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    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,377
    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    kle4 said:

    kinabalu said:

    Fishing said:

    I haven't actually seen the Deer Hunter, but am thinking that November might conceivably be more like another Pennsylvania-based movie - Groundhog Day.

    Oh god that is a mood killer. Please may you be wrong. But seriously, yes of course it's possible. Really can't see it though. This is a bizarre experiment which has failed and I think enough truth can now be seen by enough people such that he is unelectable a 2nd time.
    The thing about Groundhog day is in the end the cycle is broken as lessons were learned and everyone is happy, so it may not be a mood killer .
    Right. That is more upbeat. Groundhog Day is a film high on my 'have not seen and really must' list. Top spot currently held by Blade Runner.
    Groundhog day is a bit saccharine in places - but part of it's genius is how the main character tries smart and dumb things. In a way that makes complete sense with the character and the environment he finds himself in.
    I will definitely see it one day. Think I'm bound to like it.
    Mind you, the attempt at socialism-using-perfect-foresight fails.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,932

    kinabalu said:

    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    Donald Trump. What a jerk. I’ve been posting for ages that he is heading for the rocks and thank god it looks like I’m right again. Of course I do not (despite my almost spooky record) expect people to take my calls on blind trust. I owe it to the site to provide a killer exposition of why Trump is toast. Let’s start with what he must hold to have a chance of re-election – the Rust Belt.

    So if you’re like me the first thing you think of when hearing that term is the motion picture, The Deer Hunter. We’ve all seen it. It’s a modern classic. It was on again last week and I watched it, this time with a focus not on the plot and the dialogue – which I know backwards – but on what it tells us about this year’s presidential election.

    It’s set in Pennsylvania where Trump is defending a margin of 0.72%. Polls have him losing it but we don’t need polls when we can listen to real flesh & blood residents of the state and we have a solid sample of them here. We have Michael (Robert de Niro), Nick (Christopher Walken), Stevie (John Savage), Fredo (John Cazale), and of course Linda (Meryl Streep). Blue collar. Steel. Backbone of America. Woke? Give me a break.

    In 2016 they voted as follows. Linda for Clinton (swayed by pussygate). Fredo for Trump (also influenced by pussygate – at last a politician he could relate to). Walken and Stevie for Trump (jobs mainly plus time for something different). De Niro, as one would expect, saw through the Donald, could see he was a phony, but felt Hillary Clinton had nothing to say to people like him. So despite being interested in politics, he didn’t vote. He went hunting in the mountains (for deer) instead.

    So what do they plan to do in 2020? Have they made their minds up yet? Turns out they have and the results are striking.

    Linda and Fredo are unchanged and further entrenched. She hates Trump with a passion, he is looking forward to the rallies and breaking out his cap again. Since his accident at the plant which left him in a wheelchair Stevie has become a rather serious-minded person. In particular he no longer finds Donald Trump remotely funny. He’s had his fill of him and will be voting Dem. As will Walken, who is bitterly disappointed by Trump’s response to the coronavirus. “Shit, the guy can’t tell his ass from his windpipe,” as he put it. De Niro smirks and nods at that. But Biden looks like a crock of shit to him so once more, his interest in politics notwithstanding, he won’t be voting. Plans to spend polling day as he did in 2016 – up in the mountains shooting deer.

    Scores on the doors. In 2016 this group delivered 3 votes for Trump and 1 for Clinton. In 2020 it’s the exact opposite, 3 for Biden and only 1 for Trump. Just Fredo with his MAGA gear and conspiracy theories about “lizards” and “globalists” and all the rest of it. The basest of the base.

    Conclusion? Too obvious to bother spelling out beyond “landslide”.

    Nap of the day. You can back Biden to take Penn at 1.65. There are worse bets. :smile:

    Very persuasive, although I've never seen the film. Is it any good? Has a stellar cast.
    YES FULL OF PONCY WANKERS
    De Niro and Walken are "poncy wankers" in that brutal russian roulette scene?

    That is harsh beyond belief, Malcolm.
    If De Niro had drunk some turnip juice, before maniacally laughing - he'd have been Malcolm's hero....
    :D
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    Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 13,314

    Dura_Ace said:

    If Trump believes he he is heading for defeat might he resign and Pence will then dish out the pardons?

    I think he more likely to lose, say he only ever wanted a single term and achieved everything he wanted to anyway.
    You could well be right, but that still won't stop the IRS going after him.
    Or Putin calling in his loans.
    I thought Deutsche Bank was more likely to need the money.
    Checked the price of oil lately?
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    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,216
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    contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Just watched a Trump supporter express the opinion that Biden is a kind of trojan horse moderate candidate who will be diagnosed incapable after a year and replaced with a much more radical VEEP.

    Tin foil hat stuff for now, or course, but it does make the choice of Democrat VEEP even more interesting. The repubs could use this line of attack, depending on who it is.
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    contrariancontrarian Posts: 5,818
    Scott_xP said:
    Re-tweeting Angela Rayner. How are the mighty fallen
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    MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 25,174

    HYUFD said:

    MaxPB said:

    I think it's likely Biden wins this year (got a bet on it) and Starmer becomes PM in 2024.

    Labour has a huge mountain to climb and he may not (probably won't) be facing Boris. 2024 is a long time away and so far Starmer is benefiting from not being Corbyn but not much else. Most people I know have got little to no impression of what he stands for, It feels a bit likes Ed Miliband.
    Replacing Boris makes little difference

    https://twitter.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1274003884286099462?s=20

    https://twitter.com/ElectionMapsUK/status/1274005230418608128?s=20
    Is don't know still high for Starmer or is at more normal levels these days?
    Pay attention to this poll in around 12 months time. If the gap hasn't closed markedly Starmer is in trouble.
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:



    Andy_JS said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Falling poll numbers from 45% to 43% after 10 years in government.
    That isn't quite the whole story. From post lockdown poll numbers in the fifties for the Conservatives, the direction of travel has been trending southbound since the Cummings episode.
    Anything above 45% was, is and always will be froth.
    It wasn't on here at the time. Fifty percent plus was mark of Johnson's invincibility and a breakthrough widely celebrated.
    PBers get overly excited by polls especially when a party is hitting unreal extremes of one sort or another.

    But in reality anything above 45% was, is and always will be froth.
    Heath was the last leader to get over 45% of the vote when the Tories got 46% in 1970
    Therefore he’s empirically the best Tory leader of the last 50 years?
    Rubbish, on that basis it has to go to Major - 14,093,007 votes.
    Speaking of Heath

    https://twitter.com/GoodwinMJ/status/1274278137581522944?s=20

    Just started watching it now
    Epping just come up as a Con gain, back when it included Harlow and was a marginal I believe.

    1970; the first election where I 'participated' in the sense of being a counting agent, rather than 'just' voting.... although I'd done some campaigning in '66.
    On the same table the Lab agent was, in life, a pharmaceutical rep who called on me. He had a pocket radio and an earpiece, and kept us up to date, with a sort of gallows humour.
    IIRC the Tory was a miserable git.
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,288
    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    Donald Trump. What a jerk. I’ve been posting for ages that he is heading for the rocks and thank god it looks like I’m right again. Of course I do not (despite my almost spooky record) expect people to take my calls on blind trust. I owe it to the site to provide a killer exposition of why Trump is toast. Let’s start with what he must hold to have a chance of re-election – the Rust Belt.

    So if you’re like me the first thing you think of when hearing that term is the motion picture, The Deer Hunter. We’ve all seen it. It’s a modern classic. It was on again last week and I watched it, this time with a focus not on the plot and the dialogue – which I know backwards – but on what it tells us about this year’s presidential election.

    It’s set in Pennsylvania where Trump is defending a margin of 0.72%. Polls have him losing it but we don’t need polls when we can listen to real flesh & blood residents of the state and we have a solid sample of them here. We have Michael (Robert de Niro), Nick (Christopher Walken), Stevie (John Savage), Fredo (John Cazale), and of course Linda (Meryl Streep). Blue collar. Steel. Backbone of America. Woke? Give me a break.

    In 2016 they voted as follows. Linda for Clinton (swayed by pussygate). Fredo for Trump (also influenced by pussygate – at last a politician he could relate to). Walken and Stevie for Trump (jobs mainly plus time for something different). De Niro, as one would expect, saw through the Donald, could see he was a phony, but felt Hillary Clinton had nothing to say to people like him. So despite being interested in politics, he didn’t vote. He went hunting in the mountains (for deer) instead.

    So what do they plan to do in 2020? Have they made their minds up yet? Turns out they have and the results are striking.

    Linda and Fredo are unchanged and further entrenched. She hates Trump with a passion, he is looking forward to the rallies and breaking out his cap again. Since his accident at the plant which left him in a wheelchair Stevie has become a rather serious-minded person. In particular he no longer finds Donald Trump remotely funny. He’s had his fill of him and will be voting Dem. As will Walken, who is bitterly disappointed by Trump’s response to the coronavirus. “Shit, the guy can’t tell his ass from his windpipe,” as he put it. De Niro smirks and nods at that. But Biden looks like a crock of shit to him so once more, his interest in politics notwithstanding, he won’t be voting. Plans to spend polling day as he did in 2016 – up in the mountains shooting deer.

    Scores on the doors. In 2016 this group delivered 3 votes for Trump and 1 for Clinton. In 2020 it’s the exact opposite, 3 for Biden and only 1 for Trump. Just Fredo with his MAGA gear and conspiracy theories about “lizards” and “globalists” and all the rest of it. The basest of the base.

    Conclusion? Too obvious to bother spelling out beyond “landslide”.

    Nap of the day. You can back Biden to take Penn at 1.65. There are worse bets. :smile:

    Very persuasive, although I've never seen the film. Is it any good? Has a stellar cast.
    YES FULL OF PONCY WANKERS
    De Niro and Walken are "poncy wankers" in that brutal russian roulette scene?

    That is harsh beyond belief, Malcolm.
    Overpaid as well, De Niro has morphed into an idiot. Unless he is playing himself he is useless, a one trick pony and never liked the look of Walken, he looked a wrong un.
    PS: no prisoners today , just the truth
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCDIYvFmgW8
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,187
    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    Donald Trump. What a jerk. I’ve been posting for ages that he is heading for the rocks and thank god it looks like I’m right again. Of course I do not (despite my almost spooky record) expect people to take my calls on blind trust. I owe it to the site to provide a killer exposition of why Trump is toast. Let’s start with what he must hold to have a chance of re-election – the Rust Belt.

    So if you’re like me the first thing you think of when hearing that term is the motion picture, The Deer Hunter. We’ve all seen it. It’s a modern classic. It was on again last week and I watched it, this time with a focus not on the plot and the dialogue – which I know backwards – but on what it tells us about this year’s presidential election.

    It’s set in Pennsylvania where Trump is defending a margin of 0.72%. Polls have him losing it but we don’t need polls when we can listen to real flesh & blood residents of the state and we have a solid sample of them here. We have Michael (Robert de Niro), Nick (Christopher Walken), Stevie (John Savage), Fredo (John Cazale), and of course Linda (Meryl Streep). Blue collar. Steel. Backbone of America. Woke? Give me a break.

    In 2016 they voted as follows. Linda for Clinton (swayed by pussygate). Fredo for Trump (also influenced by pussygate – at last a politician he could relate to). Walken and Stevie for Trump (jobs mainly plus time for something different). De Niro, as one would expect, saw through the Donald, could see he was a phony, but felt Hillary Clinton had nothing to say to people like him. So despite being interested in politics, he didn’t vote. He went hunting in the mountains (for deer) instead.

    So what do they plan to do in 2020? Have they made their minds up yet? Turns out they have and the results are striking.

    Linda and Fredo are unchanged and further entrenched. She hates Trump with a passion, he is looking forward to the rallies and breaking out his cap again. Since his accident at the plant which left him in a wheelchair Stevie has become a rather serious-minded person. In particular he no longer finds Donald Trump remotely funny. He’s had his fill of him and will be voting Dem. As will Walken, who is bitterly disappointed by Trump’s response to the coronavirus. “Shit, the guy can’t tell his ass from his windpipe,” as he put it. De Niro smirks and nods at that. But Biden looks like a crock of shit to him so once more, his interest in politics notwithstanding, he won’t be voting. Plans to spend polling day as he did in 2016 – up in the mountains shooting deer.

    Scores on the doors. In 2016 this group delivered 3 votes for Trump and 1 for Clinton. In 2020 it’s the exact opposite, 3 for Biden and only 1 for Trump. Just Fredo with his MAGA gear and conspiracy theories about “lizards” and “globalists” and all the rest of it. The basest of the base.

    Conclusion? Too obvious to bother spelling out beyond “landslide”.

    Nap of the day. You can back Biden to take Penn at 1.65. There are worse bets. :smile:

    Very persuasive, although I've never seen the film. Is it any good? Has a stellar cast.
    YES FULL OF PONCY WANKERS
    De Niro and Walken are "poncy wankers" in that brutal russian roulette scene?

    That is harsh beyond belief, Malcolm.
    Overpaid as well, De Niro has morphed into an idiot. Unless he is playing himself he is useless, a one trick pony and never liked the look of Walken, he looked a wrong un.
    PS: no prisoners today , just the truth
    C'mon. De Niro is a giant of the cinema. Mean Streets to Meet The Parents - talk about a journey!
  • Options
    kinabalukinabalu Posts: 39,187

    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    kle4 said:

    kinabalu said:

    Fishing said:

    I haven't actually seen the Deer Hunter, but am thinking that November might conceivably be more like another Pennsylvania-based movie - Groundhog Day.

    Oh god that is a mood killer. Please may you be wrong. But seriously, yes of course it's possible. Really can't see it though. This is a bizarre experiment which has failed and I think enough truth can now be seen by enough people such that he is unelectable a 2nd time.
    The thing about Groundhog day is in the end the cycle is broken as lessons were learned and everyone is happy, so it may not be a mood killer .
    Right. That is more upbeat. Groundhog Day is a film high on my 'have not seen and really must' list. Top spot currently held by Blade Runner.
    Groundhog day is a bit saccharine in places - but part of it's genius is how the main character tries smart and dumb things. In a way that makes complete sense with the character and the environment he finds himself in.
    I will definitely see it one day. Think I'm bound to like it.
    Mind you, the attempt at socialism-using-perfect-foresight fails.
    Oh so it has a socialism feel to it too - I really must watch this film.
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    MattWMattW Posts: 18,525
    edited June 2020
    Starting on the 1970 Election.

    Interesting that they think the Tories won Salford because of houses being built / upgraded.

    And an Asian interviewee praising Wedgwood Benn for standing up against what I think was the racialist tone of the Lab government.

    Then a review of the attiudes of the NZ / OZ governments.

    Interesting times.

    And to Enoch Powell ... "will you continue your alliance with the far Left - people like Michael Foot". Then Powell mugging the interviewer.

    I think that was all correct. Will check though.
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    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    edited June 2020
    A minor point of correction - Trump has four and a half months to turn it around - rather than five and a half!
    Edit - already spotted I notice!
  • Options

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).
    The problem is that the Lib Dems going left doesn't seem to help them win the marginals from the Tories they need to win, it means they take more Labour voters which doesn't help.

    Your analysis is spot on in terms of what they should do - but their approach is not going to result in that, I don't think.

    It does seem to be historically true that a Labour Party people aren't scared of, results in a better Lib Dem performance.
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,060
    justin124 said:

    A minor point of correction - Trump has four and a half months to turn it around - rather than five and a half!
    Edit - already spotted I notice!

    A possible campaign line:

    "I've done a big, beautiful deal with the United Kingdom. Probably the best trade deal that's ever been done. Some people are saying it's the greatest."
  • Options
    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,995
    Scott_xP said:
    I wonder what the low cost alternative is going to be? An A-Z sellotaped to a Nokia?
  • Options
    rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038

    Dura_Ace said:

    If Trump believes he he is heading for defeat might he resign and Pence will then dish out the pardons?

    I think he more likely to lose, say he only ever wanted a single term and achieved everything he wanted to anyway.
    You could well be right, but that still won't stop the IRS going after him.
    Or Putin calling in his loans.
    I thought Deutsche Bank was more likely to need the money.
    Checked the price of oil lately?
    All he has to do is move to the UK, become a Tory donor and he's safe from HMRC and probably even the IRS. Private Eye has endless stories of special treatment for party donors.
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    Labour report is interesting.

    They lost 1.8m voters who sat at home, I wonder what difference this would have made to the result, of course we don't know where these voters were placed
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231
    Dura_Ace said:

    Scott_xP said:
    I wonder what the low cost alternative is going to be? An A-Z sellotaped to a Nokia?
    Don’t be ridiculous.

    Nokias are made in the EU.

    It would have to be a Samsung.
  • Options
    OllyTOllyT Posts: 4,913
    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    Donald Trump. What a jerk. I’ve been posting for ages that he is heading for the rocks and thank god it looks like I’m right again. Of course I do not (despite my almost spooky record) expect people to take my calls on blind trust. I owe it to the site to provide a killer exposition of why Trump is toast. Let’s start with what he must hold to have a chance of re-election – the Rust Belt.

    So if you’re like me the first thing you think of when hearing that term is the motion picture, The Deer Hunter. We’ve all seen it. It’s a modern classic. It was on again last week and I watched it, this time with a focus not on the plot and the dialogue – which I know backwards – but on what it tells us about this year’s presidential election.

    It’s set in Pennsylvania where Trump is defending a margin of 0.72%. Polls have him losing it but we don’t need polls when we can listen to real flesh & blood residents of the state and we have a solid sample of them here. We have Michael (Robert de Niro), Nick (Christopher Walken), Stevie (John Savage), Fredo (John Cazale), and of course Linda (Meryl Streep). Blue collar. Steel. Backbone of America. Woke? Give me a break.

    In 2016 they voted as follows. Linda for Clinton (swayed by pussygate). Fredo for Trump (also influenced by pussygate – at last a politician he could relate to). Walken and Stevie for Trump (jobs mainly plus time for something different). De Niro, as one would expect, saw through the Donald, could see he was a phony, but felt Hillary Clinton had nothing to say to people like him. So despite being interested in politics, he didn’t vote. He went hunting in the mountains (for deer) instead.

    So what do they plan to do in 2020? Have they made their minds up yet? Turns out they have and the results are striking.

    Linda and Fredo are unchanged and further entrenched. She hates Trump with a passion, he is looking forward to the rallies and breaking out his cap again. Since his accident at the plant which left him in a wheelchair Stevie has become a rather serious-minded person. In particular he no longer finds Donald Trump remotely funny. He’s had his fill of him and will be voting Dem. As will Walken, who is bitterly disappointed by Trump’s response to the coronavirus. “Shit, the guy can’t tell his ass from his windpipe,” as he put it. De Niro smirks and nods at that. But Biden looks like a crock of shit to him so once more, his interest in politics notwithstanding, he won’t be voting. Plans to spend polling day as he did in 2016 – up in the mountains shooting deer.

    Scores on the doors. In 2016 this group delivered 3 votes for Trump and 1 for Clinton. In 2020 it’s the exact opposite, 3 for Biden and only 1 for Trump. Just Fredo with his MAGA gear and conspiracy theories about “lizards” and “globalists” and all the rest of it. The basest of the base.

    Conclusion? Too obvious to bother spelling out beyond “landslide”.

    Nap of the day. You can back Biden to take Penn at 1.65. There are worse bets. :smile:

    The problem with this, is that you have your examples making (semi) rational decisions. The Trump block is all about "gut" voting.

    That being said, the poll strongly suggest that a chunk of his core vote has gone.

    At least for the purposes of answering polls.

    The worry now is that we are seeing "Shy Trump" voting intentions.
    I think there will be shy Trump voters because the intention to vote for him is far more of a "guilty secret" than it would have been in 2016. People voting for him this time are doing it despite 4 years of hard evidence of what he is.

    However, I think he will lose a big chunk of those who went with him in 2016 on an "Ok, what the hell, give him a shot" basis, which will swamp everything and drive the result. And given he just scraped it last time with a freakshly efficient EC distribution, to me it is all pointing to a very clear Biden win in Nov.
    Trump was very fortunate indeed that the votes fell where they did in order to win the EC whilst losing by 3 million votes overall. I still think that could happen again and the statue stuff is playing into his hands as it is for Johnson in the UK. Will they never learn???

    On the other hand I cannot imagine there will be hardly anyone voting for Trump in 2020 who didn't vote for him in 2016 but there will be plenty who did vote for him in 2016 who will not do so this time.

    Still a long way to go on this one, I'm keeping the champagne on ice for the time being.
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    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,081
    Has this government just reached the point of throwing out random statements and hoping that they'll come to pass?

    https://twitter.com/davidschneider/status/1274305754464489474?s=20
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231

    Labour report is interesting.

    They lost 1.8m voters who sat at home, I wonder what difference this would have made to the result, of course we don't know where these voters were placed

    If they had all voted Tory, it might have cost you another 60 seats.

    On a serious point, it looks as though there was considerable churn in the Red Wall - habitual non-voters voting Brexit and Tory, while habitual Labour voters stayed home. That might explain how turnout wasn’t significantly different and yet the vote shares changed so dramatically.

    A major irony of this, of course, is that Corbyn’s original strategy was to try and engage non-voters to vote Labour.

    An even bigger irony is how many people - including me - scoffed at this strategy, pointing out that by definition non-voters don’t vote.
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231

    Has this government just reached the point of throwing out random statements and hoping that they'll come to pass?

    https://twitter.com/davidschneider/status/1274305754464489474?s=20

    What do you mean, reached? That was their entire election strategy!
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    SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,896

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).

    I'd note that the Lib Dems are highly unlikely to be at 1997 seat levels at the next election, and Starmer will be MORE interested in how the SNP relationship works. But they could plausibly be at the 20-25 level with a fair wind, and are probably an easier partner than the SNP.
    Starmer needs to find a way to neutralise the SNP issue in the minds of floating voters.

    Depending on what the polls look like nearer the time, his strategy might need to be something like a revival of the Lib/Lab pact, either standing aside or fielding only paper candidates in seats where the LDs are the only party that can unseat Con incumbents. That’s going to be difficult to get past his own party, but it might be the only chance he has of being able to disavow an SNP coalition during the campaign.
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    Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,995
    ydoethur said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    Scott_xP said:
    I wonder what the low cost alternative is going to be? An A-Z sellotaped to a Nokia?
    Don’t be ridiculous.

    Nokias are made in the EU.

    It would have to be a Samsung.
    I have just read in the Guardian that government plants to buy the offal left over from the bankruptcy of OneWeb (who were some sort of ebay Starlink apparently) and move production of the satellites to the UK (probably Hartlepool). Nothing at all can possibly go wrong with this scheme.
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    Gary_BurtonGary_Burton Posts: 737

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).

    I'd note that the Lib Dems are highly unlikely to be at 1997 seat levels at the next election, and Starmer will be MORE interested in how the SNP relationship works. But they could plausibly be at the 20-25 level with a fair wind, and are probably an easier partner than the SNP.
    Lib Dems probably aren't any threat to Labour anymore (they might even drop to third in Sheffield Hallam next time) so they should choose Davey and focus on all their southern marginals and near misses like Cheadle and hope Starmer soaks up the residual LD vote in Con-Lab maginals by default.

    If the Tories drop from 45% to 40% the Lib Dems could quite feasibly end up with 30 MPs next time if Davey is leader even though they are unlikely to get more than 10-15% of the vote nationally.
  • Options
    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 19,983
    edited June 2020
    justin124 said:

    A minor point of correction - Trump has four and a half months to turn it around - rather than five and a half!
    Edit - already spotted I notice!

    Yes it’s about 18 weeks I think
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231
    Dura_Ace said:

    ydoethur said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    Scott_xP said:
    I wonder what the low cost alternative is going to be? An A-Z sellotaped to a Nokia?
    Don’t be ridiculous.

    Nokias are made in the EU.

    It would have to be a Samsung.
    I have just read in the Guardian that government plants to buy the offal left over from the bankruptcy of OneWeb (who were some sort of ebay Starlink apparently) and move production of the satellites to the UK (probably Hartlepool). Nothing at all can possibly go wrong with this scheme.
    They’re just going round and round.

    Pause.

    Ah, my coat...
  • Options
    ydoethur said:

    Labour report is interesting.

    They lost 1.8m voters who sat at home, I wonder what difference this would have made to the result, of course we don't know where these voters were placed

    If they had all voted Tory, it might have cost you another 60 seats.

    On a serious point, it looks as though there was considerable churn in the Red Wall - habitual non-voters voting Brexit and Tory, while habitual Labour voters stayed home. That might explain how turnout wasn’t significantly different and yet the vote shares changed so dramatically.

    A major irony of this, of course, is that Corbyn’s original strategy was to try and engage non-voters to vote Labour.

    An even bigger irony is how many people - including me - scoffed at this strategy, pointing out that by definition non-voters don’t vote.
    Good post.

    His strategy was based on young people not voting. They don't vote, time to give up on energising them.
  • Options
    AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 19,983
    OllyT said:

    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    Donald Trump. What a jerk. I’ve been posting for ages that he is heading for the rocks and thank god it looks like I’m right again. Of course I do not (despite my almost spooky record) expect people to take my calls on blind trust. I owe it to the site to provide a killer exposition of why Trump is toast. Let’s start with what he must hold to have a chance of re-election – the Rust Belt.

    So if you’re like me the first thing you think of when hearing that term is the motion picture, The Deer Hunter. We’ve all seen it. It’s a modern classic. It was on again last week and I watched it, this time with a focus not on the plot and the dialogue – which I know backwards – but on what it tells us about this year’s presidential election.

    It’s set in Pennsylvania where Trump is defending a margin of 0.72%. Polls have him losing it but we don’t need polls when we can listen to real flesh & blood residents of the state and we have a solid sample of them here. We have Michael (Robert de Niro), Nick (Christopher Walken), Stevie (John Savage), Fredo (John Cazale), and of course Linda (Meryl Streep). Blue collar. Steel. Backbone of America. Woke? Give me a break.

    In 2016 they voted as follows. Linda for Clinton (swayed by pussygate). Fredo for Trump (also influenced by pussygate – at last a politician he could relate to). Walken and Stevie for Trump (jobs mainly plus time for something different). De Niro, as one would expect, saw through the Donald, could see he was a phony, but felt Hillary Clinton had nothing to say to people like him. So despite being interested in politics, he didn’t vote. He went hunting in the mountains (for deer) instead.

    So what do they plan to do in 2020? Have they made their minds up yet? Turns out they have and the results are striking.

    Linda and Fredo are unchanged and further entrenched. She hates Trump with a passion, he is looking forward to the rallies and breaking out his cap again. Since his accident at the plant which left him in a wheelchair Stevie has become a rather serious-minded person. In particular he no longer finds Donald Trump remotely funny. He’s had his fill of him and will be voting Dem. As will Walken, who is bitterly disappointed by Trump’s response to the coronavirus. “Shit, the guy can’t tell his ass from his windpipe,” as he put it. De Niro smirks and nods at that. But Biden looks like a crock of shit to him so once more, his interest in politics notwithstanding, he won’t be voting. Plans to spend polling day as he did in 2016 – up in the mountains shooting deer.

    Scores on the doors. In 2016 this group delivered 3 votes for Trump and 1 for Clinton. In 2020 it’s the exact opposite, 3 for Biden and only 1 for Trump. Just Fredo with his MAGA gear and conspiracy theories about “lizards” and “globalists” and all the rest of it. The basest of the base.

    Conclusion? Too obvious to bother spelling out beyond “landslide”.

    Nap of the day. You can back Biden to take Penn at 1.65. There are worse bets. :smile:

    The problem with this, is that you have your examples making (semi) rational decisions. The Trump block is all about "gut" voting.

    That being said, the poll strongly suggest that a chunk of his core vote has gone.

    At least for the purposes of answering polls.

    The worry now is that we are seeing "Shy Trump" voting intentions.
    I think there will be shy Trump voters because the intention to vote for him is far more of a "guilty secret" than it would have been in 2016. People voting for him this time are doing it despite 4 years of hard evidence of what he is.

    However, I think he will lose a big chunk of those who went with him in 2016 on an "Ok, what the hell, give him a shot" basis, which will swamp everything and drive the result. And given he just scraped it last time with a freakshly efficient EC distribution, to me it is all pointing to a very clear Biden win in Nov.
    Trump was very fortunate indeed that the votes fell where they did in order to win the EC whilst losing by 3 million votes overall. I still think that could happen again and the statue stuff is playing into his hands as it is for Johnson in the UK. Will they never learn???

    On the other hand I cannot imagine there will be hardly anyone voting for Trump in 2020 who didn't vote for him in 2016 but there will be plenty who did vote for him in 2016 who will not do so this time.

    Still a long way to go on this one, I'm keeping the champagne on ice for the time being.
    The “playing into his hands” narrative is instinctively compelling.

    But, there’s been no evidence for it. Indeed last time it was aired on here there was a notable swing to Biden.
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,081
    Grayling appears to have the half-life radium-226. He could take a public dump on the Cenotaph and be revealed to have punched Vera Lynn yet still be popping up in various roles in Tory governments.

    https://twitter.com/StevePeers/status/1274297504276910087?s=20
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    Sandpit said:

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).

    I'd note that the Lib Dems are highly unlikely to be at 1997 seat levels at the next election, and Starmer will be MORE interested in how the SNP relationship works. But they could plausibly be at the 20-25 level with a fair wind, and are probably an easier partner than the SNP.
    Starmer needs to find a way to neutralise the SNP issue in the minds of floating voters.

    Depending on what the polls look like nearer the time, his strategy might need to be something like a revival of the Lib/Lab pact, either standing aside or fielding only paper candidates in seats where the LDs are the only party that can unseat Con incumbents. That’s going to be difficult to get past his own party, but it might be the only chance he has of being able to disavow an SNP coalition during the campaign.
    His strategy needs to be opposing independence strongly.

    He needs to accept Scotland is lost for the time being and accept that he needs to win in England and Wales.

    If the result of that is the SNP do better anyway in Scotland then fine. Better those seats are SNP than Tory.

    It is the idea that he will work with the SNP, that will cause another Ed Miliband result.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    Sandpit said:

    MaxPB said:

    I think it's likely Biden wins this year (got a bet on it) and Starmer becomes PM in 2024.

    Labour has a huge mountain to climb and he may not (probably won't) be facing Boris. 2024 is a long time away and so far Starmer is benefiting from not being Corbyn but not much else. Most people I know have got little to no impression of what he stands for, It feels a bit likes Ed Miliband.
    For some context, we are now roughly (within a week or two) at the halfway point between the Brexit referendum and the scheduled 2024 election. If a week is a long time in politics, four years is an eternity.
    Under the terms of the FTPA we have already passed that point. Unless that Act is repealed , the next election is due on May 2nd 2024. We are now as near to that date as 8th August 2016 - by which time Theresa May had already been PM for almost a month!
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,525

    Labour report is interesting.

    They lost 1.8m voters who sat at home, I wonder what difference this would have made to the result, of course we don't know where these voters were placed

    Is this report official? How do they align with Sir K and the new leadership?

    AIUI it is a group around Ed Milliband, including such as LIsa Nandy.
  • Options
    CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 39,720

    Sandpit said:

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).

    I'd note that the Lib Dems are highly unlikely to be at 1997 seat levels at the next election, and Starmer will be MORE interested in how the SNP relationship works. But they could plausibly be at the 20-25 level with a fair wind, and are probably an easier partner than the SNP.
    Starmer needs to find a way to neutralise the SNP issue in the minds of floating voters.

    Depending on what the polls look like nearer the time, his strategy might need to be something like a revival of the Lib/Lab pact, either standing aside or fielding only paper candidates in seats where the LDs are the only party that can unseat Con incumbents. That’s going to be difficult to get past his own party, but it might be the only chance he has of being able to disavow an SNP coalition during the campaign.
    His strategy needs to be opposing independence strongly.

    He needs to accept Scotland is lost for the time being and accept that he needs to win in England and Wales.

    If the result of that is the SNP do better anyway in Scotland then fine. Better those seats are SNP than Tory.

    It is the idea that he will work with the SNP, that will cause another Ed Miliband result.
    In 2017 Labour in Scotland seems to have had a policy of encouraging people to vote Tory rather than SNP to keep the SNP out. Both Ian Murray and Kezia Dugdale expressed this view. I'm surprised they are still in the party!

    Of course that did not go too well. Whjat you suggest is at least rational!
  • Options
    BannedinnParisBannedinnParis Posts: 1,884

    Grayling appears to have the half-life radium-226. He could take a public dump on the Cenotaph and be revealed to have punched Vera Lynn yet still be popping up in various roles in Tory governments.

    https://twitter.com/StevePeers/status/1274297504276910087?s=20

    Has a hashtag dated as badly as #StopTheCoup?
  • Options
    MattWMattW Posts: 18,525
    1970 Election.

    LOL - journos blaming polls for journos getting it wrong ;-)
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    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,932
    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    kle4 said:

    kinabalu said:

    Fishing said:

    I haven't actually seen the Deer Hunter, but am thinking that November might conceivably be more like another Pennsylvania-based movie - Groundhog Day.

    Oh god that is a mood killer. Please may you be wrong. But seriously, yes of course it's possible. Really can't see it though. This is a bizarre experiment which has failed and I think enough truth can now be seen by enough people such that he is unelectable a 2nd time.
    The thing about Groundhog day is in the end the cycle is broken as lessons were learned and everyone is happy, so it may not be a mood killer .
    Right. That is more upbeat. Groundhog Day is a film high on my 'have not seen and really must' list. Top spot currently held by Blade Runner.
    Groundhog day is a bit saccharine in places - but part of it's genius is how the main character tries smart and dumb things. In a way that makes complete sense with the character and the environment he finds himself in.
    I will definitely see it one day. Think I'm bound to like it.
    Groundhog Day was pretty good film, not sure if it will have aged well but reckon it will.
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    MattW said:

    Labour report is interesting.

    They lost 1.8m voters who sat at home, I wonder what difference this would have made to the result, of course we don't know where these voters were placed

    Is this report official? How do they align with Sir K and the new leadership?

    AIUI it is a group around Ed Milliband, including such as LIsa Nandy.
    I believe it's a group across the entire party, separate from the leadership.

    There's some nonsense in there but some decent analysis and polling that can be looked at.

    The 1.8m voters that sat at home who had voted in 2017 for Labour, are a good place to look. Presumably some of these will vote again now that Corbyn has disappeared.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    ydoethur said:

    HYUFD said:



    Andy_JS said:

    Scott_xP said:
    Falling poll numbers from 45% to 43% after 10 years in government.
    That isn't quite the whole story. From post lockdown poll numbers in the fifties for the Conservatives, the direction of travel has been trending southbound since the Cummings episode.
    Anything above 45% was, is and always will be froth.
    It wasn't on here at the time. Fifty percent plus was mark of Johnson's invincibility and a breakthrough widely celebrated.
    PBers get overly excited by polls especially when a party is hitting unreal extremes of one sort or another.

    But in reality anything above 45% was, is and always will be froth.
    Heath was the last leader to get over 45% of the vote when the Tories got 46% in 1970
    Therefore he’s empirically the best Tory leader of the last 50 years?
    Rubbish, on that basis it has to go to Major - 14,093,007 votes.
    Speaking of Heath

    https://twitter.com/GoodwinMJ/status/1274278137581522944?s=20

    Just started watching it now
    Epping just come up as a Con gain, back when it included Harlow and was a marginal I believe.

    Indeed - Norman Tebbit defeated Stan Newens.
  • Options
    rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 58,216
    LOL

    McKenzie talking on 1970 GE replay about the public demand to ban polling during elections.

  • Options
    Carnyx said:

    Sandpit said:

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).

    I'd note that the Lib Dems are highly unlikely to be at 1997 seat levels at the next election, and Starmer will be MORE interested in how the SNP relationship works. But they could plausibly be at the 20-25 level with a fair wind, and are probably an easier partner than the SNP.
    Starmer needs to find a way to neutralise the SNP issue in the minds of floating voters.

    Depending on what the polls look like nearer the time, his strategy might need to be something like a revival of the Lib/Lab pact, either standing aside or fielding only paper candidates in seats where the LDs are the only party that can unseat Con incumbents. That’s going to be difficult to get past his own party, but it might be the only chance he has of being able to disavow an SNP coalition during the campaign.
    His strategy needs to be opposing independence strongly.

    He needs to accept Scotland is lost for the time being and accept that he needs to win in England and Wales.

    If the result of that is the SNP do better anyway in Scotland then fine. Better those seats are SNP than Tory.

    It is the idea that he will work with the SNP, that will cause another Ed Miliband result.
    In 2017 Labour in Scotland seems to have had a policy of encouraging people to vote Tory rather than SNP to keep the SNP out. Both Ian Murray and Kezia Dugdale expressed this view. I'm surprised they are still in the party!

    Of course that did not go too well. Whjat you suggest is at least rational!
    For some reason in the 2017 election Labour got 7 seats in Scotland, not sure why that was. Presumably those seats can be won again.

    Labour needs to be far smarter about standing in seats, allocating resources. Fighting the Lib Dems, Greens and the SNP in actual seats is pointless when Labour can't win them.

    A progressive alliance with the Lib Dems might go down well - but any deals with the SNP will kill any support for Labour stone dead. Labour needs to make it clear it won't deal with the SNP (even if ultimately, they do).
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    MattW said:

    Starting on the 1970 Election.

    Interesting that they think the Tories won Salford because of houses being built / upgraded.

    And an Asian interviewee praising Wedgwood Benn for standing up against what I think was the racialist tone of the Lab government.

    Then a review of the attiudes of the NZ / OZ governments.

    Interesting times.

    And to Enoch Powell ... "will you continue your alliance with the far Left - people like Michael Foot". Then Powell mugging the interviewer.

    I think that was all correct. Will check though.

    They did not win Salford!
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    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    I doubt Starmer gives her a moments thought

    Nor does be need to
    If Starmer has any sense, he'd give some consideration to how to work with the Lib Dems.

    The Corbyn approach was to see them as essentially a party of the left that needed to be crushed by constantly pointing to the "evils" of the Coalition and calling them Tories. You can see the logic but, in practice, about as many ex-Lib Dems responded by voting for the real Tories as by voting Labour. This was broadly a wash in Tory/Labour seats, and a straightforward gift to the Tories in seats where Labour weren't a factor.

    Probably the better model is Blair/Ashdown. Blair had no compunction about going toe to toe in by-elections (Labour absolutely did not go easy in the Eastleigh and Littleborough & Saddleworth by-elections when Blair was a new leader trying to prove himself). But, ultimately, he correctly saw it as useful to have a centrist Lib Dems (i.e. not nibbling too much at his left fringe) as they'd soak up disgruntled Tories and pin Conservative resources down in quite a few seats.

    Blair also realised the personal relationship was important. In a closer election, the Lib Dems' 46 MPs in 1997 would have been helpful for him. As it turns out, he simply didn't need them. But his relationship with Ashdown was such that the safety net was there for Blair had that election campaign gone poorly for Labour. Contrast the relationships between Clegg, Cameron, and Brown/the Brownites. I don't think the maths could have worked anyway in 2010 but there's no question that Clegg was vastly more personally comfortable with Cameron than Brown (who never believed in cultivating the relationship at all).

    I'd note that the Lib Dems are highly unlikely to be at 1997 seat levels at the next election, and Starmer will be MORE interested in how the SNP relationship works. But they could plausibly be at the 20-25 level with a fair wind, and are probably an easier partner than the SNP.
    Not true of Littleborough & Saddleworth at the 1995 by election.Labour fought a good campaign and came in a strong second to the LDs - and went on to win the seat in 1997! Margaret Beckett was Acting Leader at the time of the 1994 Eastleigh by election - but again Labour ended up in second place.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    I'm not sure what they even hope to gain with such a stance. What does it benefit Corbyn or Corbynism to talk up its electoral successes, since it'll just make obtaining actual success even harder.
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    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744

    LOL

    McKenzie talking on 1970 GE replay about the public demand to ban polling during elections.

    Brilliant. It would remove so much to talk about though, and no one wants that.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744

    Grayling appears to have the half-life radium-226. He could take a public dump on the Cenotaph and be revealed to have punched Vera Lynn yet still be popping up in various roles in Tory governments.

    https://twitter.com/StevePeers/status/1274297504276910087?s=20

    Has a hashtag dated as badly as #StopTheCoup?
    That depends if any millennial cults are on twitter proclaiming the day of judgement/ascension etc through a hashtag.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231
    edited June 2020

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    However you look at it, there is a definite difference between getting a pounding after 13 years in government after three years of major economic turmoil, and getting an absolute horse whipping after 10 years in opposition when the government has been struggling with a sluggish economy and anaemic public sector and looked as though it is about to implode due to personality clashes for months.

    And the comparison is not in favour of the latter.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,060
    kle4 said:

    LOL

    McKenzie talking on 1970 GE replay about the public demand to ban polling during elections.

    Brilliant. It would remove so much to talk about though, and no one wants that.
    You'd just need to produce statistics by other means. Perhaps a whole new science of electoral divination would develop.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231
    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Do you remember the Menzies Campbell rap for the 2007 locals?
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744

    kle4 said:

    LOL

    McKenzie talking on 1970 GE replay about the public demand to ban polling during elections.

    Brilliant. It would remove so much to talk about though, and no one wants that.
    You'd just need to produce statistics by other means. Perhaps a whole new science of electoral divination would develop.
    I only take note of divinations by prophetic octopi and the like.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    ydoethur said:

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    However you look at it, there is a definite difference between getting a pounding after 13 years in government after three years of major economic turmoil, and getting an absolute horse whipping after 10 years in opposition when the government has been struggling with a sluggish economy and anaemic public sector and looked as though it is about to implode due to personality clashes for months.

    And the comparison is not in favour of the latter.
    I don't disagree - though I suspect that were the election held now , Corbyn would do a fair bit better.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Do you remember the Menzies Campbell rap for the 2007 locals?
    I don't actually.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744
    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    However you look at it, there is a definite difference between getting a pounding after 13 years in government after three years of major economic turmoil, and getting an absolute horse whipping after 10 years in opposition when the government has been struggling with a sluggish economy and anaemic public sector and looked as though it is about to implode due to personality clashes for months.

    And the comparison is not in favour of the latter.
    I don't disagree - though I suspect that were the election held now , Corbyn would do a fair bit better.
    That'll teach him to believe his own hype and give Boris what he wanted. He even had me fooled.
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231
    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Do you remember the Menzies Campbell rap for the 2007 locals?
    I don't actually.
    Trigger warning:

    It’s embarrassing, cringeworthy, bloody awful and incredibly stupid.

    But it does rather tend to prove your point.
    https://youtu.be/Rh3UlZcRQrY
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,995
    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Doesn't seem that solemn, Robin Day laughing and having some very jovial chats with those being interviewed
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    kle4 said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    However you look at it, there is a definite difference between getting a pounding after 13 years in government after three years of major economic turmoil, and getting an absolute horse whipping after 10 years in opposition when the government has been struggling with a sluggish economy and anaemic public sector and looked as though it is about to implode due to personality clashes for months.

    And the comparison is not in favour of the latter.
    I don't disagree - though I suspect that were the election held now , Corbyn would do a fair bit better.
    That'll teach him to believe his own hype and give Boris what he wanted. He even had me fooled.
    With respect , he had no choice. As soon as the SNP and LDs indicated support for a December election - via a Bill to set aside the FTPA - Corbyn lost his veto.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Do you remember the Menzies Campbell rap for the 2007 locals?
    I don't actually.
    Trigger warning:

    It’s embarrassing, cringeworthy, bloody awful and incredibly stupid.

    But it does rather tend to prove your point.
    https://youtu.be/Rh3UlZcRQrY
    Oh dear - that was really awful.
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,932
    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    They are full of comedians nowadays so be hard to make it a serious programme.
  • Options
    StereotomyStereotomy Posts: 4,092
    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    kle4 said:

    kinabalu said:

    Fishing said:

    I haven't actually seen the Deer Hunter, but am thinking that November might conceivably be more like another Pennsylvania-based movie - Groundhog Day.

    Oh god that is a mood killer. Please may you be wrong. But seriously, yes of course it's possible. Really can't see it though. This is a bizarre experiment which has failed and I think enough truth can now be seen by enough people such that he is unelectable a 2nd time.
    The thing about Groundhog day is in the end the cycle is broken as lessons were learned and everyone is happy, so it may not be a mood killer .
    Right. That is more upbeat. Groundhog Day is a film high on my 'have not seen and really must' list. Top spot currently held by Blade Runner.
    Groundhog day is a bit saccharine in places - but part of it's genius is how the main character tries smart and dumb things. In a way that makes complete sense with the character and the environment he finds himself in.
    I will definitely see it one day. Think I'm bound to like it.
    Groundhog Day was pretty good film, not sure if it will have aged well but reckon it will.
    I saw it again recently. Holds up fine, in my opinion.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,995
    HYUFD said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Doesn't seem that solemn, Robin Day laughing and having some very jovial chats with those being interviewed
    They are now interviewing voters and a young Simon Jenkins at a disco
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,995
    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    They are full of comedians nowadays so be hard to make it a serious programme.
    David Dimbleby interviewed Wilson on election night in 1970 and was still presenting elections on the BBC until Huw Edwards replaced him last year
  • Options
    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,060
    kle4 said:

    kle4 said:

    LOL

    McKenzie talking on 1970 GE replay about the public demand to ban polling during elections.

    Brilliant. It would remove so much to talk about though, and no one wants that.
    You'd just need to produce statistics by other means. Perhaps a whole new science of electoral divination would develop.
    I only take note of divinations by prophetic octopi and the like.
    We'd need to drive the octopi around the country so they could produce a constituency-level prediction.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    They are full of comedians nowadays so be hard to make it a serious programme.
    David Dimbleby interviewed Wilson on election night in 1970 and was still presenting elections on the BBC until Huw Edwards replaced him last year
    He made his first appearance reporting from the Exeter count in 1964 when his father - Richard Dimbleby - was the anchor man. 1979 was his first year in that role himself.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,995
    edited June 2020
    justin124 said:

    HYUFD said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    They are full of comedians nowadays so be hard to make it a serious programme.
    David Dimbleby interviewed Wilson on election night in 1970 and was still presenting elections on the BBC until Huw Edwards replaced him last year
    He made his first appearance reporting from the Exeter count in 1964 when his father - Richard Dimbleby - was the anchor man. 1979 was his first year in that role himself.
    A young John Humphreys now on saying the low swing to the Tories in Lancashire may be as the Protestant working class did not turn out so much for the Tories
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983
    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    ydoethur said:

    justin124 said:

    I am not watching today's 1970 Broadcast , but in my view election results programmes were far better in those days. For the last 25 years or so , they have become much more of a chat show format and rather treated as entertainment.The serious solemn nature of the occasion has rather been lost - and no longer are viewers presented with every individual constituency result.

    Do you remember the Menzies Campbell rap for the 2007 locals?
    I don't actually.
    Trigger warning:

    It’s embarrassing, cringeworthy, bloody awful and incredibly stupid.

    But it does rather tend to prove your point.
    https://youtu.be/Rh3UlZcRQrY
    Oh dear - that was really awful.
    Extra hard on Ming of course because as a result of all his athletics training his knees were in a very poor state.
  • Options
    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,860

    malcolmg said:

    kinabalu said:

    kinabalu said:

    kle4 said:

    kinabalu said:

    Fishing said:

    I haven't actually seen the Deer Hunter, but am thinking that November might conceivably be more like another Pennsylvania-based movie - Groundhog Day.

    Oh god that is a mood killer. Please may you be wrong. But seriously, yes of course it's possible. Really can't see it though. This is a bizarre experiment which has failed and I think enough truth can now be seen by enough people such that he is unelectable a 2nd time.
    The thing about Groundhog day is in the end the cycle is broken as lessons were learned and everyone is happy, so it may not be a mood killer .
    Right. That is more upbeat. Groundhog Day is a film high on my 'have not seen and really must' list. Top spot currently held by Blade Runner.
    Groundhog day is a bit saccharine in places - but part of it's genius is how the main character tries smart and dumb things. In a way that makes complete sense with the character and the environment he finds himself in.
    I will definitely see it one day. Think I'm bound to like it.
    Groundhog Day was pretty good film, not sure if it will have aged well but reckon it will.
    I saw it again recently. Holds up fine, in my opinion.
    Its all a bit samey though
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983
    edited June 2020
    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    It's my elder son's 57th birthday shortly! I believe his company pension scheme allows him to retire at 60. That will make me feel old.
    Should, of course, I keep going for another three years.

  • Options
    Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 32,942
    malcolmg said:

    Groundhog Day was pretty good film, not sure if it will have aged well but reckon it will.

    The "digital" clock radio is probably the most dated reference
  • Options
    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,715

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    "Brown could feasibly have formed a Government"
    I'd argue with 'feasibly', but accept 'theoretically'.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    "Brown could feasibly have formed a Government"
    I'd argue with 'feasibly', but accept 'theoretically'.
    Brown already had a Government and could have opted to remain in office for a further two weeks until defeated on the Queens Speech.
  • Options
    logical_songlogical_song Posts: 9,715
    justin124 said:

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    "Brown could feasibly have formed a Government"
    I'd argue with 'feasibly', but accept 'theoretically'.
    Brown already had a Government and could have opted to remain in office for a further two weeks until defeated on the Queens Speech.
    Does that count?
  • Options
    malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 41,932
    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
  • Options
    HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 116,995
    A young Gyles Brandreth interviewed at the Oxford Union
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983

    What I find very troubling is the revisionism that Corbyn didn't do terribly because he got more share of the vote than Brown.

    Except of course, Brown could feasibly have formed a Government, Corbyn had no chance and lost in a near landslide.

    People with these views, are best ignored.

    "Brown could feasibly have formed a Government"
    I'd argue with 'feasibly', but accept 'theoretically'.
    I wouldn't even put it that high; he'd have to get the DUP on-side to do it.
  • Options
    nichomarnichomar Posts: 7,483
    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    And mine
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,971
    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    I was five years old and I remember my parents discussing it the day after. As Tories they were pleasantly surprised by the result. It was, I think, the first time in my life that politics impinged on my consciousness.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,971

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    It's my elder son's 57th birthday shortly! I believe his company pension scheme allows him to retire at 60. That will make me feel old.
    Should, of course, I keep going for another three years.

    Same age as me. My birthday will be on 7 July. Unfortunately, I won’t be in a position to retire at 60.
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,971
  • Options
    TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 40,081
    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    You were on the bevvy and nags in 4th year? An early developer!
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    My experience was very different. There were pass grades 1 - 6 - Grade 1 being a Distinction. Fail grades were 7 - 9. A few years later the pass grades became A - C with Fail grades of D and E. I believe GCSE grades have now reverted to 1-6 with grade 6 being a Distinction.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    It's my elder son's 57th birthday shortly! I believe his company pension scheme allows him to retire at 60. That will make me feel old.
    Should, of course, I keep going for another three years.

    Same age as me. My birthday will be on 7 July. Unfortunately, I won’t be in a position to retire at 60.
    I will be 66 on 8 July.
  • Options
    MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 44,377
    NHS England data out -

    Headline - 71
    Last 7 days - 59
    Yesterday - 6

    image
    image
    image
    image
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,971
    justin124 said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    My experience was very different. There were pass grades 1 - 6 - Grade 1 being a Distinction. Fail grades were 7 - 9. A few years later the pass grades became A - C with Fail grades of D and E. I believe GCSE grades have now reverted to 1-6 with grade 6 being a Distinction.
    1-9. 9 is the top grade.
  • Options
    TresTres Posts: 2,226
    It's always heads I win, tails you lose when the likes of Hartley-Brewer opine on race issues. And I suspect she does not even realise it.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983
    justin124 said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    My experience was very different. There were pass grades 1 - 6 - Grade 1 being a Distinction. Fail grades were 7 - 9. A few years later the pass grades became A - C with Fail grades of D and E. I believe GCSE grades have now reverted to 1-6 with grade 6 being a Distinction.
    IIRC from what my grandchildren tell me, 9 is top, although I believe one can get a 9*.

    I've got some grandchildren teaching for them and others taking them!
  • Options
    ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,971

    justin124 said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    My experience was very different. There were pass grades 1 - 6 - Grade 1 being a Distinction. Fail grades were 7 - 9. A few years later the pass grades became A - C with Fail grades of D and E. I believe GCSE grades have now reverted to 1-6 with grade 6 being a Distinction.
    IIRC from what my grandchildren tell me, 9 is top, although I believe one can get a 9*.

    I've got some grandchildren teaching for them and others taking them!
    Don’t think so. 9 is an approximate equivalent to the old A*, though apparently a bit harder to get.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744
    HYUFD said:
    This is something of a relief to me. Since I am a racist regardless of what I believe or how I act, I guess that means I need do nothing.
  • Options
    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983

    justin124 said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    My experience was very different. There were pass grades 1 - 6 - Grade 1 being a Distinction. Fail grades were 7 - 9. A few years later the pass grades became A - C with Fail grades of D and E. I believe GCSE grades have now reverted to 1-6 with grade 6 being a Distinction.
    IIRC from what my grandchildren tell me, 9 is top, although I believe one can get a 9*.

    I've got some grandchildren teaching for them and others taking them!
    Don’t think so. 9 is an approximate equivalent to the old A*, though apparently a bit harder to get.
    Seems to change with each grandchild who takes the exams! One did them 15 years ago, another 13, then there's a gap due to children not getting married until their late 30's so one did them last year, and is doing A levels next year, and two more are starting the two year run-up in September.
    What is the difference, do any of our educators know, between GCSE and IGCSE?
  • Options
    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,231

    justin124 said:

    malcolmg said:

    justin124 said:

    Tempus fugit . Perhaps it is the downside of being blessed with a very good memory, but I do find it hard emotionally to get my mind to accept the reality that not a single MP elected in 1970 now sits in the House of Commons - indeed the vast majority have passed away.To me , it feels but a few years ago. It was my O level month.

    O levels, a blast from the past. No F passes in those days, it was straight pass or fail. I did mine in 1971, failed every prelim due to bone idleness and horses/drinking and they were not going to let me sit the O levels but I did a couple of weeks work just to show them and passed all 8 easily.
    My experience was very different. There were pass grades 1 - 6 - Grade 1 being a Distinction. Fail grades were 7 - 9. A few years later the pass grades became A - C with Fail grades of D and E. I believe GCSE grades have now reverted to 1-6 with grade 6 being a Distinction.
    IIRC from what my grandchildren tell me, 9 is top, although I believe one can get a 9*.

    I've got some grandchildren teaching for them and others taking them!
    Don’t think so. 9 is an approximate equivalent to the old A*, though apparently a bit harder to get.
    8 is the equivalent of A*. 9 is the grade above that, given to a small cohort within that 8 grade to indicate exceptional achievement.
  • Options
    kle4kle4 Posts: 91,744
    edited June 2020
    eadric said:

    kle4 said:

    HYUFD said:
    This is something of a relief to me. Since I am a racist regardless of what I believe or how I act, I guess that means I need do nothing.
    Yes, this one from L'Oreal's lovely new consultant is especially liberating:

    “Once white people begin to admit that their race is the most violent and oppressive force of nature on Earth, then we can talk.”

    No matter what I do I am part of the most violent and oppressive force on earth and always will be, because of my skin colour.

    So I might as well go out and be horribly violent and oppressive then, at least it will be fun.
    Well, I wouldn't recommend playing up to their racist opinions and I don't intend to change my behaviour, but they are quite clearly a racist and should be reacted to as such.

    Racists should be confronted whoever they are, even if they pretend they are anti-racism. Actions and words reveal the truth.
This discussion has been closed.