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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Tonight’s YouGov has the worst LAB voting figures and the wors

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    The_ApocalypseThe_Apocalypse Posts: 7,830
    edited August 2018

    LOL at the different results between YouGov and ICM.

    Different methodologies plus different timeframes for the fieldwork

    Not really that hard to understand
    Not really, it’s not like ICM and YouGov have never produced similar results before. Polls have had different methodologies yet produced similar voting intention.

    As for timeframes, it’s only some days difference. Both polls are well into the period in which yet another saga of the antisemitism scandal became news. The only thing that’s happened very recently is the whole Boris Burka row which seems to only be cared about by Westminster commentators. Not that I agree with what Boris said, because there I side with what many centre left commentators are saying.
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    These people are literally mad:

    https://twitter.com/ToryFibs/status/1027664922270945281

    At least their utter purity will be maintained when they lose in 2020/21 and they can say the last Socialist government was still 1945.

    Presumably Blairite magic only works on YouGov and not on ICM then? For their sake, they should be happy most of the general public still don’t know how crazy some of them are.
    Apparently the 'Tory Fibs' account is "Dr" Eoin's other account, hence the reason it is on the loopy side. The boy is an absolute roaster.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940

    Every party on the slide except Tommy Robinson:

    https://twitter.com/britainelects/status/1027683460511682560

    Tory voteshare identical with YouGov and ICM.

    Main difference Labour 5 points higher with ICM than YouGov and the LDs 3% lower and UKIP 1% lower in the ICM poll compared to the YouGov poll.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095
    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
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    rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,920
    AndyJS said:

    Anazina said:

    AndyJS said:

    Better news for Labour with ICM:


    "Europe Elects
    @EuropeElects
    10m10 minutes ago

    UK, ICM Poll:

    LAB-S&D: 40% (-1)
    CON-ECR: 39% (-1)
    LDEM-ALDE: 7% (-1)
    UKIP-EFDD: 6% (+1)
    Greens-G/EFA: 3%

    Field work: 03/08/18 – 05/08/18
    Sample size: 2,049"

    None of these midterm polls are worth a hill of beans. Who cares?
    This is a site where polls are usually discussed.
    And Poles.
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,159
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    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,244
    Maybe Sir Jim posts on PB under a pseudonym. He would add to the illustrious list of PB Leavers who have, er, left.
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    Foxy said:

    Cyclefree said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    SeanT said:

    is it not worth discussing the biggest ideological challenge facing the West since the end of communism?


    FPT

    1. People can be offended, if they want. It does not follow that they therefore are entitled to ask for whatever offends them to be banned.

    2. The right to free speech & free thought are far more important than the right to dress in a particular way.

    I agree with 1, but 2 sets up a false choice. There's nothing wrong with saying both that people have a right to dress how they like and other people have a right not to like it. Forms of dress are partly an expresion of opinion, and this comes close to saying that we're all in favour of freedom of speech, so long as we agree with it.

    I think Boris was being simultaneously rude and frivolous about a difficult issue, but we shouldn't ban him saying what he thinks, just roll our eyes and ignore his tiresome attention-seeking.
    The issue is whether those women, and it is women, not men, who wear these costumes are expressing a right to dress how they would like.

    Many are, some are not. Now I may regard their free decision to don what I consider to be oppressive misogynistic clothing as evidence that they have Stockholm syndrome, but they will undoubtably see it differently.

    I more often see young women in Niqab than older, and not infrequently much more conservatively dressed than their parents. I think that at least in part this is second and third generation identity confusion, much like Rastafarianism in the Seventies and Eighties. These are often people who feel incompletely British, but also incompletely in touch with the old culture, and in investigating and seeking their true identity adopt a simalcrum of archaism. How genuine this spirituality is, as opposed to political, varies. It also varies whether it is a passing phase or a dissapearance down the rabbit hole.

    My own approach is unlike Boris, I do not insult the wearers but rather support them in their education and careers. That is their best hope of escape.
    It says something about the modern UK that Boris Johnson gets more grief for criticizing medieval dress than Tulip Siddiq gets for supporting an Islamist government that abducts, tortures and kills democracy protesters.

    Generations hence, they will look back and be astonished at how fawning liberals were over Islam.
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    AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395

    LOL at the different results between YouGov and ICM.

    Take an average and you're probably closer to the truth.
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    https://news.sky.com/story/indian-family-thrown-off-british-airways-flight-over-crying-child-11466706

    "A father claims BA subjected him to "humiliation and racist behaviour", triggering calls for Indians to boycott the airline."
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    mattmatt Posts: 3,789

    https://news.sky.com/story/indian-family-thrown-off-british-airways-flight-over-crying-child-11466706

    "A father claims BA subjected him to "humiliation and racist behaviour", triggering calls for Indians to boycott the airline."

    Alternatively, they ignored the seat belt requirement because they knew better.
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    matt said:

    https://news.sky.com/story/indian-family-thrown-off-british-airways-flight-over-crying-child-11466706

    "A father claims BA subjected him to "humiliation and racist behaviour", triggering calls for Indians to boycott the airline."

    Alternatively, they ignored the seat belt requirement because they knew better.
    Possibly :)

    But some were sympathetic towards the airline, with one person saying: "I don't feel bad about this at all, we Indians don't respect or value our Indian resources, be it trains or airplanes, this is good learning for us."

    Vani M Manokaran said what BA did "was absolutely right", while Khushi said: "Indian parents start howling too when kids start howling - three-year-olds outside India are taught how to behave socially."
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Good morning, everyone.

    Just statistical bobbling, probably. Have to see how the next few go.
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    tlg86tlg86 Posts: 25,187
    This is one to save for the next time a remainer accuses Brexiteers of wanting to take Britain back to the 1950s.
    Scott_P said:
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,919

    Good morning, everyone.

    Just statistical bobbling, probably. Have to see how the next few go.

    Probably. But seems fair enoiugh to me. May’s ‘not very good’ and chances are Corbyn would be worse.
    It’s a sad commentary on the state of British politics.
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    MTimT said:

    rcs1000 What do you make of the Elon Musk tweet and the SEC's questions? Sounds like he is in real trouble to me.

    He is ... Considering....
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. 86, that tweet is just daft. Their faces can be seen. And it's a funeral.
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    CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 59,576
    edited August 2018

    Good morning, everyone.

    Just statistical bobbling, probably. Have to see how the next few go.

    Hush you! What would PB without statistical wobbling?

    Look how the Remainers delight over every MOE drift in Remain versus Leave!

    Would you crush them utterly?
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    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,964
    edited August 2018
    TOPPING said:

    Maybe Sir Jim posts on PB under a pseudonym. He would add to the illustrious list of PB Leavers who have, er, left.
    Is it just me, or are climate change sceptics too a little thin on the ground this summer?

    Parched in the summer heat, as 'twere.
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    rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 7,905
    If Musk does end up going to jail that is really going to upset his fans.
    Still I suppose Trump could pardon him right?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    rkrkrk said:

    If Musk does end up going to jail that is really going to upset his fans.
    Still I suppose Trump could pardon him right?

    Seriously ?
    How many hedge buddies of the SEC are shorting the stock ?
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    More judicial activism from left wing judges in the States

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-45139071
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    AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    Both main parties are off their peaks. Since both seem to include a fair number of supporters whose primary motivation is opposition to the other main party, we can expect this joint trend to continue as such supporters decide they can afford to back a different party given the hated party’s decline.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. Nashe, no.

    The latter half of the 17th century was notably cold. That wasn't because Charles II closed down all the coal-fired power stations.
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    rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 7,905
    Pulpstar said:

    More judicial activism from left wing judges in the States

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-45139071

    Is that really activism?
    I would have thought it standard to keep people while the appeal is going on...
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    PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 75,903
    rkrkrk said:

    Pulpstar said:

    More judicial activism from left wing judges in the States

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-45139071

    Is that really activism?
    I would have thought it standard to keep people while the appeal is going on...
    Hah you've got me, probably not - but they do seem to enjoy making decisions against the Trump administration that get turned over when the matter is sent up to SCOTUS.
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    not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,341
    House of Fraser in administration
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    rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 7,905

    Both main parties are off their peaks. Since both seem to include a fair number of supporters whose primary motivation is opposition to the other main party, we can expect this joint trend to continue as such supporters decide they can afford to back a different party given the hated party’s decline.

    What is the evidence that people voted primarily in opposition to the other main party?
    Lord Ashcroft found 13% of Tories said their primary reason was the best PM/leadership which could be a proxy for that.

    My alternative theory is that right wing people are enthused by Brexit and last time were keen to back Theresa May. And that there are left wing people tired of austerity, worried about the NHS etc. who are keen to back Corbyn and weren't particularly enthused by Miliband.
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    not_on_firenot_on_fire Posts: 4,341
    House of Fraser in administration
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    rkrkrkrkrkrk Posts: 7,905
    Pulpstar said:

    rkrkrk said:

    Pulpstar said:

    More judicial activism from left wing judges in the States

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-45139071

    Is that really activism?
    I would have thought it standard to keep people while the appeal is going on...
    Hah you've got me, probably not - but they do seem to enjoy making decisions against the Trump administration that get turned over when the matter is sent up to SCOTUS.
    Yes - although there's not much new about judicial activism in the US, particularly on the left.
    America's system is so prone to gridlock it's basically the only way to get certain things done.
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    SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 20,580

    House of Fraser in administration

    Thank you Amazon.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222
    AndyJS said:

    It must be a long time since the combined share for Con and Lab was as low as 74%.

    The key point, as far as the next GE is concerned. The two-party share can only go down, and both of the big parties are doing their best to help it along with some bad behaviour. The question isn't whether Tory or Labour will gain votes, but who will lose the most votes, and to where.
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    F1: Alonso's odds have ballooned again from 6 to 17 to get Ricciardo's old seat. Leclerc's entered the market at 10.

    Got to say I think Ferrari would be nuts to let Leclerc, or risk him, going to Red Bull.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109
    Foxy said:

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    https://twitter.com/JimMFelton/status/1025478178163380224?s=19
    That's a really corny joke.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222
    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109
    edited August 2018
    IanB2 said:

    AndyJS said:

    It must be a long time since the combined share for Con and Lab was as low as 74%.

    The key point, as far as the next GE is concerned. The two-party share can only go down, and both of the big parties are doing their best to help it along with some bad behaviour. The question isn't whether Tory or Labour will gain votes, but who will lose the most votes, and to where.
    It seems to me that apathy is the key enemy for both. For example, a few hundred Labour tribalists outside London staying at home rather than voting for a man who can't seem to bring himself to condemn racism would hand the Tories 50 seats in the Midlands and North without them picking up a single extra voter.

    Meanwhile if there is a full No Deal they can themselves kiss goodbye to Hastings, Southampton, Dover, Ramsgate etc. and any chance of regaining Canterbury or Oxford West.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109
    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    He would have made an excellent Party Chairman as long as he had a boring technocrat under him doing the actual organising. He could write a manifesto and sell it superbly. That is how he could win a general election.

    He is utterly unfit for any sort of executive office. He isn't stupid, but he's lazy, disorganised, and has no common sense at all.

    The tragedy is he can't seem to see that and accept the secondary role he's perfect for. As a result he will always be embittered and sniping at those who are more successful than he is.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    It's a seat previously held by UKIP - which likely explains the latest result. The LibDems won it in a by-election in 2016, the guy who won having recently died, which suggests that the 2016 result was the exceptional one and probably personal.
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    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    It's got sod all to do with racism or Islamophobia.
    This is a Remain led attack on Boris as he was the most prominant Leaver.
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    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    It's got sod all to do with racism or Islamophobia.
    This is a Remain led attack on Boris as he was the most prominant Leaver.
    Penny Mordaunt is a Remainer?
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    https://twitter.com/JimMFelton/status/1025478178163380224?s=19
    That's a really corny joke.
    It does a maize that people still find it funny.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. Doethur, I agree with that summary of Boris.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,095

    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    It's got sod all to do with racism or Islamophobia.
    This is a Remain led attack on Boris as he was the most prominant Leaver.
    Penny Mordaunt is a Remainer?
    No. But she is one of those better placed to Stop Boris.....
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625
    AndyJS said:

    "John Rentoul
    ‏Verified account @JohnRentoul

    Best PM:
    May 36%+4,
    Corbyn 22%-3,
    Don’t know 39%"

    They are only single polls, of course, but I wonder if Guido will be as quick to jump on these data points as he was on the immediate post Chequers ones.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    Negotiating with other other leaders, whether from a position of strength or not, does not equal prostration. May deserves plenty of stick for her actions, but not for that one.
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    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    It's got sod all to do with racism or Islamophobia.
    This is a Remain led attack on Boris as he was the most prominant Leaver.
    Penny Mordaunt is a Remainer?
    Interesting choice.
    What about the other performing sealions?
    Greive
    Sourbury
    May
    Lewis etc etc
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625
    HYUFD said:
    Curious one. IIRC the lds were winning a lor of Cornwall by elections pre May 2017, and had hopes of possibly winning outright there, but with the good locals there the Tories became more dominant.
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    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    When the Tories start competitively virtue-signalling, you know the world is changing. Or else Tory MPs dislike Boris and can't stop themselves.

    It's more difficult for Labour; refusing the adopt the international system for antisemitism looks like a guilty conscience for things said in the past.

    Both should be easily dealt with, but things aren't always what they seem.

    I expect this mid-summer madness will pass and we'll revert to juvenile name-calling by both parties.
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    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222
    ydoethur said:

    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    He would have made an excellent Party Chairman as long as he had a boring technocrat under him doing the actual organising. He could write a manifesto and sell it superbly. That is how he could win a general election.

    He is utterly unfit for any sort of executive office. He isn't stupid, but he's lazy, disorganised, and has no common sense at all.

    The tragedy is he can't seem to see that and accept the secondary role he's perfect for. As a result he will always be embittered and sniping at those who are more successful than he is.
    Yep, spot on; his ambition exceeds both his ability and his self awareness. As someone said here yesterday, he is the child who was never told that merely wanting something doesn't get it.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109
    Foxy said:

    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    https://twitter.com/JimMFelton/status/1025478178163380224?s=19
    That's a really corny joke.
    It does a maize that people still find it funny.
    I can feel people pulling rye faces at these puns :lol:
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625

    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    It's got sod all to do with racism or Islamophobia.
    This is a Remain led attack on Boris as he was the most prominant Leaver.
    It can be both, but I do think it more to do with because he is Boris. And I don't think him being the most prominent leaver is the sole factor, as plenty of Leavers don't like Boris on here for instance.
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    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,130
    Yeah, a thread about a MoE change in a poll! Normal times are returning to PB. Excellent.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109

    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    It's got sod all to do with racism or Islamophobia.
    This is a Remain led attack on Boris as he was the most prominant Leaver.
    No.

    This is a PCP attack on Boris because they want to make it clear to everyone including him that they consider him unfit to be leader.

    They are showing sense in doing so.
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    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625
    ydoethur said:

    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    He would have made an excellent Party Chairman as long as he had a boring technocrat under him doing the actual organising. He could write a manifesto and sell it superbly. That is how he could win a general election.

    He is utterly unfit for any sort of executive office. He isn't stupid, but he's lazy, disorganised, and has no common sense at all.

    The tragedy is he can't seem to see that and accept the secondary role he's perfect for. As a result he will always be embittered and sniping at those who are more successful than he is.
    True enough. Even compared to most politicians his ambitions are obvious, hes not good at pretending his actions are motivated by something else, and he comes with a host of problems.

    If done form of the Chequers deal is made and agreed, neither being certain by any means, I am sure the next Tory leader will be either a hard leaver or a convert more leavery than most leavers to compensate. There have to be non Boris options who lack his flaws, even of they lack his merits? They woukd have years to grow in the role.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625
    edited August 2018
    DavidL said:

    Yeah, a thread about a MoE change in a poll! Normal times are returning to PB. Excellent.

    What were the Scottish subsamples?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    edited August 2018
    IanB2 said:

    Iain Dale on Boris, just out: Sky had a poll which showed that 58 per cent of younger voters thought Boris should apologise, while 57 per cent of older voters did not. Given the age profile of the Tory membership, Boris’s remarks will have gone down well with many of them. However, apart from Nadine Dorries I have yet to hear a single Tory MP support Boris on the record. In terms of getting more support from the Parliamentary Party, I don’t think the last few days have done Boris any good at all. I still remain of the view that he will find it difficult to get into the final two, but it depends on the circumstances and political atmosphere at the time. It’s all very well being attracted by Boris’s undoubted stardust, but the questions surrounding his judgement will persist.

    With the overnight polling the chance of May leading the Tories into the next general election must have increased anyway. Why have a leadership election and replace her when all the alternatives bar Boris poll worse than May against Corbyn and Boris is too controversial for much of the party?

    May seems to be doing a Merkel and losing votes to her right to UKIP as Merkel has lost them to the AfD but making up for it by winning centrist Labour voters as Merkel has won centrist SPD voters
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,130
    In other news this is another significant blow to the High Street: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-45140874

    In many towns and cities the last of the large, slightly old fashioned general department stores are run by HoF. The HoF store in Dundee High Street closed 20+ years ago. It is still not fully reoccupied.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,130
    kle4 said:

    DavidL said:

    Yeah, a thread about a MoE change in a poll! Normal times are returning to PB. Excellent.

    What were the Scottish subsamples?
    Have you not read the marshmallow test? Good things come to those who wait.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625

    These people are literally mad:

    https://twitter.com/ToryFibs/status/1027664922270945281

    At least their utter purity will be maintained when they lose in 2020/21 and they can say the last Socialist government was still 1945.

    Presumably Blairite magic only works on YouGov and not on ICM then? For their sake, they should be happy most of the general public still don’t know how crazy some of them are.
    Like most party supporters, they'll be converted to the glories of polling if it shows big leads for their side. Curious.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
  • Options
    felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    edited August 2018
    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    https://twitter.com/JimMFelton/status/1025478178163380224?s=19
    That's a really corny joke.
    Ever swift with your rye comments.

    Oops I seed you beet me to it.
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    F1: just seen the BBC Gossip. Apparently Horner's ruled out Alonso. Bugger.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    Over 60% of Labour voters voted Remain but a majority of Labour seats voted Leave and it is working class Leave voting marginals where the Tories are Labour's opponents Corbyn needs to become PM under FPTP, safe inner city and university town Labour Remain seats which had huge Remain leads will vote for him regardless even if a few move to the LDs they will not go Tory
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,625
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    I know Corbyn has not backed it before, but I think he will. Either hell be swayed by such pressure supporters, and it means labour does not need to pick an option , but it wrongfoot the tories and pleases his base.

    It's like his u turn on appearing in a tv debate if May wasn't coming. Very smart move, and no one cared that he had opposed doing so once he did it. Same here. Diehard remainers won't care he opposed it if he backs it later, his core cult won't care, and labour leavers might grumble but still get to vote leave.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
  • Options
    mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    edited August 2018
    DavidL said:

    In other news this is another significant blow to the High Street: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-45140874

    In many towns and cities the last of the large, slightly old fashioned general department stores are run by HoF. The HoF store in Dundee High Street closed 20+ years ago. It is still not fully reoccupied.

    You have to be very good to survive and exceptional to prosper as a general goods store. House of Fraser is/was neither. In Nottingham for example in the same tired Intu one has both HoF and JL. The differences were stark.

    People had the same nostalgia about Woolworths. Nostalgia is the key word though.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222
    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    Over 60% of Labour voters voted Remain but a majority of Labour seats voted Leave and it is working class Leave voting marginals where the Tories are Labour's opponents Corbyn needs to become PM under FPTP, safe inner city and university town Labour Remain seats which had huge Remain leads will vote for him regardless even if a few move to the LDs they will not go Tory
    Has it never occurred to you that a lot of the Leave voters in such seats already support the Tories or UKIP or, indeed, are people who tend not to vote at all in ordinary elections?
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222
    HYUFD said:



    ...and Boris is too controversial for much of the party

    We should acknowledge the first HY shred of doubt about Boris....
  • Options
    mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    edited August 2018
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
    Leicester’s was tired, tatty and in the wrong place. The shopping heart of the city moved and Fenwick’s was on the periphery. JL in Leicester is performing very well.
  • Options
    IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,222
    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    I know Corbyn has not backed it before, but I think he will. Either hell be swayed by such pressure supporters, and it means labour does not need to pick an option , but it wrongfoot the tories and pleases his base.

    It's like his u turn on appearing in a tv debate if May wasn't coming. Very smart move, and no one cared that he had opposed doing so once he did it. Same here. Diehard remainers won't care he opposed it if he backs it later, his core cult won't care, and labour leavers might grumble but still get to vote leave.
    The moment when Labour swings fully behind the People's Vote will be key, and I hope their timing is good. With a few Tory rebels there is then a parliamentary majority for it, and they need to work out how best to bring this to bear.
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    I know Corbyn has not backed it before, but I think he will. Either hell be swayed by such pressure supporters, and it means labour does not need to pick an option , but it wrongfoot the tories and pleases his base.

    It's like his u turn on appearing in a tv debate if May wasn't coming. Very smart move, and no one cared that he had opposed doing so once he did it. Same here. Diehard remainers won't care he opposed it if he backs it later, his core cult won't care, and labour leavers might grumble but still get to vote leave.
    The #peoplesvote will get a lot of constituency and grassroots support at conference, and Jezza really isn't that bothered over Europe.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,130
    matt said:

    DavidL said:

    In other news this is another significant blow to the High Street: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-45140874

    In many towns and cities the last of the large, slightly old fashioned general department stores are run by HoF. The HoF store in Dundee High Street closed 20+ years ago. It is still not fully reoccupied.

    You have to be very good to survive and exceptional to prosper as a general goods store. House of Fraser is/was neither. In Nottingham for example in the same tired Intu one has both. The differences were stark.

    People had the same nostalgia about Woolworths. Nostalgia is the key word though.
    I think latterly they lived on the pop up franchise/concessions within them which didn't do a lot to disperse the general perception of chaos and disorganisation. Way more than half their staff were working on concessions.

    It can be done, Debenhams seem to do it quite well, but they tend to have purpose built modern accommodation as opposed to these old behemoths from the last century or even the one before. What will we do with these buildings? It can really bring the whole street down.
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,046
    edited August 2018
    So PBers we'll be able in an hour's time to see how accurate the Treasury's prediction of GDP after a Leave vote was.

    The Treasury gave two possibilities:

    Shock scenario
    2016q3 -0.1%
    2016q4 -0.1%
    2017q1 -0.1%
    2017q2 -0.1%
    2017q3 +0.2%
    2017q4 +0.2%
    2018q1 +0.2%
    2018q2 +0.2%
    Total +0.4%

    Severe shock scenario
    2016q3 -1.0%
    2016q4 -0.4%
    2017q1 -0.4%
    2017q2 -0.4%
    2017q3 +0.0%
    2017q4 +0.0%
    2018q1 +0.1%
    2018q2 +0.1%
    Total -2.0%

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/524967/hm_treasury_analysis_the_immediate_economic_impact_of_leaving_the_eu_web.pdf

    Actual Outurn
    2016q3 +0.5%
    2016q4 +0.7%
    2017q1 +0.4%
    2017q2 +0.2%
    2017q3 +0.4%
    2017q4 +0.4%
    2018q1 +0.2%
    2018q2 +0.4% est
    Total +3.2%

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/grossdomesticproductgdp/timeseries/ihyq/qna

    Will we get the announcement of an official investigation into that Treasury prediction by the Electoral Commission today ?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    IanB2 said:

    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    I know Corbyn has not backed it before, but I think he will. Either hell be swayed by such pressure supporters, and it means labour does not need to pick an option , but it wrongfoot the tories and pleases his base.

    It's like his u turn on appearing in a tv debate if May wasn't coming. Very smart move, and no one cared that he had opposed doing so once he did it. Same here. Diehard remainers won't care he opposed it if he backs it later, his core cult won't care, and labour leavers might grumble but still get to vote leave.
    The moment when Labour swings fully behind the People's Vote will be key, and I hope their timing is good. With a few Tory rebels there is then a parliamentary majority for it, and they need to work out how best to bring this to bear.
    It will NEVER happen under Corbyn.

    Corbyn is not going to risk losing Leave voters to the Tories or UKIP and see his PM hopes go with them to appease a few upper middle class Remainers led by the likes of Umunna who hates Corbyn anyway.

    As Corbyn advisers made clear in the Sunday Times recently they do not give a toss about trying to reverse Brexit or stay in the single market they care about getting Corbyn into No 10 and for that they need working class Leave votes
  • Options
    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,969
    Mr. B2, but what will the proposition (ie options) be in said second referendum?
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    IanB2 said:

    HYUFD said:



    ...and Boris is too controversial for much of the party

    We should acknowledge the first HY shred of doubt about Boris....
    Boris could beat Corbyn but provided May also can then no need for Boris
  • Options
    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    matt said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
    Leicester’s was tired, tatty and in the wrong place. The shopping heart of the city moved and Fenwick’s was on the periphery. JL in Leicester is performing very well.
    Leicesters HoF was too close to JL! I do miss Fenwicks though, as it used to cover ranges not sold elsewhere.

    I think this is going to be a tough winter for High St retail. We really do need to level the playing field in terms of tax with the internet.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
    M and S will keep going as will Harrods and John Lewis even if the rest fall away
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,940
    edited August 2018
    IanB2 said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    Over 60% of Labour voters voted Remain but a majority of Labour seats voted Leave and it is working class Leave voting marginals where the Tories are Labour's opponents Corbyn needs to become PM under FPTP, safe inner city and university town Labour Remain seats which had huge Remain leads will vote for him regardless even if a few move to the LDs they will not go Tory
    Has it never occurred to you that a lot of the Leave voters in such seats already support the Tories or UKIP or, indeed, are people who tend not to vote at all in ordinary elections?
    It only needs a handful of Labour Leave voters in a marginal Labour Leave seat won by say 500 votes to move to UKIP or the Tories for the Tories to win.

    That is not an issue in an inner city Remain seat with a 20 000 Labour majority
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109
    felix said:

    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    https://twitter.com/JimMFelton/status/1025478178163380224?s=19
    That's a really corny joke.
    Ever swift with your rye comments.

    Oops I seed you beet me to it.
    It's sweet of you to take it graciously. I eared you might be upset.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,109
    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
    M and S will keep going as will Harrods and John Lewis even if the rest fall away
    M and S is rumoured to be considering a switch to food only.
  • Options
    DavidLDavidL Posts: 51,130
    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
    M and S will keep going as will Harrods and John Lewis even if the rest fall away
    M and S is rumoured to be considering a switch to food only.
    That's where they have been making pretty much all of their money for a long time.
  • Options
    mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    Foxy said:

    matt said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    House of Fraser in administration

    Pity as they do the best teas in Oxford Street and you cannot get that in an Amazon warehouse
    I haven't been in one for years, and Leicesters HoF closed last year. I cannot see a future for department stores. Even John Lewis has faltered recently.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/jun/27/john-lewis-to-close-five-waitrose-stores-after-warning-on-profits
    Leicester’s was tired, tatty and in the wrong place. The shopping heart of the city moved and Fenwick’s was on the periphery. JL in Leicester is performing very well.
    Leicesters HoF was too close to JL! I do miss Fenwicks though, as it used to cover ranges not sold elsewhere.

    I think this is going to be a tough winter for High St retail. We really do need to level the playing field in terms of tax with the internet.
    You’re right but it was an outlet/remainder store I recall so lacking huge make-up displays . Does show to me though that JL’s branding works. That I’d forgotten Rackhams(?) was there says much about marketing (or me).
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,153
    Foxy said:

    Cyclefree said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    SeanT said:




    I agree with 1, but 2 sets up a false choice. There's nothing wrong with saying both that people have a right to dress how they like and other people have a right not to like it. Forms of dress are partly an expresion of opinion, and this comes close to saying that we're all in favour of freedom of speech, so long as we agree with it.

    I think Boris was being simultaneously rude and frivolous about a difficult issue
    The issue is whether those women, and it is women, not men, who wear these costumes are expressing a right to dress how they would like.

    Many are, some are not. Now I may regard their free decision to don what I consider to be oppressive misogynistic clothing as evidence that they have Stockholm syndrome, but they will undoubtably see it differently.

    I more often see young women in Niqab than older, and not infrequently much more conservatively dressed than their parents. I think that at least in part this is second and third generation identity confusion, much like Rastafarianism in the Seventies and Eighties. These are often people who feel incompletely British, but also incompletely in touch with the old culture, and in investigating and seeking their true identity adopt a simalcrum of archaism. How genuine this spirituality is, as opposed to political, varies. It also varies whether it is a passing phase or a dissapearance down the rabbit hole.

    My own approach is unlike Boris, I do not insult the wearers but rather support them in their education and careers. That is their best hope of escape.
    How can they be supported in their education when in some Islamic schools young girls have to wear clothing which inhibits their ability to play, to do sports, when they are made to sit at the back or not allowed to learn certain subjects or told that their only role is as wives and mothers? Let’s not be naive: the burqa is one of a range of meaures by which a particular strand of extreme Islam seeks to control the women (and men) in its commumity so that, despite being British citizens, they do not integrate into British society or participate fully in it and develop views and attitudes which are often hostile to it (and can turn into something more violent). That is damaging to social cohesion and is not something we can airily dismiss just by saying that people can wear what they like.

    There is, as you say, often something deeper going on. It may just be a passing phase. But it may also be a symptom of a politically motivated apartness which is harmful.
  • Options
    148grss148grss Posts: 3,679
    I think if Labour end up supporting a "People's Vote" Jezza will be able to spin it as "we need a vote because Chequers deal is bad" without actually saying what a good deal would look like. This will mean he can get the middle-class Remainers to stay in the party, as well as appeal to the Leaving working-class traditional Labour voters.

    It isn't a sustainable position, but it is one that will provide cover for voting against a Chequers deal alongside the likes of JRM and BoJo, pushing the country closer to either a 2nd Ref or GE. The ultimate goal not being remaining (as I don't think Jezza really cares too much one way or t'other) but to just fracture the Tories irreversibly.
  • Options
    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    When predicting the future, I work on the basis that politicians who actively climb the greasy pole will lie any time it suits them. On that basis, we will have a second referendum as soon as they can engineer enough fig leaves to cover their previous statements.

    The Labour party grandees never wanted one but had to go along with it for fear of being seen anti-democratic. Corbyn will break cover once he's convinced a GE may be in the offing and it's one he can win without losing too many WWC supporters.

    Politics isn't rocket science, it's a game for ambitious children with acting abilities. Reagan had these, Trump lacks them. Corbyn …. time will tell, but I suspect he hasn't the nous or the timing.
  • Options
    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,153
    Anyway, in (possibly) surprising news, I am off to the Great British Beer Festival later on today.

    If I find them sprinkling chocolate on novelty beers, well....
  • Options
    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,372
    .
    ydoethur said:

    felix said:

    ydoethur said:

    Foxy said:

    Jezza is crap.

    Sleazy, broken Labour on the slide.
    Will May return from prostrating herself in front of Macron in order to call a snap election?
    https://twitter.com/JimMFelton/status/1025478178163380224?s=19
    That's a really corny joke.
    Ever swift with your rye comments.

    Oops I seed you beet me to it.
    It's sweet of you to take it graciously. I eared you might be upset.
    You are a cereal offender when it comes to competitive punning, but it would go against the grain to take offence.
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    PClippPClipp Posts: 2,138
    HYUFD said:

    IanB2 said:

    kle4 said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:
    Boris must be going down a storm in the SW.....
    Well Cornwall voted 56.5% Leave, it probably is Boris country
    https://twitter.com/InFactsOrg/status/1027581124208480256?s=19
    That does not contradict the statement at all considering the South West as a whole ie including Remain voting areas like Bristol and Cheltenham only voted 52.6% Leave ie about 5% less than just Cornwall voted Leave.

    Indeed less than 50% back a 'People's Vote' even on the poll you linked to
    Labour is heading that way:

    https://twitter.com/MSmithsonPB/status/1027790689323704320?s=19
    I know Corbyn has not backed it before, but I think he will. Either hell be swayed by such pressure supporters, and it means labour does not need to pick an option , but it wrongfoot the tories and pleases his base.

    It's like his u turn on appearing in a tv debate if May wasn't coming. Very smart move, and no one cared that he had opposed doing so once he did it. Same here. Diehard remainers won't care he opposed it if he backs it later, his core cult won't care, and labour leavers might grumble but still get to vote leave.
    The moment when Labour swings fully behind the People's Vote will be key, and I hope their timing is good. With a few Tory rebels there is then a parliamentary majority for it, and they need to work out how best to bring this to bear.
    It will NEVER happen under Corbyn.

    Corbyn is not going to risk losing Leave voters to the Tories or UKIP and see his PM hopes go with them to appease a few upper middle class Remainers led by the likes of Umunna who hates Corbyn anyway.

    As Corbyn advisers made clear in the Sunday Times recently they do not give a toss about trying to reverse Brexit or stay in the single market they care about getting Corbyn into No 10 and for that they need working class Leave votes
    Absolutely, Mr HY! Did Corbyn brief you personally on this, or was it via an intermediary?
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    FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,526
    edited August 2018
    Cyclefree said:

    Foxy said:

    Cyclefree said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    SeanT said:




    I agree with 1, but 2 sets up a false choice. There's nothing wrong with saying both that people have a right to dress how they like and other people have a right not to like it. Forms of dress are partly an expresion of opinion, and this comes close to saying that we're all in favour of freedom of speech, so long as we agree with it.

    I think Boris was being simultaneously rude and frivolous about a difficult issue
    The issue is whether those women, and it is women, not men, who wear these costumes are expressing a right to dress how they would like.

    Many are, some ar

    My own approach is unlike Boris, I do not insult the wearers but rather support them in their education and careers. That is their best hope of escape.
    How can they be supported in their education when in some Islamic schools young girls have to wear clothing which inhibits their ability to play, to do sports, when they are made to sit at the back or not allowed to learn certain subjects or told that their only role is as wives and mothers? Let’s not be naive: the burqa is one of a range of meaures by which a particular strand of extreme Islam seeks to control the women (and men) in its commumity so that, despite being British citizens, they do not integrate into British society or participate fully in it and develop views and attitudes which are often hostile to it (and can turn into something more violent). That is damaging to social cohesion and is not something we can airily dismiss just by saying that people can wear what they like.

    There is, as you say, often something deeper going on. It may just be a passing phase. But it may also be a symptom of a politically motivated apartness which is harmful.
    My contact us on tertiary education, where students are free to dress as they choose, albut with peer pressure like all youngsters. I don't argue against their choice as that tends to make them defensive, but I do try to keep their eyes open to a wider world.

    I also see see patients with families and there it can be very variable, but seeing daughters in a Niqab but parents dressed Western is not unusual. Student Islamic societies can be quite coercive in these matters, though I haven't encountered it in Leicester.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,372
    Cyclefree said:

    Anyway, in (possibly) surprising news, I am off to the Great British Beer Festival later on today.

    If I find them sprinkling chocolate on novelty beers, well....

    There are some excellent (and some not so excellent) coffee stouts, but even I draw the line at chocolate in beer.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,372
    Cyclefree said:

    Foxy said:

    Cyclefree said:

    RoyalBlue said:

    SeanT said:






    I think Boris was being simultaneously rude and frivolous about a difficult issue
    The issue is whether those women, and it is women, not men, who wear these costumes are expressing a right to dress how they would like.

    Many are, some are not. Now I may regard their free decision to don what I consider to be oppressive misogynistic clothing as evidence that they have Stockholm syndrome, but they will undoubtably see it differently.

    I more often see young women in Niqab than older, and not infrequently much more conservatively dressed than their parents. I think that at least in part this is second and third generation identity confusion, much like Rastafarianism in the Seventies and Eighties. These are often people who feel incompletely British, but also incompletely in touch with the old culture, and in investigating and seeking their true identity adopt a simalcrum of archaism. How genuine this spirituality is, as opposed to political, varies. It also varies whether it is a passing phase or a dissapearance down the rabbit hole.

    My own approach is unlike Boris, I do not insult the wearers but rather support them in their education and careers. That is their best hope of escape.
    How can they be supported in their education when in some Islamic schools young girls have to wear clothing which inhibits their ability to play, to do sports, when they are made to sit at the back or not allowed to learn certain subjects or told that their only role is as wives and mothers? Let’s not be naive: the burqa is one of a range of meaures by which a particular strand of extreme Islam seeks to control the women (and men) in its commumity so that, despite being British citizens, they do not integrate into British society or participate fully in it and develop views and attitudes which are often hostile to it (and can turn into something more violent). That is damaging to social cohesion and is not something we can airily dismiss just by saying that people can wear what they like.

    There is, as you say, often something deeper going on. It may just be a passing phase. But it may also be a symptom of a politically motivated apartness which is harmful.
    Those are quite justifiable concerns, which I share.
    Attacking the women who wear the garments is divisive and counterproductive if you are really concerned about those kids in schools.
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    NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,320
    DavidL said:

    matt said:

    DavidL said:

    In other news this is another significant blow to the High Street: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-45140874

    In many towns and cities the last of the large, slightly old fashioned general department stores are run by HoF. The HoF store in Dundee High Street closed 20+ years ago. It is still not fully reoccupied.

    You have to be very good to survive and exceptional to prosper as a general goods store. House of Fraser is/was neither. In Nottingham for example in the same tired Intu one has both. The differences were stark.

    People had the same nostalgia about Woolworths. Nostalgia is the key word though.
    I think latterly they lived on the pop up franchise/concessions within them which didn't do a lot to disperse the general perception of chaos and disorganisation. Way more than half their staff were working on concessions.

    It can be done, Debenhams seem to do it quite well, but they tend to have purpose built modern accommodation as opposed to these old behemoths from the last century or even the one before. What will we do with these buildings? It can really bring the whole street down.
    A glance at the US is often a guide to our future. Some cities like LA don't really have identifiable centers (sic). In my limited experience, the idea of a high street seems fairly foreign there - instead, there are still lots of smallish shops sprawled around, plus some luxury malls.
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    CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,153
    O/T - hooray for Italian headteachers - https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/world/italian-teachers-demand-mmr-proof-in-vaccine-row-gv6r05glk

    Andrew Wakefield has done so much harm. Children have died because of his ignorance, greed and vanity.
This discussion has been closed.