
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    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    'What’s more intriguing is the wider political commentariat whose language might not be so daft but whose assumptions are as out of touch with public understanding and sentiment.'

    Maybe they are out of touch ,but how do you explain why the majority of voters don't believe any of Ed's pledges will happen,could it be that the Labour party is out of touch?


    'Widespread scepticism over Labour pledges - YouGov
    yougov.co.uk/news/2013/09/.../widespread-scepticism-over-labour-pledges...
    1 day ago - Only a minority of voters – including a minority of Labour voters in some cases – think the Labour party will acheive the goals outlined in Ed ...
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    AveryLPAveryLP Posts: 7,815

    AveryLP said:

    Carney supports Osborne's Help to Buy schemes

    The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee has issued a statement on the housing market following its recent policy meeting.

    The key section is as follows:

    In the United Kingdom, the continued recovery of the banking sector had been associated with a further easing in credit conditions. Against that backdrop, the recovery in the housing market appeared to have gained momentum and to be broadening. Mortgage approvals in July were 30% higher than a year earlier and average house prices in August were 5% higher than a year earlier and had risen more in some parts of the country, particularly London.

    Nevertheless, activity in the housing market and loan-to-value ratios on new mortgage lending remained below their historic averages. Households’ debt servicing costs were low and the ratio of house prices to earnings was at its level of a decade ago.

    In view of that, the Committee judged that it should closely monitor developments in the housing market and banks' underwriting standards. The Committee would be vigilant to potential emerging vulnerabilities.

    The Committee noted that if risks to the stability of the financial system were to emerge from the housing market, both it and the microprudential regulators had a range of tools available to address those risks. These included, amongst others, supervisory guidance on underwriting standards, sectoral capital requirements and recommendations to the regulators on tightening of affordability tests.

    The Committee agreed that, if it became necessary to deploy its tools, they would be used in a way that was proportionate to the risks and consistent with a graduated response.


    [to be continued...]

    foppy master strategist Osbrowne in omnishambles housing bubble.

    Porpoise.
    Are you suffering an identity crisis, Mr. Brooke.

    Your comment only makes sense if spoken in a Scouser accent.

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    Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,836
    Plato said:

    "Relatively soon after Tony Blair became prime minister a new question started doing the rounds at Westminster. “When oh when,” people began asking, “is the real Tony Blair going to stand up?”

    When I say “people”, I actually mean those commentators, MPs and activists who could broadly be described as the soft Left. People like me, in fact. I think Polly Toynbee started it. The basic thrust of her line of questioning was: “OK, we know Tony is quite Left-wing really, but he keeps confusing the issue by talking and acting in this Right-wing way. So when will the Left-wing bit of him start to assert itself?”

    The trouble was, it didn’t. So a new argument was constructed to reassure ourselves everything was going to be OK. Labour's strategy was to “talk Right, but act Left”. Tony would carry on saying lots of fairly Right-wing things, but that would just be cover to enable him to do lots of Left-wing things when no one was looking.

    But he didn’t. As his premiership went on, and as we got further away from the first term manifesto, Tony kept talking Right and acting Right. > http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/danhodges/100238405/when-ed-miliband-said-he-planned-to-bring-back-socialism-it-wasnt-a-slip-of-the-tongue/

    The last government was left wing enough. But, it was the sort of left wing that appeals to middle class left wingers, rather than working class left wingers.

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    RandomRandom Posts: 107

    It is dispiriting to see Labour go back to 1970s socialism, but Ed has made his move. We are now likely to see a polarised GE with clear red vs blue water between the main two parties. The waters parted in a Moses type of event and a GE turned into ..
    More Government intervention + Larger Public Sector vs Welfare Cuts and an EC referendum

    Yeah. I've made no secret on this board of the fact I despise Cameron, but EdM has done a better job this week of arguing that voting UKIP and getting Labour isn't a risk worth taking better than any Cameroon has managed. The Conservatives would be fools not to build on this - however, as they largely are, they probably won't.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    taffys said:

    Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election?

    Would Dave be able to get that through?

    No. More to the point he wouldn't try.
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    Random said:

    It is dispiriting to see Labour go back to 1970s socialism, but Ed has made his move. We are now likely to see a polarised GE with clear red vs blue water between the main two parties. The waters parted in a Moses type of event and a GE turned into ..
    More Government intervention + Larger Public Sector vs Welfare Cuts and an EC referendum

    Yeah. I've made no secret on this board of the fact I despise Cameron, but EdM has done a better job this week of arguing that voting UKIP and getting Labour isn't a risk worth taking better than any Cameroon has managed. The Conservatives would be fools not to build on this - however, as they largely are, they probably won't.
    Quite - I've noticed a little shift in soft Kipper voters on Twitter and even in the DT. They aren't quite so militant after EdM's contribution.
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    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    ''Growing up in the Seventies was great. My parents had plenty of money, and children were largely left to their own devices, as people weren't paranoid about paedophiles.''

    THere was a fascinating documentary on TV recently whose theme was that Thatcherism was the child of the 70s, not the 80s. It was in the former that the people of Britain started to get wealthier, more educated, more ambitious etc. and saw the left as standing in their way.

    The most most perceptive comic creation of the 1970s wasn;t Fletcher or Reggie Perrin, it was Margo Leadbeater.

    Everybody sniggered, but tomorrow belonged to her.
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    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @taffys

    'Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election? '

    Why would you have people participating in an election in a country they had just chosen to leave?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    john_zims said:

    @taffys

    'Scotland votes for Independence next year, and Dave passes legislation removing Scottish voters and constituencies from the 2015 General Election? '

    Why would you have people participating in an election in a country they had just chosen to leave?

    Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016.
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    Another thread from one of Mike's little cheerleaders. You can tell not only when a site has gone downhill, but an argument has been lost, when the protagonist only calls in the 'yes men'. Seen it time and again in politics and it always presages defeat.

    Hardly.

    I may disagree with most of what Henry says and with his conclusions but the idea that Mike only brings him out as a 'yes man' is idiotic. Henry has a long standing slot on the site and uses it to put his own particular Labour supporting slant on the threads. Almost everyone recognises that and accepts it.

    If the idea is to stimulate discussion and keep the site ticking along merrily then I would say Henry is a great success.

    And as I mentioned. I say that from a position of disagreeing with most of what he normally writes.

    (Edited for a typo)

    Well said, Richard.

    Sean Fear used to contribute similarly from the right and was equally well respected.
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    Good afternoon, everyone.

    Sadly, I agree with Mr. Manson that Labour remains in the best position for electoral success.
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    AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,754
    AveryLP said:

    AveryLP said:

    Carney supports Osborne's Help to Buy schemes

    The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee has issued a statement on the housing market following its recent policy meeting.

    The key section is as follows:

    In the United Kingdom, the continued recovery of the banking sector had been associated with a further easing in credit conditions. Against that backdrop, the recovery in the housing

    The Committee agreed that, if it became necessary to deploy its tools, they would be used in a way that was proportionate to the risks and consistent with a graduated response.


    [to be continued...]

    foppy master strategist Osbrowne in omnishambles housing bubble.

    Porpoise.
    Are you suffering an identity crisis, Mr. Brooke.

    Your comment only makes sense if spoken in a Scouser accent.

    Well to a certain degree yes Mr Pole. Since I volunteered to step into the LOTO post on Osborne given tim's absence it's certainly been challenging. It's easy to criticise our effete PM and his rubbish CoE as the "fop and flop strategy" and proclaim they'll never get elected. But since I usually critiscise GO from the right and try to have things like numbers and arguments, this approach of just plucking any old idea from the ether and proclaiming it's a fact is something of a culture shock.

    73% of PBTories employ their butlers on less than the minimum wage. Fact.
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    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016.

    OMG imagine the parliament in the interim under that arrangement.....doesn't bear thinking about.
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    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @Pulpstar

    'Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016'

    Westminster would represent the rest of the UK and the Scottish parliament Scotland.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    Personally I think if Scotland votes for Independence (And it is a bloody big IF) then it'll take till probably 2017 to iron out the negotiations. Independence will probably be ~ March 2018, not 2016. If that turns a Labour Majority Gov't into a Labour Minority then I assume they'll try and pass budgets without their 40 Scottish MPs (Who will give up their seats on independence day). It'll probably end up leaving the Lib Dems having an enourmous amount of power in all honesty, unless the Con opposition is now a Majority in which case a vote of No confidence is swiftly passed and a GE is called.
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    PolruanPolruan Posts: 2,083
    AveryLP said:


    Miliband's policies to impose price controls on the energy industry and to incent house building through land confiscation are wrong because they conflict with economic law and have been shown to fail when implemented in the past.

    Henry. The policies are wrong. Miliband knows that. We know that. Almost all economists and political commentators know that. But you argue that he is justified in promising to implement them because the electorate is too young to realise they are wrong and that he will win the election anyway.

    What happened to the moral compass, Henry?

    I think you're confusing your economic beliefs with reality. Not saying you're wrong, just that you're not necessarily right. There's more than one mainstream view on these things. An equivalent statement from an alternative perspective would be to suggest that neo-libs in the Osborne mould know that their policies reward rent-seeking behaviour, drive unsustainable asset price bubbles and concentrate wealth in the hands of a few whilst driving down incomes for the many meaning that the only remaining choice is between a decreasing standard of living or increased state spending on welfare. And that they advocate these policies in order to enhance their own and their friends' wealth; they use the power structures of a media-political complex owned by those friends to persuade poorer people to vote against their own interests, knowing all the time what the real consequences would be - as these consequences have indeed arisen when such policies were implemented.

    Now, I pretty much believe that the consequences of the current government's policies look a bit like what I've outlined above, but I'm happy to accept that many of the individuals concerned genuinely and passionately believe that those policies produce the best (or least worst) outcome for the most people. In the same way, I'm sure you genuinely believe that when you put forward such policies. I'm surprised that you wouldn't give similar credit to your opponents: surely fairer to believe that they are sincerely, passionately and altruistically wrong, rather than dishonest. It seems a bit arrogant and a lot misanthropic to believe that everyone who expresses disagreement with those beliefs is actually lying, that they're secretly in agreement with you, but suppressing their true understanding of economics in order to pursue their own selfish ends.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926
    taffys said:

    Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016.

    OMG imagine the parliament in the interim under that arrangement.....doesn't bear thinking about.

    The 'interim parliament' as it would probably be known would be first class popcorn material. It is on of the reasons I'd like Scottish independence.
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    felixfelix Posts: 15,124

    felix said:

    I think the energy price issue is interesting - I have friends in Spain where it is much more expensive than the UK. It also used to have govt controls and now everyone has to pay additional charges to cover the cost of the earlier govt subsidies. I realise there is a perception that it's expensive in the UK but I think that reflects the residual dependency culture prevalent here - it may take decades to change that.

    The perception of energy being expensive is relative to what it used to cost in the UK.

    Of course but do people ready believe that we are the only ones paying a lot for electricity and are they aware that we pay much less than many in Europe?
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    http://twitpic.com/df4jpc

    Chris Williamson @WilliamsonChris
    UK recovering as private sector job worries lowest since pre-crisis & public sector has recovered from 2010 shock twitpic.com/df4jpc
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    RBS agrees to £600m sale of 315 branches to a consortium backed by the Church of England

    They're going after Wonga?
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    FinancierFinancier Posts: 3,916
    At last it is Friday afternoon, but have to work the weekend in order to study the tenders that have poured in. Reading through this very gentle and polite thread it is interesting to read of the times in their lives when PBers thought they were best off.

    It made me reflect, and it seems that for me each decade brought something new and exciting as it still does today. In my late teens, it was exploring my options and new experiences away from family, in my twenties it was employment, marriage, children, house-owner, being an inventor but losing my father. In my thirties, it was part of the commercial world, living in central America and the Caribbean and then sub-Saharan Africa whilst running the international business of a global operation. In my forties, becoming financially independent as was given shares in oil-fields in return for technical and commercial advice. In my fifties it was getting involved with European politics, World Bank and UN. In my sixties, back to science and technology. But best of all it is the people I have met - both rulers and the poverty-stricken - and now it is my grandchildren who have my focus.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,115
    Pulpstar said:

    taffys said:

    Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016.

    OMG imagine the parliament in the interim under that arrangement.....doesn't bear thinking about.

    The 'interim parliament' as it would probably be known would be first class popcorn material. It is on of the reasons I'd like Scottish independence.
    Does raise an interesting spectre - Miliband having a wafer thin majority in May 2015, then being plunged into a minority by the loss of his Scottish MP's a year later. Ditto Labour in a coalition with the LibDems, falling apart as the Tories may then have not only most votes but also most seats....

    Labour Govt lasting a year. Man, they would have to shake that money tree in that year!
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    john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @taffys

    'OMG imagine the parliament in the interim under that arrangement.....doesn't bear thinking about.'

    Would be absurd,make the West Lothian question look like petty cash.
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    EasterrossEasterross Posts: 1,915
    john_zims said:

    @Pulpstar

    'Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016'

    Westminster would represent the rest of the UK and the Scottish parliament Scotland.

    IF Scotland votes YES on 18th September 2014 then the Coalition should lodge a Bill on 19th September 2014 to suspend the 59 Scottish Constituencies as from Dissolution of the 2010-15 Parliament. Stupid for Scottish MPs to sit in a parliament for what will in effect become a foreign country a few months later and totally wrong for Scottish MPs to vote on legislation for that foreign country.
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    Mr. Easterross, indeed.

    But the greater problem would be that we could have Scotsmen on both sides of the negotiating table.

    Still, let's hope No wins and we don't end up with that immoral, indefensible situation. [If Yes wins I'd expect the SNP north of the border and Conservatives south of it to benefit greatly].

    On a side note, Labour's devolution plan to kill nationalism stone dead is working terribly well, isn't it?
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    taffys said:

    ''Growing up in the Seventies was great. My parents had plenty of money, and children were largely left to their own devices, as people weren't paranoid about paedophiles.''.

    And housing was cheap both to buy and rent (at that time largely from the public sector - hardly any private landlords). Very few people relied on housing benefit and the numbers on disability benefits were tiny compared to today's levels. There were also very few workless households.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,926

    john_zims said:

    @Pulpstar

    'Parliament still represents the whole of the UK till Independence day, which would be at the earliest March 2016'

    Westminster would represent the rest of the UK and the Scottish parliament Scotland.

    IF Scotland votes YES on 18th September 2014 then the Coalition should lodge a Bill on 19th September 2014 to suspend the 59 Scottish Constituencies as from Dissolution of the 2010-15 Parliament. Stupid for Scottish MPs to sit in a parliament for what will in effect become a foreign country a few months later and totally wrong for Scottish MPs to vote on legislation for that foreign country.
    Could you imagine the look on Gordon Brown's face !
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    CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758

    That's a good argument, and one that I don't think can be easily refuted.
    Whether it's a good policy or not ( I don't know, either way), Milliband's energy price freeze is bound to be popular, after all, who doesn't moan about the cost of running a house?
    At the least, it makes Milliband appear that he knows what make the public tick, never a bad thing for the LOTO.

    That seems to highlight the most effective response though.

    1. Labour's failure - and EdM's failure as the cabinet minister responsible means that we don't have enough power generation capability in the country

    2. We are taking steps to try and fix that as quickly as we can

    3. To do that needs stable conditions: we need to convince companies to invest

    4. EdM is just playing politics - putting the country's future at risk for personal gain
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    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    Labour Govt lasting a year. Man, they would have to shake that money tree in that year!

    Labour would do the math and weep. The departure of their scotsmen would make a tory majority at some time almost inevitable, followed quickly be a redrawing of boundaries along the lines the tories want. We then have the possibility of a government that would make Douglas Carswell look like a soaking wet pinko.

    What would really set the cat amongst the pigeons is if labour tried to use their scotsmen to redraw a constitution for England ahead of any election, to ensure they stayed in the game down here.
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    PolruanPolruan Posts: 2,083
    Charles said:

    That's a good argument, and one that I don't think can be easily refuted.
    Whether it's a good policy or not ( I don't know, either way), Milliband's energy price freeze is bound to be popular, after all, who doesn't moan about the cost of running a house?
    At the least, it makes Milliband appear that he knows what make the public tick, never a bad thing for the LOTO.

    That seems to highlight the most effective response though.

    1. Labour's failure - and EdM's failure as the cabinet minister responsible means that we don't have enough power generation capability in the country

    2. We are taking steps to try and fix that as quickly as we can

    3. To do that needs stable conditions: we need to convince companies to invest

    4. EdM is just playing politics - putting the country's future at risk for personal gain
    Items 1-3 all lead to the same question: you've been in power for three years now, when will the power generation capability that you've enabled in that time come on stream? If there's no good answer to that question, why would anyone believe that more of the same ("stability") will solve the problem?

    Item 4 is the standard politician's reply to any proposal by their opponent which appears popular. Makes the current supporters happy, but doesn't really change anybody's mind.
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    PlatoPlato Posts: 15,724
    "In YouGov’s poll this morning for the Sun the Conservatives had 33 percent support, Labour 40 percent, the Liberal Democrats 9 percent and Ukip 11 percent. While it would be a gross exaggeration to say all of Ukip’s support comes from the Conservative party, they do gain a disproportionate amount of support from ex-Tories and it’s natural for people to add together that Conservative 33 percent and that Ukip 11 percent and think what might be.

    The reality though may not be as simple as adding the two together. In yesterday’s poll we also asked people to imagine that Ukip and the Conservatives agreed a pact at the next general election where they would not stand against each other, with Ukip backing the Conservative candidate in most constituencies and the Conservatives backing the Ukip candidate in a small number of constituencies. We then asked how they’d vote under those circumstances. Once you’ve taken out the don’t knows and wouldn’t votes, the new Conservative/Ukip alliance would be on 35 percent of the vote (up just two points on their current support), Labour would be on 45 percent (up five points on their current support), the Liberal Democrats on 11 percent (up two points), 9 percent of people would vote for other parties (down eight points).

    So what goes wrong, how does 33 plus 11 equal only 35? >> http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2013/09/why-a-toryukip-alliance-would-benefit-labour/
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    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351

    I filled the car today (at Tesco), and I noticed the price had dropped below the crucial £1.30 a litre. I remember seeing (on here) a graph associating petrol prices with government approval. If so, that could be more important than jam tomorrow promises from the LOTO.

    Although it might be cynical, you can't blame Milli for trying it on. It's one of the few ways for a LOTO to get headlines.
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    taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    ''that seems to highlight the most effective response though.''

    The tories have decided to agree with Ed Miliband that energy is too expensive if Michael Gove's comments are anything to go by. Its not a bad strategy.

This discussion has been closed.