Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » ChangeUK is in danger of running out of steam and it has only

SystemSystem Posts: 11,002
edited April 2019 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » ChangeUK is in danger of running out of steam and it has only itself to blame

Having to face two big elections in a very short period of time looks as though it has taken its toll on TIG following what appear to have been a number of strategic mistakes.

Read the full story here


«134

Comments

  • BalrogBalrog Posts: 207
    Is this where I say first?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 53,905
    First
  • AndyJSAndyJS Posts: 29,395
    With the Tories collapsing, you'd think it would be a good time to start a new party.
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840
    edited April 2019
    They were/are arrogant, they didn't want the Lib Dems dragging them down or holding them back.

    I wonder if they believed many in the press about how everyone really wanted a centrist alternative. People who wanted to push this theory were able to ignore the last election on the basis that people didn't have a decent centrist alternative because the Lib Dems reputation discounted them.

    If you believe the majority did want centrism and the only reason the Lib Dems didn't make a big breakthrough is because their reputation held them back then CUKs actions make sense. If you read some newspapers and listened to some journalists you would have assumed that all this would have happened quite easily and CUK MPs would be riding a huge wave of popular support just by not being in Corbyn's Labour or the pro Brexit Tories.

    It turns out reality is rather more complicated than some imagine.

    Edit: I enjoyed Ians comment, we should ask(force) him to write a whole thread on the subject!
  • JohnLoonyJohnLoony Posts: 1,790
    They didn't set out to be a party; it didn't even occur to them to become a party until later.
    They started only as a parliamentary group - which, by its very nature, doesn't need a proper specific name - hence the lack of thought about what name to adopt.

    The only raison d'être of the group was (a) we don't like Corbyn/May (b) we don't like Brexit.
    Hence no need for any other policies, and no need for any strategy on how to fight election campaigns.

    Now, fighting elections and persuading voters of policies, is something they never intended to do in the first place.
  • JohnLoonyJohnLoony Posts: 1,790
    AndyJS said:

    With the Tories collapsing, you'd think it would be a good time to start a new party.

    That's what the Brexit Party is.

  • JohnLoonyJohnLoony Posts: 1,790
    85 is the smallest number that can be expressed as the sum of two non-one squares in two different ways.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,140
    JohnLoony said:

    They didn't set out to be a party; it didn't even occur to them to become a party until later.
    They started only as a parliamentary group - which, by its very nature, doesn't need a proper specific name - hence the lack of thought about what name to adopt.

    The only raison d'être of the group was (a) we don't like Corbyn/May (b) we don't like Brexit.
    Hence no need for any other policies, and no need for any strategy on how to fight election campaigns.

    Now, fighting elections and persuading voters of policies, is something they never intended to do in the first place.

    Yup, this all made sense as far as it went. Unfortunately for some reason they then decided to run in the Euro elections.
  • edmundintokyoedmundintokyo Posts: 17,140
    JohnLoony said:

    85 is the smallest number that can be expressed as the sum of two non-one squares in two different ways.

    How did you know I was going to ask that?
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,077

    They were/are arrogant, they didn't want the Lib Dems dragging them down or holding them back.

    I wonder if they believed many in the press about how everyone really wanted a centrist alternative. People who wanted to push this theory were able to ignore the last election on the basis that people didn't have a decent centrist alternative because the Lib Dems reputation discounted them.

    If you believe the majority did want centrism and the only reason the Lib Dems didn't make a big breakthrough is because their reputation held them back then CUKs actions make sense. If you read some newspapers and listened to some journalists you would have assumed that all this would have happened quite easily and CUK MPs would be riding a huge wave of popular support just by not being in Corbyn's Labour or the pro Brexit Tories.

    It turns out reality is rather more complicated than some imagine.

    Edit: I enjoyed Ians comment, we should ask(force) him to write a whole thread on the subject!

    Aren’t you so funny calling them ‘CUKs’ all the time. Ha ha ha.
  • ArtistArtist Posts: 1,882
    Lets see how they do first?
  • TheJezziahTheJezziah Posts: 3,840

    They were/are arrogant, they didn't want the Lib Dems dragging them down or holding them back.

    I wonder if they believed many in the press about how everyone really wanted a centrist alternative. People who wanted to push this theory were able to ignore the last election on the basis that people didn't have a decent centrist alternative because the Lib Dems reputation discounted them.

    If you believe the majority did want centrism and the only reason the Lib Dems didn't make a big breakthrough is because their reputation held them back then CUKs actions make sense. If you read some newspapers and listened to some journalists you would have assumed that all this would have happened quite easily and CUK MPs would be riding a huge wave of popular support just by not being in Corbyn's Labour or the pro Brexit Tories.

    It turns out reality is rather more complicated than some imagine.

    Edit: I enjoyed Ians comment, we should ask(force) him to write a whole thread on the subject!

    Aren’t you so funny calling them ‘CUKs’ all the time. Ha ha ha.
    Parties with long names can get called by their initials, they were the TIGs previously (although not actually a party then) any complaints about their name should be directed at the smart people who came up with it.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 4,560
    I think they were always going to be a failure. They have no big names, no novelty factor and no space on the political spectrum to themselves. When you consider that the SDP had all of those and still flopped at the 1983 election, it is obvious how difficult it is to start a non-regionally-based new party under FPTP.
  • felixfelix Posts: 15,124
    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.
  • TomsToms Posts: 2,478
    edited April 2019
    Apparently originally "chaos" meant a void or vast chasm.
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    You could say the same about the LDs...

    So it seems like a “problem” with Remain voters.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,833
    Fishing said:

    I think they were always going to be a failure. They have no big names, no novelty factor and no space on the political spectrum to themselves. When you consider that the SDP had all of those and still flopped at the 1983 election, it is obvious how difficult it is to start a non-regionally-based new party under FPTP.

    Nigel Farage seems to be doing a good job of it.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,893
    edited April 2019
    Good morning everyone.
    Why do we have party organisations? Surely it's because experience strongly indicates that voters need reminding to get out and actually vote. Doing so is different to answering when someone 'phones you up, or stops you in the street and and asks a question.
    And there needs to be a feeling that 'whatever it is' needs to happen.
    So Change isn't going to get very far beyond Fleet Street (or Wapping nowadays) without a lot of people actually going out and talking to ordinary folk. And so far as I can see at the moment they're all generals and no foot-soldiers.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,833

    They were/are arrogant, they didn't want the Lib Dems dragging them down or holding them back.

    I wonder if they believed many in the press about how everyone really wanted a centrist alternative. People who wanted to push this theory were able to ignore the last election on the basis that people didn't have a decent centrist alternative because the Lib Dems reputation discounted them.

    If you believe the majority did want centrism and the only reason the Lib Dems didn't make a big breakthrough is because their reputation held them back then CUKs actions make sense. If you read some newspapers and listened to some journalists you would have assumed that all this would have happened quite easily and CUK MPs would be riding a huge wave of popular support just by not being in Corbyn's Labour or the pro Brexit Tories.

    It turns out reality is rather more complicated than some imagine.

    Edit: I enjoyed Ians comment, we should ask(force) him to write a whole thread on the subject!

    Aren’t you so funny calling them ‘CUKs’ all the time. Ha ha ha.
    They’re not the first organisation (and won’t be the last) to fail to run a proposed name or acronym past a cursory google search, Urban Dictionary or even a couple of teenagers. I’m quite sure Farage is going to be happily calling them the EUs cucks for the next five weeks, so they’d better get used to it.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Good morning, everyone.

    Mr. Toms, interesting. According to at least one version of Greek myth, Chaos was the first thing to exist.

    I largely agree with the article. Initially, and then with the trio of Conservative defectors, it seemed like they might snowball. Reports at the time suggested they deliberately delayed/put off further potential Conservative defectors to try and avoid looking too blue a shade.

    Given the state of the major parties, they might yet get more defectors, but after a strong start, the energetic Tiggers have become rather more lacklustre. And I agree with Mr. Sandpit. Calling yourselves the CUKs is about as smart as forming the Group of Independent Mainstream Progressives. Give yourself a daft name and people will take the piss.
  • felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    You could say the same about the LDs...

    So it seems like a “problem” with Remain voters.
    The Lib Dems problems stem from a massive failure of leadership
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    Eighteenth like TIG.

    I am honoured to wake up to my own thread :)
  • TomsToms Posts: 2,478
    MD said " According to at least one version of Greek myth, Chaos was the first thing to exist."

    I think many of these creation myths are (logically when one thinks about it) intertwined. For instance

    "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep...."
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    AndyJS said:

    With the Tories collapsing, you'd think it would be a good time to start a new party.

    Essentially that's the bottom line - they are a lifeboat or shell company should either Tory or Labour go on to sink. If this should happen, their nature will change, probably their name, and certainly their policies - so in that eventuality their current fuzzy position doesn't matter too much.

    But if the two old parties don't sink - or if realignment takes a lot longer than some are expecting - then it is hard to see the current TIG achieving much success. It's possible that, despite a healthy Remain vote in the Euros altogether, TIG itself won't come away with that much. If they happen to fall behind the LibDems it may start to concentrate minds.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Mr. Toms, yeah. The Greeks got some stuff from the Egyptians and I remember reading there are Greco-Norse links. Obviously the three monotheistic religions have large overlaps with bits from other beliefs too.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    Sandpit said:

    Fishing said:

    I think they were always going to be a failure. They have no big names, no novelty factor and no space on the political spectrum to themselves. When you consider that the SDP had all of those and still flopped at the 1983 election, it is obvious how difficult it is to start a non-regionally-based new party under FPTP.

    Nigel Farage seems to be doing a good job of it.
    He is not running in FPTP elections. When he has, he has lost 7 times.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,080
    edited April 2019

    Mr. Toms, interesting. According to at least one version of Greek myth, Chaos was the first thing to exist.

    And in Genesis. That leads to the old joke:

    A farmer, a soldier and a politician were discussing which one of their professions was the oldest. The farmer said it was his, because God planted the Garden of Eden and nobody could do that but a farmer. The soldier said it was his, because God created order from chaos and only a soldier could hope to do that. The politician disputed both of these, on the grounds that somebody must have created the chaos to sort out, and the only people who could do that...
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    Toms said:

    MD said " According to at least one version of Greek myth, Chaos was the first thing to exist."

    I think many of these creation myths are (logically when one thinks about it) intertwined. For instance

    "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep...."

    Because the creation myths are getting across ideas about what creation means, the ideas are similar so the stories will contain familiar elements.

    The earliest versions of Chaos in Greek myth bear a striking resemblance to Nun, the Egyptian waters of chaos out of which the earth and sky were made.

    I like the Egyptian myth as the god Atum literally wanked the other gods into existence...
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    edited April 2019
    I would caveat my own criticisms by remembering that it was nine months between the Limehouse Declaration and the formal launch of the SDP. Judged against that timescale, TIG has come a long way in a very short time.

    However that period did give the Gang of Four time to do the politics - make the speeches, build the support, stake out their territory - and by the time of launch then had critical mass in many constituencies, with funding and staff ready to go.

    I do wonder to what extent the TIG MPs and their personal caseworkers have been dragged immediately into all the admin of founding a new party. For example this weekend TIG says it is interviewing the couple of thousand aspirant MEP candidates (hopefully after some shortlisting!) - how much of a burden is this on the MPs themselves, already tired from the pressure cooker of the Brexit debates. If they aren't making much political impact in the media (and between them they've been appearing on all the usual shows), maybe they are just busy?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,223
    JohnLoony said:

    They didn't set out to be a party; it didn't even occur to them to become a party until later.
    They started only as a parliamentary group - which, by its very nature, doesn't need a proper specific name - hence the lack of thought about what name to adopt.

    The only raison d'être of the group was (a) we don't like Corbyn/May (b) we don't like Brexit.
    Hence no need for any other policies, and no need for any strategy on how to fight election campaigns.

    Now, fighting elections and persuading voters of policies, is something they never intended to do in the first place.

    It's a good example, in a nutshell, of the ongoing failure of self-described centrists to respond to any of the big changes in British politics that have occurred over the last 12 years.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    edited April 2019

    JohnLoony said:

    They didn't set out to be a party; it didn't even occur to them to become a party until later.
    They started only as a parliamentary group - which, by its very nature, doesn't need a proper specific name - hence the lack of thought about what name to adopt.

    The only raison d'être of the group was (a) we don't like Corbyn/May (b) we don't like Brexit.
    Hence no need for any other policies, and no need for any strategy on how to fight election campaigns.

    Now, fighting elections and persuading voters of policies, is something they never intended to do in the first place.

    Yup, this all made sense as far as it went. Unfortunately for some reason they then decided to run in the Euro elections.
    When the TIGgers formed, few expected Euro elections!

    I agree with @IanB2 in part, certainly they have failed to outline a policy platform beyond being anti Brexit, and that is not unique enough, being agreed policy for several other parties.

    As an aside, CUK seems to be an insult favoured by the sort of Incel who thinks "I wouldn't even consider raping you" to be an acceptable form of satire. A cuckold is someone whose partner has been cheating sexually on them, and is a rather curious one for the modern age. It implies that the cuckold cannot control his woman, who is his property, so the term carries a lot of misogynistic baggage. In enlightened times, do we really think that a cuckold is a weak person, or that a real man has such sexual power that adultery by his partner reflects badly on him? Indeed we usually regard such a person as a wronged innocent party, and show sympathy.
  • tpfkartpfkar Posts: 1,546
    IanB2 said:

    Eighteenth like TIG.

    I am honoured to wake up to my own thread :)


    Well deserved Ian. Captures my changing thoughts about TIG very nicely. I was excited at first that the realignment was happening, had lots of time for the individuals involved, and even wondered whether I'd want to join them.

    Now fed up by their tribalism, lack of platform, already lost momentum and feel that they offer precious little that's actually new. Maybe they have more in the tank but I can't see it right now, and I wonder how long till they come begging to join the Lib Dems? Would be hilarious if they manage to splinter on something like that.
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,914
    Yep. TIG looks like turning into a retirement home for disillusioned Cameroon’s. The vacancy in England for a non-racist, internationalist, redistributive party of the centre left remains.
  • ThomasNasheThomasNashe Posts: 4,961
    A bit soon to be writing them off, though I quite understand why the established parties would want to be doing that. Let's see where we are at the next GE, when the vacuum that could potentially be filled by a more pragmatic group will be abundantly evident.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,080
    This looks grim:

    Sri Lanka explosions: 50 killed as churches and hotels targeted
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-48001720
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    edited April 2019

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    You could say the same about the LDs...

    So it seems like a “problem” with Remain voters.
    The Lib Dems problems stem from a massive failure of leadership
    Is there any evidence of that or is that just the easy answer to prevent having to think hard why the strategy fails?

    Not everything is about leadership, there's also the fact the Remain voters are motivated by more than just Remain.

  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,893
    I wonder what difference will a new leader make to the LibDems? I don't see anyone champing at the bit to take over.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190

    JohnLoony said:

    They didn't set out to be a party; it didn't even occur to them to become a party until later.
    They started only as a parliamentary group - which, by its very nature, doesn't need a proper specific name - hence the lack of thought about what name to adopt.

    The only raison d'être of the group was (a) we don't like Corbyn/May (b) we don't like Brexit.
    Hence no need for any other policies, and no need for any strategy on how to fight election campaigns.

    Now, fighting elections and persuading voters of policies, is something they never intended to do in the first place.

    Yup, this all made sense as far as it went. Unfortunately for some reason they then decided to run in the Euro elections.
    My guess is that they saw the opportunity to be the "Remain Party" - hence the thousands of applicants to be candidates.

    An alternative approach for them would have been to explicitly establish as the "Remain Party" - the mirror to Farage's Brexit Party. It would give them a clear identity, might have helped them overshadow the LibDems, and the polarity between the Brexit Party and Remain Party would create an interesting dynamic for the media, each gaining publicity on the back of the other, and ensured more coverage as the Euro elections approached.

    The trouble with that branding is that it is obviously temporary - just as for Farage, when Brexit is either done or abandoned, the imperative goes away. But, firstly, TIG/CUK doesn't appear to offer the basis for a lasting Uk political party, so is surely temporary anyway and secondly, an explicitly temporary vehicle would have paved the way to fold themselves into the LibDems somewhere down the line, once time had put distance between the defectors and their origins; an eventual outcome that already looks the most likely end to this story.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    IanB2 said:

    I would caveat my own criticisms by remembering that it was nine months between the Limehouse Declaration and the formal launch of the SDP. Judged against that timescale, TIG has come a long way in a very short time.

    However that period did give the Gang of Four time to do the politics - make the speeches, build the support, stake out their territory - and by the time of launch then had critical mass in many constituencies, with funding and staff ready to go.

    I do wonder to what extent the TIG MPs and their personal caseworkers have been dragged immediately into all the admin of founding a new party. For example this weekend TIG says it is interviewing the couple of thousand aspirant MEP candidates (hopefully after some shortlisting!) - how much of a burden is this on the MPs themselves, already tired from the pressure cooker of the Brexit debates. If they aren't making much political impact in the media (and between them they've been appearing on all the usual shows), maybe they are just busy?

    I think that a valid point. The SDP were formed mid electoral cycle, and Roy Jenkins was not even a sitting MP initially, Neither was there particularly overwhelming parliamentary business. Since their formation, the Tiggers have been highly involved in very closely fought parliamentary business, in which they have shown considerable organisation and subtlety. While they may lack extra parliamentary organisation, their internal parliamentary discipline and tactics must be the envy of more divided parties.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Dr. Foxy, easier to be undivided with small numbers, though.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    edited April 2019
    IanB2 said:

    I would caveat my own criticisms by remembering that it was nine months between the Limehouse Declaration and the formal launch of the SDP. Judged against that timescale, TIG has come a long way in a very short time.

    However that period did give the Gang of Four time to do the politics - make the speeches, build the support, stake out their territory - and by the time of launch then had critical mass in many constituencies, with funding and staff ready to go.

    I do wonder to what extent the TIG MPs and their personal caseworkers have been dragged immediately into all the admin of founding a new party. For example this weekend TIG says it is interviewing the couple of thousand aspirant MEP candidates - how much of a burden is this on the MPs themselves, already tired from the pressure cooker of the Brexit debates. If they aren't making much political impact in the media (and between them they've been appearing on all the usual shows), maybe they are just busy?

    An important caveat. When they formed things were moving fast in their direction. Both May and Corbyn and their loony camp followers were becoming more disagreeable by the day. In the vacuum that followed Labour in particular tried to meet their Remainers demands and some degree of stability kicked in.

    Which is where we are now but it's far too early to declare a knock out. The 'breakaways' don't have to do much other than be there and wait for Corbyn and May to revert to type at which point another gaping hole will appear for them to walk into.

    Hopefully by then someone with experience of corporate identities will have grabbed them by the scruff of the neck and sorted out their logos and names
  • SouthamObserverSouthamObserver Posts: 38,914
    Foxy said:

    IanB2 said:

    I would caveat my own criticisms by remembering that it was nine months between the Limehouse Declaration and the formal launch of the SDP. Judged against that timescale, TIG has come a long way in a very short time.

    However that period did give the Gang of Four time to do the politics - make the speeches, build the support, stake out their territory - and by the time of launch then had critical mass in many constituencies, with funding and staff ready to go.

    I do wonder to what extent the TIG MPs and their personal caseworkers have been dragged immediately into all the admin of founding a new party. For example this weekend TIG says it is interviewing the couple of thousand aspirant MEP candidates (hopefully after some shortlisting!) - how much of a burden is this on the MPs themselves, already tired from the pressure cooker of the Brexit debates. If they aren't making much political impact in the media (and between them they've been appearing on all the usual shows), maybe they are just busy?

    I think that a valid point. The SDP were formed mid electoral cycle, and Roy Jenkins was not even a sitting MP initially, Neither was there particularly overwhelming parliamentary business. Since their formation, the Tiggers have been highly involved in very closely fought parliamentary business, in which they have shown considerable organisation and subtlety. While they may lack extra parliamentary organisation, their internal parliamentary discipline and tactics must be the envy of more divided parties.

    Chuka, Heidi Allen and Luciana Bergen have interesting views and wide political hinterlands. The rest are less compelling, to say the least. Soubry and, to an extent, Wollaston have been very doughty on Brexit, but they are clearly mainstream, one nation Tories. That’s where TIG is heading. Maybe there’ll be another split!

  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    edited April 2019
    And to complete the counterfactual, the other approach they might have taken is to have done some hard thinking about staking out some political territory at the beginning. Analysis seems to suggest the 'gap' in the political offering is in the culturally conservative economically soft left space, and I don't think TIG would have had too much difficulty positioning themselves there. At least the shifts or compromises the various defectors were prepared to make would have been upfront.

    I am however sceptical that this gap really exists. Despite the freebooting economics of Farage, UKIP as a party was pretty interventionist in its policy and certainly not economically libertarian.

    And, further, were it not for Brexit I think May's intention was to move the Tories toward this space. ConHome is full of moans about the Conservatives' Milibandish approach, and policies such as the fuel price cap or the potential changes to tenancy arrangements are hardly right wing economics.

    Except possibly for Farage (and surely his incentive will be to say as little about non-Brexit policy as possible, for the time being?), no-one at all is offering economic liberalism right now. It appears to have gone out of fashion.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Inside Labour there is a very strong default to staying and fighting it out. The SDP showed what the TIG are doing is unlikely to work

    It is the LDs who should have grabbed this lifeline for all it was worth. Whilst they have the remnants of a party organisation, they have no political personalities nor policies able to cut through. They should have made a bold move.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190

    Yep. TIG looks like turning into a retirement home for disillusioned Cameroon’s. The vacancy in England for a non-racist, internationalist, redistributive party of the centre left remains.

    Except that does set out the LibDem self image quite clearly. Add in environmentalist and individualist and you are pretty much there.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    edited April 2019
    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of Remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
  • FregglesFreggles Posts: 3,486
    I note also that Change UK's slogan#ChangePolitics has been hijacked by the Brexit Party: "#ChangePoliticsForGood"
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473

    Dr. Foxy, easier to be undivided with small numbers, though.

    True in part, though small parties such as UKIP, BNP and various Trotskyite factions are notoriously factional and fissile.

    I suppose we shall see some formerly large parties shringing to a similar size to improve their internal discipline :)
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,962

    I wonder what difference will a new leader make to the LibDems? I don't see anyone champing at the bit to take over.

    Moran has shit the bed so it'll have to be the other one (can't remember the name but I'm sure she's just terrific at dog shit politics) when Vince goes away to play Monty Burns in The Simpsons live action movie.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,223
    FPT - the obsession of so many Tory members and Leavers with cancelling HS2, seemingly as a test of soundness and on a par with withdrawing from the EU, is really bizzare.

    I couldn't think of two more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    edited April 2019
    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 55,223

    Yep. TIG looks like turning into a retirement home for disillusioned Cameroon’s. The vacancy in England for a non-racist, internationalist, redistributive party of the centre left remains.

    They think they are that party.

    I'd say disillusioned Blarities, personally.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of Remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    Yes, that is the Remainers dilemma at these Euro elections. Under the Dehondt system do I vote LD, Green or ChangeUK in the EM? or for Labour? The latter is less Remainey, but the local candidates are sound on Europe and much more likely to take seats off the Tories. Currently in the East Midlands we are L1, UKIP2, Con2.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 12,962

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901

    Yep. TIG looks like turning into a retirement home for disillusioned Cameroon’s. The vacancy in England for a non-racist, internationalist, redistributive party of the centre left remains.

    They think they are that party.

    I'd say disillusioned Blarities, personally.
    You miss the point of Blair. The whole point was to get Labour into power, so that we might actually achieve something. Mucking about with a dozen MPs is an anathema to whole spirit of the thing.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    Dura_Ace said:

    I wonder what difference will a new leader make to the LibDems? I don't see anyone champing at the bit to take over.

    Moran has shit the bed so it'll have to be the other one (can't remember the name but I'm sure she's just terrific at dog shit politics) when Vince goes away to play Monty Burns in The Simpsons live action movie.
    I don't think Layla has blown it, but also would not rule out Tom Brake and Ed Davey from standing as well as Jo Swinson.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    edited April 2019
    Interesting the Guardian on line defending the middle-class know-it-alls by attacking the middle-class know-it-alls who complain about middle-class know-it-alls.

    Live and let live, I say. As long as the middle-class know-it-alls bugger up London amd stay there, they can do what they want.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Foxy said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    I wonder what difference will a new leader make to the LibDems? I don't see anyone champing at the bit to take over.

    Moran has shit the bed so it'll have to be the other one (can't remember the name but I'm sure she's just terrific at dog shit politics) when Vince goes away to play Monty Burns in The Simpsons live action movie.
    I don't think Layla has blown it, but also would not rule out Tom Brake and Ed Davey from standing as well as Jo Swinson.
    Meh vs meh vs meh. Chuka or Allen would make better LD leaders.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    Foxy said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of Remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    Yes, that is the Remainers dilemma at these Euro elections. Under the Dehondt system do I vote LD, Green or ChangeUK in the EM? or for Labour? The latter is less Remainey, but the local candidates are sound on Europe and much more likely to take seats off the Tories. Currently in the East Midlands we are L1, UKIP2, Con2.
    To be honest the least important thing this time is the candidates - it really doesn't matter. Quite probably they won't be in office for long, and even in office they have no individual influence on the outcome. All that really matters is how the election result is interpreted in a Brexit context.

    Which means voting either Labour or Tory isn't sending a clear message (except in the Tory case the impossible scenario of a thumping Tory vote would I guess at least give May's deal a following wind. With Labour, the same result would simply be a vote of confidence for sitting on the fence).

    Despite their own policy, I don't think Green will be seen as primarily Remain vote. So remainers are left with TIG v LibDem, and it will be interesting to see if the polls start to clarify which of them is out front.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    CD13 said:

    Interesting the Guardian on line defending the middle-class know-it-alls by attacking the middle-class know-it-alls who complain about middle-class know-it-alls.

    Live and let live, I say. As long as the middle-class know-it-alls bugger up London amd stay there, they can do what they want.

    Considering middle-class know-it-alls are a substantial proportion of the voting public and an increasingly active one, parties ought not be too dismissive of them. Or come the next election they may well regret it. The Extinction Rebellion protests are easy to mock, but have been very effective at dominating the news narrative, and slightly bemused sympathy is a very common reaction, even it seems by many of those disrupted by the protests.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    IanB2 said:

    Foxy said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of Remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    Yes, that is the Remainers dilemma at these Euro elections. Under the Dehondt system do I vote LD, Green or ChangeUK in the EM? or for Labour? The latter is less Remainey, but the local candidates are sound on Europe and much more likely to take seats off the Tories. Currently in the East Midlands we are L1, UKIP2, Con2.
    To be honest the least important thing this time is the candidates - it really doesn't matter. Quite probably they won't be in office for long, and even in office they have no individual influence on the outcome. All that really matters is how the election result is interpreted in a Brexit context.

    Which means voting either Labour or Tory isn't sending a clear message (except in the Tory case the impossible scenario of a thumping Tory vote would I guess at least give May's deal a following wind. With Labour, the same result would simply be a vote of confidence for sitting on the fence).

    Despite their own policy, I don't think Green will be seen as primarily Remain vote. So remainers are left with TIG v LibDem, and it will be interesting to see if the polls start to clarify which of them is out front.
    Success will be measured on vote share and seats won. The small parties are not in a strong position on either.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Dr. Foxy, dominating a news cycle does not mean people like the story, though. Notre Dame being on fire got a lot of coverage, but I doubt that means most viewers were thinking "Hmm. Cathedral inferno. Cool."
  • SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    edited April 2019
    blockquote class="Quote" rel="Jonathan">

    Yep. TIG looks like turning into a retirement home for disillusioned Cameroon’s. The vacancy in England for a non-racist, internationalist, redistributive party of the centre left remains.

    They think they are that party.

    I'd say disillusioned Blarities, personally.
    You miss the point of Blair. The whole point was to get Labour into power, so that we might actually achieve something. Mucking about with a dozen MPs is an anathema to whole spirit of the thing.

    Well Labour "achieved " an illegal war, the ramifications of which are still being felt, and a 156 billion deficit.. best to keep Labour out of power.. Labour always end up with higher unemployment that when they take office. You know it doesn't make sense to vote Labour.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,893
    Jonathan said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
    I really, really don't think the LibDems will prop up the Tories again for at least 20 years.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190

    FPT - the obsession of so many Tory members and Leavers with cancelling HS2, seemingly as a test of soundness and on a par with withdrawing from the EU, is really bizzare.

    I couldn't think of two more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    They could both be seen as very expensive fantasy projects. Both can be criticised from a standpoint of applying "common sense" argumentation devoid of actual fact or analysis. And having a proper high speed rail network is a European idea, after all.

    Tests of soundness aren't new, of course, and political activists on left and right love identifying totemic issues such as these that allow a shortcut to working out whether someone is "one of us" or not.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,080
    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Well, I think they're at least coming round to it after the mess he's made of his Cabinet brief.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    IanB2 said:

    Foxy said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of Remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    Yes, that is the Remainers dilemma at these Euro elections. Under the Dehondt system do I vote LD, Green or ChangeUK in the EM? or for Labour? The latter is less Remainey, but the local candidates are sound on Europe and much more likely to take seats off the Tories. Currently in the East Midlands we are L1, UKIP2, Con2.
    To be honest the least important thing this time is the candidates - it really doesn't matter. Quite probably they won't be in office for long, and even in office they have no individual influence on the outcome. All that really matters is how the election result is interpreted in a Brexit context.

    Which means voting either Labour or Tory isn't sending a clear message (except in the Tory case the impossible scenario of a thumping Tory vote would I guess at least give May's deal a following wind. With Labour, the same result would simply be a vote of confidence for sitting on the fence).

    Despite their own policy, I don't think Green will be seen as primarily Remain vote. So remainers are left with TIG v LibDem, and it will be interesting to see if the polls start to clarify which of them is out front.
    I am an LD member, and we have little chance in the EM. Reducing the number of UKIP/Con/Brexit MEPs by tactical voting is not an unreasonable objective.

    Labour coming top of the Euros is very possible, even probable, and sets up a very different post election narrative.

    In the locals, LD all the way, though as I am working both this weekend and next, delivering Focus leaflets is probably as active as I can get.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901

    Jonathan said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
    I really, really don't think the LibDems will prop up the Tories again for at least 20 years.
    Of course they would given the right leader, circumstances and offer. It would be done in the ‘national interest’ again. They won’t resist being ‘important’ again.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    Freggles said:

    I note also that Change UK's slogan#ChangePolitics has been hijacked by the Brexit Party: "#ChangePoliticsForGood"

    Both nicked from Paddy Ashdown's 1992 manifesto, of course.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    edited April 2019
    Dr Fox,

    The media is the epitome of middle-class know-it-alls, so it's hardly like to ignore itself. I wouldn't be surprised if most of their kids are on gap-years promoting the cause.

    It's become a fashion accessory rather then a cause. The new quinoa.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Harsh. It’s simply proposed as practical alternative to looting in the no deal scenario. Fox roasted over a brazier is good Brexit eating.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,080
    edited April 2019

    and a 156 billion deficit..

    Really, get your facts right.

    It wasn't £156b.

    It was £167 billion.

    http://image.guardian.co.uk/sys-files/Guardian/documents/2010/03/24/DeficitMountain2.pdf
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
    I really, really don't think the LibDems will prop up the Tories again for at least 20 years.
    Of course they would given the right leader, circumstances and offer. It would be done in the ‘national interest’ again. They won’t resist being ‘important’ again.
    No way is it going to happen when the LDs and Con are polar opposites on the key political issue of Brexit. One or other party would have to do a 180 to make it possible. I suspect the Tories will revert to their long standing postwar enthusiasm for joining Europe, but probably not before spending a decade or two down a nativist rabbit hole.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,893
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
    I really, really don't think the LibDems will prop up the Tories again for at least 20 years.
    Of course they would given the right leader, circumstances and offer. It would be done in the ‘national interest’ again. They won’t resist being ‘important’ again.
    Disagree; suspect that Clegg will carry the same baggage for them as Ramsay Mac does for Labour. Clegg of course has had the sense to get well out of it.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    CD13 said:

    Dr Fox,

    The media is the epitome of middle-class know-it-alls, so it's hardly like to ignore itself. I wouldn't be surprised if most of their kids are on gap-years promoting the cause.

    It's become a fashion accessory rather then a cause. The new quinoa.

    Do you prefer pseudo upper class know-it-alls like Mogg? Or pseudo lower class know-it-alls like Francois?
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Actually remainerdom is the more rational position for the hunting fraternity. Ease of access to Ireland is critical for those wanting to enjoy the real thing.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    On topic - although the author clearly has a political axe to grind - this is a relevant read:

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/18/change-uk-internet-politics-european-elections-party-logo
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 44,473
    CD13 said:

    Dr Fox,

    The media is the epitome of middle-class know-it-alls, so it's hardly like to ignore itself. I wouldn't be surprised if most of their kids are on gap-years promoting the cause.

    It's become a fashion accessory rather then a cause. The new quinoa.

    Tories under estimate them at their own peril! A times ER are rather foolish, but increasingly over the next decade or so peoples are going to be confronted by the realities of climate change. The Tories are on the wrong side of history on this one.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901
    Foxy said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
    I really, really don't think the LibDems will prop up the Tories again for at least 20 years.
    Of course they would given the right leader, circumstances and offer. It would be done in the ‘national interest’ again. They won’t resist being ‘important’ again.
    No way is it going to happen when the LDs and Con are polar opposites on the key political issue of Brexit. One or other party would have to do a 180 to make it possible. I suspect the Tories will revert to their long standing postwar enthusiasm for joining Europe, but probably not before spending a decade or two down a nativist rabbit hole.
    Why can’t the LD leadership say that then and - given the mess we’re in - say ‘you know what we did our best in coalition , but we made a mistake when we let the Tory genie out of the bottle ‘.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    One problem I have with know-it-alls is that they will happily mention A,C, and E which support their supposition, but totally ignore B, D, and F which don't. I understand - that's normal politics, but it's not science, or didn't used to be.

    But I'm getting old and grumpy.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    CD13 said:

    Interesting the Guardian on line defending the middle-class know-it-alls by attacking the middle-class know-it-alls who complain about middle-class know-it-alls.

    Live and let live, I say. As long as the middle-class know-it-alls bugger up London amd stay there, they can do what they want.

    I've asked you before what it is about leaving that excites you so much. A lot of the 'know alls' complaint is that apart from chanting 'referendum result' no Leaver seems able to give a coherent reason for wanting to leave.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Dr. Foxy, people love an end times story. It's why so many people have zombie apocalypse plans. The nice thing about zombie enthusiasts is they don't ask other people to pay taxes to fund anti-zombie government programmes.

    Not to mention, there's rising solar and geothermal energy. (Wind too, though wind is stupid). The idea there's no move to reduce carbon dioxide emissions is fictional. The protesters are bleating because it's not happening right now and so they're stamping their feet.

    If they actually want to point fingers, they should head over to China. The kid glove response of the Met is unlikely to be reproduced in Beijing, though...
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr Roger,

    No reason will be coherent to you. That's called a subjective view. We all have them.

    I'm coherent, you're confused, he's barmy.

    That's politics.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Mr. CD13, the treatment of those who disagree as heretics is unwelcome too. Scepticism should be the default position of science, not dogma.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    CD13 said:

    One problem I have with know-it-alls is that they will happily mention A,C, and E which support their supposition, but totally ignore B, D, and F which don't. I understand - that's normal politics, but it's not science, or didn't used to be.

    But I'm getting old and grumpy.

    Your last sentence explains it all ;)
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,893
    Jonathan said:

    Foxy said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Roger said:

    felix said:

    The opinion polling suggests around 55% are very keen to stay in the EU so it's odd that a party focussed on this objective fails to gain the same sort of traction as the Brexit party. Either the issue itself lacks deep support compared to others or there's been a massive failure of leadership.

    Too difficult a choice. Labour offers a small chance of remaining but a big chance of getting it through. The lib Dems offer a 100% chance of Remaining but with no chance of getting it through. The Tigs are somewhere in the middle. The Brexiteers have no such dilemma. They have the Tories to push it through and the Brexit Party to kick them up the backside.
    If you are on the centre left there is no point voting LD. They’re too weak to achieve anything and there is always that suspicion if they were to do well they would prop up the Tories.

    Best avoided until they reform and regroup. Hence TIG was a lost opportunity.
    I really, really don't think the LibDems will prop up the Tories again for at least 20 years.
    Of course they would given the right leader, circumstances and offer. It would be done in the ‘national interest’ again. They won’t resist being ‘important’ again.
    No way is it going to happen when the LDs and Con are polar opposites on the key political issue of Brexit. One or other party would have to do a 180 to make it possible. I suspect the Tories will revert to their long standing postwar enthusiasm for joining Europe, but probably not before spending a decade or two down a nativist rabbit hole.
    Why can’t the LD leadership say that then and - given the mess we’re in - say ‘you know what we did our best in coalition , but we made a mistake when we let the Tory genie out of the bottle ‘.
    Fair question. However hindsight is a wonderful thing! I often idly wonder what will happen next year when some will have 20/20 visions.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 37,606

    They were/are arrogant, they didn't want the Lib Dems dragging them down or holding them back.

    I wonder if they believed many in the press about how everyone really wanted a centrist alternative. People who wanted to push this theory were able to ignore the last election on the basis that people didn't have a decent centrist alternative because the Lib Dems reputation discounted them.

    If you believe the majority did want centrism and the only reason the Lib Dems didn't make a big breakthrough is because their reputation held them back then CUKs actions make sense. If you read some newspapers and listened to some journalists you would have assumed that all this would have happened quite easily and CUK MPs would be riding a huge wave of popular support just by not being in Corbyn's Labour or the pro Brexit Tories.

    It turns out reality is rather more complicated than some imagine.

    Edit: I enjoyed Ians comment, we should ask(force) him to write a whole thread on the subject!

    Aren’t you so funny calling them ‘CUKs’ all the time. Ha ha ha.
    It was a stupid name.
  • brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    edited April 2019
    IanB2 said:

    FPT - the obsession of so many Tory members and Leavers with cancelling HS2, seemingly as a test of soundness and on a par with withdrawing from the EU, is really bizzare.

    I couldn't think of two more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    They could both be seen as very expensive fantasy projects. Both can be criticised from a standpoint of applying "common sense" argumentation devoid of actual fact or analysis. And having a proper high speed rail network is a European idea, after all.
    Ok, you want facts and analysis. Let’s start with this, what specifically is the economic benefit of HS2? And who sees that benefit?

    And of course high speed rail matters more to continental Europe because they have a very different heavy rail network to ours; theirs being built around infrequent long distance services where the U.K. being smaller and having little in the way of external connections is more like a national metro. There’s a reason we aren’t like Europe.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr Jonathan,

    I'm amused by both Mogg and Francois. So am I not allowed to be amused by a seventeen-year-old know-it-all?
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,901

    Dr. Foxy, people love an end times story. It's why so many people have zombie apocalypse plans. The nice thing about zombie enthusiasts is they don't ask other people to pay taxes to fund anti-zombie government programmes.

    Not to mention, there's rising solar and geothermal energy. (Wind too, though wind is stupid). The idea there's no move to reduce carbon dioxide emissions is fictional. The protesters are bleating because it's not happening right now and so they're stamping their feet.

    If they actually want to point fingers, they should head over to China. The kid glove response of the Met is unlikely to be reproduced in Beijing, though...

    Zombies aren’t real. Climate change is real. The impact of climate change is real.

    Politics needs to grow up. If you eat burgers 24/7 you will eventually die early from it, even if an individual burger doesn’t kill you.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,180
    edited April 2019
    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Nothing atrocious about it it's a perfectly sensible way of killing foxes.

    You'd better watch your Emma Thompson tendencies there Dura they can get out of hand if left unchecked.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,180
    edited April 2019
    Meanwhile did Amir quit? Perhaps. Probably.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190
    Ishmael_Z said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Actually remainerdom is the more rational position for the hunting fraternity. Ease of access to Ireland is critical for those wanting to enjoy the real thing.
    I'd be amazed if that community were predominantly Remain. In any case, for people at least, access to Ireland isn't a Brexit issue.
  • Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    All leavers?
  • Yep. TIG looks like turning into a retirement home for disillusioned Cameroon’s. The vacancy in England for a non-racist, internationalist, redistributive party of the centre left remains.

    They think they are that party.

    I'd say disillusioned Blarities, personally.
    So not redistributive at all, then.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 47,190

    IanB2 said:

    FPT - the obsession of so many Tory members and Leavers with cancelling HS2, seemingly as a test of soundness and on a par with withdrawing from the EU, is really bizzare.

    I couldn't think of two more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    They could both be seen as very expensive fantasy projects. Both can be criticised from a standpoint of applying "common sense" argumentation devoid of actual fact or analysis. And having a proper high speed rail network is a European idea, after all.
    Ok, you want facts and analysis. Let’s start with this, what specifically is the economic benefit of HS2? And who sees that benefit?

    And of course high speed rail matters more to continental Europe because they have a very different heavy rail network to ours; theirs being built around infrequent long distance services where the U.K. being smaller and having little in the way of external connections is more like a national metro. There’s a reason we aren’t like Europe.
    The argument as I understand it is that the main north-south railway lines are already running close to full capacity and more 'bandwidth' is needed. If we are going to have to build a new railway, it might as well be a fit for purpose modern high speed one.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,960
    Mr. Jonathan, even if we assume you're correct (and I disagree with your implied position that it's proven the activities of mankind are materially altering the climate), there's one climate. Focusing on the UK, which is rapidly reducing its carbon dioxide emissions, is dumb.

    But convenient if you want to twat about in the centre of London and annoy law-abiding people just trying to make a living and go about their business.
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr Dancer,

    Well said. Scepticism is good.

    Lord Kelvin said in around 1900, that the task of Physics was finished. All that was needed now was more and more accuracy - the decimal points. Within the next decade, quantum mechanics and relativity appeared.

    Carbon dioxide has the potential to warm the atmosphere and may well do so. How much and to what extent depends on many confounding factors. That's why predicting accurately is not yet possible. Those perky unknown unknowns.
  • Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    IanB2 said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Actually remainerdom is the more rational position for the hunting fraternity. Ease of access to Ireland is critical for those wanting to enjoy the real thing.
    I'd be amazed if that community were predominantly Remain. In any case, for people at least, access to Ireland isn't a Brexit issue.
    I am part of "that community." I don't think it has a distinctive position on brexit one way or the other.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,180
    Ishmael_Z said:

    IanB2 said:

    Ishmael_Z said:

    Dura_Ace said:

    wo more totally disconnected political issues if I tried, but I've really confused several of them by my support for both propositions and made another err.. quite cross.

    Fox hunting. Leavers fucking love that atrocity without fail.
    Actually remainerdom is the more rational position for the hunting fraternity. Ease of access to Ireland is critical for those wanting to enjoy the real thing.
    I'd be amazed if that community were predominantly Remain. In any case, for people at least, access to Ireland isn't a Brexit issue.
    I am part of "that community." I don't think it has a distinctive position on brexit one way or the other.
    I'd put it at 60:40 Leave.
This discussion has been closed.