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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Buttigieg now nine points clear in Iowa

SystemSystem Posts: 11,002
edited November 2019 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Buttigieg now nine points clear in Iowa

CNN

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  • First and I have no interest in US politics
  • Other than to see the end of Trump
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind
  • The front end or the back end? Both are equally obnoxious

  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    edited November 2019
    Whether he does win Iowa or not, and whether he gets any further, fair play to Buttigieg for getting so much attention - jumping the queue has probably annoyed plenty of aged Democrats, but it shows what being bold can manage.
    Gabs3 said:

    Seriously kicking off in Hong Kong tonight.

    The Chinese government is terrible. In a moral world everyone would boycott them but the powers that be put money over people every time.
    And it seems that is what the world we be like for a long time to come as well. It's depressing as hell.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    Other than to see the end of Trump

    In which case Biden still remains the Democrats best bet in my view
  • AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670
    SNP starting to talk up their chances in East Dunbartonshire. Surely that is unwise?
  • RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    Try a double on Mayor Pete and Jo Swinson for Pres and PM......

    Just seen Andrew's interview. I wonder whether the idea of over privileged empty vessels might tip over and affect Johnson. It's got to be time we turfed out these old fogies once and for all. I suspect Jo is going to be the surprise package. She's improving by the day
  • HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Roger said:

    Try a double on Mayor Pete and Jo Swinson for Pres and PM......

    Just seen Andrew's interview. I wonder whether the idea of over privileged empty vessels might tip over and affect Johnson. It's got to be time we turfed out these old fogies once and for all. I suspect Jo is going to be the surprise package. She's improving by the day

    I cannot see Swinson becoming PM in a way I could Chuka for example but if she gets in the debates she could have her own Cleggasm.

    Buttigieg might win Iowa but I cannot see him actually beating Warren for the nomination, she still looks the likeliest candidate for the Democrats to pick given their current mood
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
  • Cough, cough. :blush:

    May I just mention that I blew the trumpet on here for Buttigieg many months ago following a rave review of his embryonic chances from Axelrod?

    110/1 at the time.
  • StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    Yeah forget Sanders on 18% and Biden on 27.3%, it's all about Pete on 7.5%
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    edited November 2019
    kle4 said:

    Whether he does win Iowa or not, and whether he gets any further, fair play to Buttigieg for getting so much attention - jumping the queue has probably annoyed plenty of aged Democrats, but it shows what being bold can manage.

    Gabs3 said:

    Seriously kicking off in Hong Kong tonight.

    The Chinese government is terrible. In a moral world everyone would boycott them but the powers that be put money over people every time.
    And it seems that is what the world we be like for a long time to come as well. It's depressing as hell.
    The Chinese government may be ruthless authoritarians but one thing you can say for them is they don't take any nonsense seeking to undermine the unity of the state, Sturgeon and Blackford take note next time you complain about Scotland being oppressed by Westminster
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 14,772
    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain crossbreaks for Lab and Con marginals and safe seats. Unfortunately “marginal” and “safe” aren’t defined and the marginals subsamples are small, so the enormous Tory leads that they found in both Labour and Con marginals should be treated with caution.

    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labour seats and slightly more marginal Conservative seats than Labour marginal seats.

    Not safe to take them too seriously, though - according to the subsamples Tory marginal seats are now about to become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain crossbreaks for Lab and Con marginals and safe seats. Unfortunately “marginal” and “safe” aren’t defined and the marginals subsamples are small, so the enormous Tory leads that they found in both Labour and Con marginals should be treated with caution.

    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labour seats and slightly more marginal Conservative seats than Labour marginal seats.

    Not safe to take them too seriously, though - according to the subsamples Tory marginal seats are now about to become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
  • ArthurArthur Posts: 63
    edited November 2019
    I'm watching the ITV film about Jennifer Arcuri and Boris Johnson. She's quite a character. There's been no mention yet that at the time he was in a relationship with this "highly persuasive" foreigner, he was not only Mayor of London but also attending Cabinet meetings... So the relationship would have been vetted, right?
  • HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Trump wins. For all her many policy qualities and sincerities she is McGovern.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Trump wins. For all her many policy qualities and sincerities she is McGovern.
    More Kerry or Dukakis (Sanders is more McGovern) but yes you are probably right
  • ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503
    edited November 2019
    HYUFD said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain crossbreaks for Lab and Con marginals and safe seats. Unfortunately “marginal” and “safe” aren’t defined and the marginals subsamples are small, so the enormous Tory leads that they found in both Labour and Con marginals should be treated with caution.

    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labour seats and slightly more marginal Conservative seats than Labour marginal seats.

    Not safe to take them too seriously, though - according to the subsamples Tory marginal seats are now about to become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
    HYUFD - I’m near Harlow. Pointless canvassing / leafleting in my constituency so looking for where help needed. Helped Harrington in Watford in 2010 (for my sins). Do the blues need any help there?
  • https://twitter.com/CharlotteAlter/status/1195884959443103746

    Something for the Corbynista to think about?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    Yeah forget Sanders on 18% and Biden on 27.3%, it's all about Pete on 7.5%
    I think you underestimate how Iowa and New Hampshire define the viable candidates. Obama was 20 to 30 points behind Clinton before Iowa. At this stage in the 2004 contests, Howard Dean was topping the polls, while John Kerry was in single digits.

    Like it or not, whoever wins Iowa is the top dog - at least until New Hampshire comes around.

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain cro
    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labour seats and slightly more marginal Conservative seats than Labour marginal seats.

    Not safe to take them too seriously, though - according to the subsamples Tory marginal seats are now about to become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
    HYUFD - I’m near Harlow. Pointless canvassing / leafleting in my constituency so looking for where help needed. Helped Harrington in Watford in 2010 (for my sins). Do the blues need any help there?
    Robert Halfon still needs some deliverers though as Momentum still make the occasional foray there (have done a stint myself).

    In Hertfordshire St Albans is more vulnerable than Watford and I know the agent, Reece Fox, so would help there
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    https://twitter.com/CharlotteAlter/status/1195884959443103746

    Something for the Corbynista to think about?

    Well certainly Labour voices on Twitter and Labour voters in the likes of Workington and Stoke are two different groups of people
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    HYUFD said:

    Roger said:

    Try a double on Mayor Pete and Jo Swinson for Pres and PM......

    Just seen Andrew's interview. I wonder whether the idea of over privileged empty vessels might tip over and affect Johnson. It's got to be time we turfed out these old fogies once and for all. I suspect Jo is going to be the surprise package. She's improving by the day

    I cannot see Swinson becoming PM in a way I could Chuka for example but if she gets in the debates she could have her own Cleggasm.

    Buttigieg might win Iowa but I cannot see him actually beating Warren for the nomination, she still looks the likeliest candidate for the Democrats to pick given their current mood
    She could have a Cleggism and still not make it on the porn channels let alone Downing Street
  • ozymandiasozymandias Posts: 1,503
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain cro
    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labour seats and slightly more marginal Conservative seats than Labour marginal seats.

    Not safe to take them too seriously, though - according to the subsamples Tory marginal seats are now about to become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
    HYUFD - I’m near Harlow. Pointless canvassing / leafleting in my constituency so looking for where help needed. Helped Harrington in Watford in 2010 (for my sins). Do the blues need any help there?
    Robert Halfon still needs some deliverers though as Momentum still make the occasional foray there (have done a stint myself).

    In Hertfordshire St Albans is more vulnerable than Watford and I know the agent, Reece Fox, so would help there
    Thanks. I’ll see if my local association can put me in contact.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766
    edited November 2019
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain cro
    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labour seats and slightly more marginal Conservative seats than Labour marginal seats.

    Not safe to take them too seriously, though - according to the subsamples Tory marginal seats are now about to become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
    HYUFD - I’m near Harlow. Pointless canvassing / leafleting in my constituency so looking for where help needed. Helped Harrington in Watford in 2010 (for my sins). Do the blues need any help there?
    Robert Halfon still needs some deliverers though as Momentum still make the occasional foray there (have done a stint myself).

    In Hertfordshire St Albans is more vulnerable than Watford and I know the agent, Reece Fox, so would help there
    I found this old clip of Ms Swansong

    https://youtu.be/HXiZHXkG-ac
  • Andy_JS said:

    The interesting thing about those figures is that the Tory share was slightly underestimated. They polled 43.5% at the election itself.
    Is the ELBOW chart based on GB or UK polling?
    Only Survation is UK. All other pollsters do GB polling.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    Roger said:

    Try a double on Mayor Pete and Jo Swinson for Pres and PM......

    Just seen Andrew's interview. I wonder whether the idea of over privileged empty vessels might tip over and affect Johnson. It's got to be time we turfed out these old fogies once and for all. I suspect Jo is going to be the surprise package. She's improving by the day

    I cannot see Swinson becoming PM in a way I could Chuka for example but if she gets in the debates she could have her own Cleggasm.

    Buttigieg might win Iowa but I cannot see him actually beating Warren for the nomination, she still looks the likeliest candidate for the Democrats to pick given their current mood
    She could have a Cleggism and still not make it on the porn channels let alone Downing Street
    Boris isn't that fussy
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain cro
    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginal Labome safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
    HYUFD - I’m near Harlow. Pointless canvassing / leafleting in my constituency so looking for where help needed. Helped Harrington in Watford in 2010 (for my sins). Do the blues need any help there?
    Robert Halfon still needs some deliverers though as Momentum still make the occasional foray there (have done a stint myself).

    In Hertfordshire St Albans is more vulnerable than Watford and I know the agent, Reece Fox, so would help there
    Thanks. I’ll see if my local association can put me in contact.
    Yes do, they could use the help
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Roger said:

    Try a double on Mayor Pete and Jo Swinson for Pres and PM......

    Just seen Andrew's interview. I wonder whether the idea of over privileged empty vessels might tip over and affect Johnson. It's got to be time we turfed out these old fogies once and for all. I suspect Jo is going to be the surprise package. She's improving by the day

    I cannot see Swinson becoming PM in a way I could Chuka for example but if she gets in the debates she could have her own Cleggasm.

    Buttigieg might win Iowa but I cannot see him actually beating Warren for the nomination, she still looks the likeliest candidate for the Democrats to pick given their current mood
    She could have a Cleggism and still not make it on the porn channels let alone Downing Street
    Boris isn't that fussy
    Thee are limits, even for Boris
  • Gabs3Gabs3 Posts: 836
    HYUFD said:
    That is too many things in a message. They need to pick three.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
    Gabbard is on the 'socialist' wing
  • Gabs3Gabs3 Posts: 836
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Trump wins. For all her many policy qualities and sincerities she is McGovern.
    More Kerry or Dukakis (Sanders is more McGovern) but yes you are probably right
    Both Kerry and Dukakis would win if you reweighted to current demographics.
  • No matter how many times my head tells me Buttigieg aint gonna be the Dem nominee this time for a myriad of reasons.

    My gut tells me to think again.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    HYUFD said:
    Lammy meant satyre. He has 20:20 vision
  • Gabs3Gabs3 Posts: 836
    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
    Gabbard is on the 'socialist' wing
    Socialist sponsored by Putin. Like Jill Stein and Jeremy Corbyn.
  • Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    NeilVW said:

    nunu2 said:

    Tories have a bigger lead in the seats with less than 10,000 vote majority

    https://mobile.twitter.com/anthonyjwells/status/1196036222327672832

    That 17% yougov lead has few crumbs of comfort for Remain

    Do you know what the Tory lead was in those marginals at the last general election?

    You might expect it to be close to zero, but it depends on things like differential turnout, any skew in the distribution of marginal seats and third-party effects.
    I asked that very question of Mr Wells, and will report back his answer. If he doesn’t have it to hand, I’ll have to crank up the spreadsheet and estimate it myself.

    10,000-seat majority and under for any party is quite a wide spread of seats - about a 20-point lead assuming average turnout?
    Going back to this, I worked out that there are 283 seats in GB with a 2017 majority of under 10,000 (“marginals” for these purposes). The average Con lead over Lab in the 283 was 2.0 points. YouGov found a 20-point lead, suggesting a 9% swing in marginals (compared with about 7% overall). Among those certain to vote in these marginals, they found a 26% lead (a swing of 12%).

    For the record, the 283 seats are made up as follows:

    - 127 won by Con in 2017
    - 105 Lab
    - 12 LD
    - 4 PC
    - 35 SNP
    Fab work, thanks. No comfort for Labour, but suggests considering majorities upto 5,000 would be more useful.
    No problem. Deltapoll tables contain cro
    http://www.deltapoll.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Deltapoll-MoS191116.pdf
    Going from the sample sizes it looks like there are slightly more than 63 marginato become safer seats than current Tory safe seats.
    Yes, I expect Harlow for example to be safer than Tunbridge Wells after this election for the Tories
    HYUFD - I’m near Harlow. Pointless canvassing / leafleting in my constituency so looking for where help needed. Helped Harrington in Watford in 2010 (for my sins). Do the blues need any help there?
    Robert Halfon still needs some deliverers though as Momentum still make the occasional foray there (have done a stint myself).

    In Hertfordshire St Albans is more vulnerable than Watford and I know the agent, Reece Fox, so would help there
    I found this old clip of Ms Swansong

    https://youtu.be/HXiZHXkG-ac
    Yes if she gets on the debates that could well happen again
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766
    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
    Gabbard is on the 'socialist' wing
    Well, let's take that as being so. We'll also add Bullock and Sestak to the socialist grouping, although we'll have to add Castro to the moderates. And let's divide Williamson's support equally between the moderate and socialist sides (the number is frankly pretty small). In total, the 'moderates' are in the mid to high-40s, and the 'socialists' in the 40 to 44 range.

    In other words, while I agree the zeitgeist seems to favour Warren, the race is pretty well balanced between the moderate and socialist wings of the Democratic party.
  • HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
    Gabbard is on the 'socialist' wing
    There's some overlap between tankie and normal socialist, with Bernie 2016 being the intersection of the venn diagrams, but saying she's "on the socialist wing" is just weird.

    Nate Silver has a thing on where her support comes from, and it's not socialists.
    https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-we-know-about-tulsi-gabbards-base/
  • Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
    Gabbard is on the 'socialist' wing
    Well, let's take that as being so. We'll also add Bullock and Sestak to the socialist grouping, although we'll have to add Castro to the moderates. And let's divide Williamson's support equally between the moderate and socialist sides (the number is frankly pretty small). In total, the 'moderates' are in the mid to high-40s, and the 'socialists' in the 40 to 44 range.

    In other words, while I agree the zeitgeist seems to favour Warren, the race is pretty well balanced between the moderate and socialist wings of the Democratic party.
    Should also be noted the 'moderate' camp is divided between more socially conservative voters behind Biden and more socially liberal voters behind Buttigieg while the 'socialist' camp is largely united on populist, leftist economics and social liberalism
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    Full on Gammon.....
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He won't. He has been well drilled now. His performance in the debates will be fine / good (not saying I agree with his policies, but he has spent 40 years rehearsing his lines).
  • Nobody seems to have told her that the rest of Jezza's outriders spend most of the day slagging off this kind of mainstream media quoting of what people actually say...

    https://twitter.com/LauraPidcockMP/status/1196128940819206145
  • Lucky for the Dems that Mayor Pete is getting some good polling now. Their nightmare scenario was that he pops up in Iowa, crowds out the other moderates beginning with "B" (Biden/Booker/Baemy), then falls apart under scrutiny because he wasn't ready for the big time.

    PS I do like how this process works, with each candidate getting a couple of weeks as front-runner so we can see how they do.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709
    Gabs3 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Trump wins. For all her many policy qualities and sincerities she is McGovern.
    More Kerry or Dukakis (Sanders is more McGovern) but yes you are probably right
    Both Kerry and Dukakis would win if you reweighted to current demographics.
    Not the electoral college they wouldn't, certainly not Dukakis
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    Nobody seems to have told her that the rest of Jezza's outriders spend most of the day slagging off this kind of mainstream media quoting of what people actually say...

    https://twitter.com/LauraPidcockMP/status/1196128940819206145

    And Tories can't forgive Laura Pidcock for backing Corbyn's hard left agenda
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392
    edited November 2019

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He sometimes seems able to handle it, but other times he cracks (like petulantly asking for questions on things he wanted to be questioned about, like the NHS, once) - last time he did very well all things considered. He's not alone in politicians in not liking persistent questioning on a point he does not like (and sometimes journalists do it on something already answered or something inconsequential) but that's the job, and they have to deal with it and not get tetchy.

    I suppose default reactions to losing one's cool is key. Boris flaps around like a deer in headlights when it happens, but Corbyn gets angry. This is his moment, a rerun after he showed a lot of people (mostly) wrong last time - can he keep discipline? Boris does seem to provoke a lot of people to distraction, but a 'debate' is a very different arena to a media interview - he just needs to stay calm, repeat his core lines and look passionate.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766

    HYUFD said:

    rcs1000 said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Warren ahead in New Hampshire though in the latest poll on 31% with Biden on 22%, Sanders on 20% and Buttigieg on 16%.

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_pubOi7tGP9BOHHNbNj3XLtMXxOUheSd/view

    Biden ahead in South Carolina's latest poll on 45% with Warren on 17%, Sanders on 15% and Buttigieg on 8%

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/18LZNu8nrKO8zvVKbrdkagjcbZaYN_uW5/view

    So looks like an emerging Buttigieg, Warren and Biden top tier if those 3 take the early caucus and primary states, with Sanders just behind

    Sanders is finished imho. His time is done.

    This will end up being Bittigieg vs Warren.

    Fascinating.

    In which case the Sanders vote will go to Warren and she wins
    Simplistically, I think there are two Democratic "tracks" - there are the moderates (Biden, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Harris, Booker, Steyer and Yang), and then there are the socialists (Warren and Sanders.

    A lot depends on when the tier three candidates drop out, with early departures favouring Biden and Buttigieg, and later departures favouring Warren and Sanders. (Because a lot of the moderate vote will be wasted if it goes on Klobuchar, and she doesn't get delegates.) In total, the moderate "wing" of the Democratic party looks slightly bigger than the socialist one, although there are of course some difficult to pigeonhole candidates such as Gabbard.
    Gabbard is on the 'socialist' wing
    There's some overlap between tankie and normal socialist, with Bernie 2016 being the intersection of the venn diagrams, but saying she's "on the socialist wing" is just weird.

    Nate Silver has a thing on where her support comes from, and it's not socialists.
    https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-we-know-about-tulsi-gabbards-base/
    That's a fascinating article, and one that suggests she could really outperform in New Hampshire if a lot of Republicans come out to vote in the Democratic primary.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    All people in the middle east need to come together....just not Israel as they are a racist nation that should exist (in Jezza's view).
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502
    HYUFD said:
    Good to see such a young vibrant crowd there supporting him ! Was he doing some publicity for Saga !
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766
    HYUFD said:

    Should also be noted the 'moderate' camp is divided between more socially conservative voters behind Biden and more socially liberal voters behind Buttigieg while the 'socialist' camp is largely united on populist, leftist economics and social liberalism

    That's true. It's a complex picture, with Buttigieg appealing more to college educated whites (which is Sanders and Warren's base), and Biden doing better with African American and lower income voters. Likewise, one shouldn't ignore the poll from September that had Buttigieg as the most common "second choice" for voters, almost irrespective of who their first choice was.

    I think adding anyone's votes to anyone else's is a bit of a mug's fame. And this is going to be a fascinating primary season.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    kle4 said:

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He sometimes seems able to handle it, but other times he cracks (like petulantly asking for questions on things he wanted to be questioned about, like the NHS, once) - last time he did very well all things considered. He's not alone in politicians in not liking persistent questioning on a point he does not like (and sometimes journalists do it on something already answered or something inconsequential) but that's the job, and they have to deal with it and not get tetchy.

    I suppose default reactions to losing one's cool is key. Boris flaps around like a deer in headlights when it happens, but Corbyn gets angry. This is his moment, a rerun after he showed a lot of people (mostly) wrong last time - can he keep discipline? Boris does seem to provoke a lot of people to distraction, but a 'debate' is a very different arena to a media interview - he just needs to stay calm, repeat his core lines and look passionate.
    Jezza hasn't had a gammon moment for a long time now. I don't think it will happen next week.

    I actually find worse than the blow up, his hectoring manner of a university lecturer who thinks they are far superior than everybody else, where they are definitely unwavering 100% correct in their assessment and everybody else is just plain wrong.

    I am fully expecting Boris to go into full on bluster mode. He was like that during every debate I have seen him do. I would hope the Tories have been drilling him, but I have a feeling he won't stick to the script.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019

    twitter.com/PME_Politics/status/1196191858688503809?s=20

    Not massively different from Baxter i.e. in the 50 seat majority kinda of range.
  • All people in the middle east need to come together....just not Israel as they are a racist nation that should exist (in Jezza's view).
    If Julie Etchingham can do this in Tuesday's debate then Lab are f***ed.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,392

    kle4 said:

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He sometimes seems able to handle it, but other times he cracks (like petulantly asking for questions on things he wanted to be questioned about, like the NHS, once) - last time he did very well all things considered. He's not alone in politicians in not liking persistent questioning on a point he does not like (and sometimes journalists do it on something already answered or something inconsequential) but that's the job, and they have to deal with it and not get tetchy.

    I suppose default reactions to losing one's cool is key. Boris flaps around like a deer in headlights when it happens, but Corbyn gets angry. This is his moment, a rerun after he showed a lot of people (mostly) wrong last time - can he keep discipline? Boris does seem to provoke a lot of people to distraction, but a 'debate' is a very different arena to a media interview - he just needs to stay calm, repeat his core lines and look passionate.
    Jezza hasn't had a gammon moment for a long time now. I don't think it will happen next week.

    I actually find worse than the blow up, his hectoring manner of a university lecturer who thinks they are far superior than everybody else, where they are definitely unwavering 100% correct in their assessment and everybody else is just plain wrong.

    I am fully expecting Boris to go into full on bluster mode. He was like that during every debate I have seen him do. I would hope the Tories have been drilling him, but I have a feeling he won't stick to the script.
    Indeed. Problem is Boris would probably do poorly trying to stick to a script as it would seem against his usual character, but freeballing is also risky as you note. One cutting question he cannot answer and his own reaction will make it seem worse than it is.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    Christ almighty - can anyone trust their canary to him, never mind the nation
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He sometimes seems able to handle it, but other times he cracks (like petulantly asking for questions on things he wanted to be questioned about, like the NHS, once) - last time he did very well all things considered. He's not alone in politicians in not liking persistent questioning on a point he does not like (and sometimes journalists do it on something already answered or something inconsequential) but that's the job, and they have to deal with it and not get tetchy.

    I suppose default reactions to losing one's cool is key. Boris flaps around like a deer in headlights when it happens, but Corbyn gets angry. This is his moment, a rerun after he showed a lot of people (mostly) wrong last time - can he keep discipline? Boris does seem to provoke a lot of people to distraction, but a 'debate' is a very different arena to a media interview - he just needs to stay calm, repeat his core lines and look passionate.
    Jezza hasn't had a gammon moment for a long time now. I don't think it will happen next week.

    I actually find worse than the blow up, his hectoring manner of a university lecturer who thinks they are far superior than everybody else, where they are definitely unwavering 100% correct in their assessment and everybody else is just plain wrong.

    I am fully expecting Boris to go into full on bluster mode. He was like that during every debate I have seen him do. I would hope the Tories have been drilling him, but I have a feeling he won't stick to the script.
    Indeed. Problem is Boris would probably do poorly trying to stick to a script as it would seem against his usual character, but freeballing is also risky as you note. One cutting question he cannot answer and his own reaction will make it seem worse than it is.
    I think luckily for Boris, it is a bit like his bonking around, and it is factored in somewhat that he will bumble and bluster. And he won't be up against a Nick Clegg type figure who was relatively unknown and able to morph his positions to sound very very reasonable for all sides.
  • kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He sometimes seems able to handle it, but other times he cracks (like petulantly asking for questions on things he wanted to be questioned about, like the NHS, once) - last time he did very well all things considered. He's not alone in politicians in not liking persistent questioning on a point he does not like (and sometimes journalists do it on something already answered or something inconsequential) but that's the job, and they have to deal with it and not get tetchy.

    I suppose default reactions to losing one's cool is key. Boris flaps around like a deer in headlights when it happens, but Corbyn gets angry. This is his moment, a rerun after he showed a lot of people (mostly) wrong last time - can he keep discipline? Boris does seem to provoke a lot of people to distraction, but a 'debate' is a very different arena to a media interview - he just needs to stay calm, repeat his core lines and look passionate.
    Jezza hasn't had a gammon moment for a long time now. I don't think it will happen next week.

    I actually find worse than the blow up, his hectoring manner of a university lecturer who thinks they are far superior than everybody else, where they are definitely unwavering 100% correct in their assessment and everybody else is just plain wrong.

    I am fully expecting Boris to go into full on bluster mode. He was like that during every debate I have seen him do. I would hope the Tories have been drilling him, but I have a feeling he won't stick to the script.
    Indeed. Problem is Boris would probably do poorly trying to stick to a script as it would seem against his usual character, but freeballing is also risky as you note. One cutting question he cannot answer and his own reaction will make it seem worse than it is.
    If you go back to the mayoral debates he was always seen by commentators to have “lost” but often judged to have “won” by the public. I think some of it is being liked. And we know from the polling he has a head start there.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312
    nico67 said:

    HYUFD said:
    Good to see such a young vibrant crowd there supporting him ! Was he doing some publicity for Saga !
    It obviously wasn't rigged
  • Christ almighty - can anyone trust their canary to him, never mind the nation
    Imagine what he will be like after months of little sleep, 7 day a week travelling around the world to meeting after meeting, having to complete his red box on time, etc etc etc....rather than going on a news show after only "working" 3-4 days week, very long holidays and having regular afternoon naps.
  • nico67nico67 Posts: 4,502

    All people in the middle east need to come together....just not Israel as they are a racist nation that should exist (in Jezza's view).
    If Julie Etchingham can do this in Tuesday's debate then Lab are f***ed.
    Julie Etchingham was brilliant in the last GE when she had to cope with the 7 leaders debate although of course Amber Rudd took over for May then .

    I have no idea how this debate will work out , much depends on what questions are asked . I think anything could happen .
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    nico67 said:

    All people in the middle east need to come together....just not Israel as they are a racist nation that should exist (in Jezza's view).
    If Julie Etchingham can do this in Tuesday's debate then Lab are f***ed.
    Julie Etchingham was brilliant in the last GE when she had to cope with the 7 leaders debate although of course Amber Rudd took over for May then .

    I have no idea how this debate will work out , much depends on what questions are asked . I think anything could happen .
    I predict a lot of heat and not much light. The difference from say Cameron, Brown and Clegg where they were all competing for a fairly similar part of turf, this head to head will be two extreme views with very little overlap.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312

    Christ almighty - can anyone trust their canary to him, never mind the nation
    Imagine what he will be like after months of little sleep, 7 day a week travelling around the world to meeting after meeting, having to complete his red box on time, etc etc etc....rather than going on a news show after only "working" 3-4 days week, very long holidays and having regular afternoon naps.
    I was just going to bed hoping to sleep. You're heartless.
  • Christ almighty - can anyone trust their canary to him, never mind the nation
    Imagine what he will be like after months of little sleep, 7 day a week travelling around the world to meeting after meeting, having to complete his red box on time, etc etc etc....rather than going on a news show after only "working" 3-4 days week, very long holidays and having regular afternoon naps.
    In a fit of sleep deprivation Corbyn reverses his nuclear subs orders and demands that they fire on Moscow now.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312

    Christ almighty - can anyone trust their canary to him, never mind the nation
    Imagine what he will be like after months of little sleep, 7 day a week travelling around the world to meeting after meeting, having to complete his red box on time, etc etc etc....rather than going on a news show after only "working" 3-4 days week, very long holidays and having regular afternoon naps.
    In a fit of sleep deprivation Corbyn reverses his nuclear subs orders and demands that they fire on Moscow now.
    Phew. I thought it might be serious.
  • ReggieCideReggieCide Posts: 4,312

    nico67 said:

    All people in the middle east need to come together....just not Israel as they are a racist nation that should exist (in Jezza's view).
    If Julie Etchingham can do this in Tuesday's debate then Lab are f***ed.
    Julie Etchingham was brilliant in the last GE when she had to cope with the 7 leaders debate although of course Amber Rudd took over for May then .

    I have no idea how this debate will work out , much depends on what questions are asked . I think anything could happen .
    I predict a lot of heat and not much light. The difference from say Cameron, Brown and Clegg where they were all competing for a fairly similar part of turf, this head to head will be two extreme views with very little overlap.
    You've persuaded me to watch, suitably primed.
  • nico67 said:

    All people in the middle east need to come together....just not Israel as they are a racist nation that should exist (in Jezza's view).
    If Julie Etchingham can do this in Tuesday's debate then Lab are f***ed.
    Julie Etchingham was brilliant in the last GE when she had to cope with the 7 leaders debate although of course Amber Rudd took over for May then .

    I have no idea how this debate will work out , much depends on what questions are asked . I think anything could happen .
    I predict a lot of heat and not much light. The difference from say Cameron, Brown and Clegg where they were all competing for a fairly similar part of turf, this head to head will be two extreme views with very little overlap.
    You've persuaded me to watch, suitably primed.
    I would rather watch the Cincinnati Bengals play the Miami Dolphins at hand egg...
  • RobDRobD Posts: 58,941
    HYUFD said:
    Blue diamonds? :o

    Is he winning there?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019

    twitter.com/Rachael_Swindon/status/1196194504719716352

    He is just going to create 300k jobs, just like that? Poor effort anyway, Mandelson once promised 400k green jobs in a similar manner. Loft laggers of the world unite.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    Under the plans, businesses will benefit from an average of 80,000 people per year being trained as apprentice engineers and technicians in renewable energy and transport, civil engineers and skilled tradespeople in sustainable construction, designers, welders and fabricators in low carbon industries, and sustainable agriculture and forestry specialists.

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/general-election-labour-promise-320000-20903857

    Arhhhh, so it is like Mandelson's wheeze. It is basically a catch all term for apprenticeships in trades and attaching "sustainable" buzz words to stuff like construction and farming.

    I presume it won't be as bad as Mandy's were trainee shoe makers were included in the figures, as technically they could make Vegan shoes and that would be a sustainable green job.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766
    That's very similar to my "internal" forecast.
  • A bill is being introduced that would give the vote to 16- and 17-year-olds in many elections in Wales and empower local authorities to decide which voting system they use.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/nov/18/welsh-bill-would-allow-16--and-17-year-olds-to-vote-in-local-elections
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,279
    rcs1000 said:

    That's very similar to my "internal" forecast.
    I think the LDs will do a bit better than 20 seats. Between 30 and 40 IMO.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,709

    Christ almighty - can anyone trust their canary to him, never mind the nation
    Imagine what he will be like after months of little sleep, 7 day a week travelling around the world to meeting after meeting, having to complete his red box on time, etc etc etc....rather than going on a news show after only "working" 3-4 days week, very long holidays and having regular afternoon naps.
    John McDonnell would actually run the country, Corbyn would just be the frontman.

    A bit like Dick Cheney and George W Bush
  • SunnyJimSunnyJim Posts: 1,106
    kle4 said:


    Indeed. Problem is Boris would probably do poorly trying to stick to a script as it would seem against his usual character, but freeballing is also risky as you note. One cutting question he cannot answer and his own reaction will make it seem worse than it is.

    You would expect him to be being coached to cut out the waffling, bumbling delivery which grates.

    It isn't beyond the wit of man to foresee the likely questions and practice short, snappy answers.

    Anything out of left-field should be pulled back on to Brexit or Corbyn's unsuitability for the job.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,009
    If gay politicians were electable, Tim Farron would be prime minister by now.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,009
    Tomorrow's Daily Mail headline:
    "PAEDO ANTI-SEMITIC COMMIES IN BID TO CONTROL THE WEATHER"
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,009

    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    Not sure this will persuade centrist voters in Labour marginals that Corbyn is a safe pair of hands. https://t.co/dCqw40Yhpb

    If he blows up in the debate he’s fucked. And Boris will try for it.
    He sometimes seems able to handle it, but other times he cracks (like petulantly asking for questions on things he wanted to be questioned about, like the NHS, once) - last time he did very well all things considered. He's not alone in politicians in not liking persistent questioning on a point he does not like (and sometimes journalists do it on something already answered or something inconsequential) but that's the job, and they have to deal with it and not get tetchy.

    I suppose default reactions to losing one's cool is key. Boris flaps around like a deer in headlights when it happens, but Corbyn gets angry. This is his moment, a rerun after he showed a lot of people (mostly) wrong last time - can he keep discipline? Boris does seem to provoke a lot of people to distraction, but a 'debate' is a very different arena to a media interview - he just needs to stay calm, repeat his core lines and look passionate.
    Jezza hasn't had a gammon moment for a long time now. I don't think it will happen next week.

    I actually find worse than the blow up, his hectoring manner of a university lecturer who thinks they are far superior than everybody else, where they are definitely unwavering 100% correct in their assessment and everybody else is just plain wrong.

    I am fully expecting Boris to go into full on bluster mode. He was like that during every debate I have seen him do. I would hope the Tories have been drilling him, but I have a feeling he won't stick to the script.
    Indeed. Problem is Boris would probably do poorly trying to stick to a script as it would seem against his usual character, but freeballing is also risky as you note. One cutting question he cannot answer and his own reaction will make it seem worse than it is.
    If you go back to the mayoral debates he was always seen by commentators to have “lost” but often judged to have “won” by the public. I think some of it is being liked.
    I think some of it is stupid people falling for a plausible con-man.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,279
    edited November 2019
    Not sure it's a good idea for Corbyn to lose his temper with interviewers from Channel 4 News (Krishnan Guru-Murthy) and the BBC (Andrew Marr). Those are probably the most pro-Labour broadcasters with more Labour supporters watching then other TV news shows. It would be a bit like Trump going on Fox News and losing his temper with the anchors.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,766
    Andy_JS said:

    rcs1000 said:

    That's very similar to my "internal" forecast.
    I think the LDs will do a bit better than 20 seats. Between 30 and 40 IMO.
    My gut, and there is nothing scientific about this, is that the LDs will have a good last ten days of the campaign, hammering home their "only we can stop Brexit" message.

    It will do them no good at all in the South West, but it may well resonate in London, in University towns, and a few other prosperous suburbs and market towns. 21-15 seats is my current range.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    SunnyJim said:

    twitter.com/Survation/status/1196242566649434112

    Is that a new one? I might be wrong but I think that a 7% increase for the Tories on last Survation poll, Labour down 1%.
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    SunnyJim said:
    Just a hunch but i'm guessing Survation just fell out of favour with the keyboard Corbynistas.
  • SunnyJim said:
    Just a hunch but i'm guessing Survation just fell out of favour with the keyboard Corbynistas.
    Other than one poll, it seems Labour have hit 30% and got stuck there the last week or so, while the Tories have broken through 40% and rising.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,279
    edited November 2019

    SunnyJim said:

    twitter.com/Survation/status/1196242566649434112

    Is that a new one? I might be wrong but I think that a 7% increase for the Tories on last Survation poll, Labour down 1%.
    Yes that's correct.

    Changes since previous Survation poll:

    Con +7%
    Lab -1%
    LD -4%
    BRX -5%
    Grn +2%
    Others +1%
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    edited November 2019
    Like most other pollsters methodology has now changed to reading out only candidates standing in the constituency.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,279
    edited November 2019

    Like most other pollsters methodology has changed to reading out only candidates standing in the constituency.

    The Tories almost automatically getting a 5% swing from BRX in this Survation poll due to Farage's party only standing in 274 seats, but interesting that they also seem to have taken some support from the LDs as well.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,274
    edited November 2019
    Andy_JS said:

    Like most other pollsters methodology has changed to reading out only candidates standing in the constituency.

    The Tories almost automatically getting a 5% swing from the Brexit Party in this Survation poll due to Farage's party only standing in 274 seats, but interesting that they also seem to have taken some support from the LDs as well.
    The Lib Dems are having a terrible war so far. Seems even worse than 2017. At least then Farron was getting some tv exposure, perhaps not quite for the reason he hoped.
  • SunnyJimSunnyJim Posts: 1,106
    Reaction on BF was pretty instant to Survation.

    Con Maj in to 1.49 from around 1.6.

    My other lay, Con 340+ hasn't moved in quite as markedly.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 26,279

    Andy_JS said:

    Like most other pollsters methodology has changed to reading out only candidates standing in the constituency.

    The Tories almost automatically getting a 5% swing from the Brexit Party in this Survation poll due to Farage's party only standing in 274 seats, but interesting that they also seem to have taken some support from the LDs as well.
    The Lib Dems are having a terrible war so far. Seems even worse than 2017. At least then Farron was getting some tv exposure, perhaps not quite for the reason he hoped.
    Doing badly against Corbyn is quite an achievement for the LDs' campaign so far. I thought they'd be on 20% at this stage.
This discussion has been closed.