0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Quote from: Filo on May 31, 2017, 02:29:49 pmI would n't be surprised to see Labour nick it, Corbyn has out performed May on everything, Labour have momentum and the Tories are retreating at an alarming rate. My gut feeling is a hung Parliament thoughWouldn't it be fun if we end up virtually exactly as we already are? How would May be able to say that she won't call yet another election to 'end the uncertainty' then?
I would n't be surprised to see Labour nick it, Corbyn has out performed May on everything, Labour have momentum and the Tories are retreating at an alarming rate. My gut feeling is a hung Parliament though
Have to say the Tories in general and May in particular have run a pretty wretched campaign. However I'm old enough to remember how poor their campaign was in 1987 (another occasion where they thought they only had to turn up) and they still won a sizeable majority then.
I reckon the higher the turnout the greater Labour's chance of winning. If you look at the campaigns they kind of mirror that too - May is trying to frighten people to not vote Labour (if you are not going to voet for me then at least dont vote for him) whereas Corbyn is trying to engage a lot of the people who dont often vote (under 25's - low earners). We wont know who is successful until next week but I will go for - a high turnout - Labour win, a low turnout - Tory win.
I wouldn't write off the LibDems yet. Their vote is traditionally highly regionalised and national polls don't really take that into account.
Quote from: The Red Baron on May 31, 2017, 04:38:34 pmHave to say the Tories in general and May in particular have run a pretty wretched campaign. However I'm old enough to remember how poor their campaign was in 1987 (another occasion where they thought they only had to turn up) and they still won a sizeable majority then.Only because they started off with an absolutely monumental majority to start with! They lost 40-50 seats of their majority then if I remember correctly, from roughly 144 to about 100..?Imagine them losing that many seats this time!
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on May 31, 2017, 04:44:18 pmQuote from: The Red Baron on May 31, 2017, 04:38:34 pmHave to say the Tories in general and May in particular have run a pretty wretched campaign. However I'm old enough to remember how poor their campaign was in 1987 (another occasion where they thought they only had to turn up) and they still won a sizeable majority then.Only because they started off with an absolutely monumental majority to start with! They lost 40-50 seats of their majority then if I remember correctly, from roughly 144 to about 100..?Imagine them losing that many seats this time!That is true, but if you recall a number of polls were calling it a lot closer than that. I sat up watching TV on election night 1987 (as is my wont!) expecting an all-nighter. After the first dozen results or so it was clear the Tories were in for a comfortable night.
Do you think the General Election turnout will be as big as the Referendum, or back to the level of the 2015 election?
That is true, but if you recall a number of polls were calling it a lot closer than that. I sat up watching TV on election night 1987 (as is my wont!) expecting an all-nighter. After the first dozen results or so it was clear the Tories were in for a comfortable night. An example: I was living in Cambridge at the time, a rare example of a three-way marginal. No-one gave the incumbent Tory a price. It was going to be Labour or the Alliance. In the end the Tory hung on.
Now there is food for thought another hung parliament Could Labour hook up with the SNP or vice versa ,or is that one never going to be on the cards.
Quote from: not on facebook on May 30, 2017, 02:18:06 pmI personally think that Labour will win this election ,not because I don't like but I just don't trust the polls anymore and would not belive what day it was if they told me.It is virtually impossible for Labour to "win" a General Election because of their huge losses in 2015 in Scotland. Until they start making substantial gains there their best hope is to be the largest party in a hung parliament. You make a fair point about polls, but some polling companies have a better track record than others. It is often worth looking at overall trends. At the moment I'm reckoning about a 50 seat CON majority. That's on the basis that the numbers will tighten a little more in the next week.
I personally think that Labour will win this election ,not because I don't like but I just don't trust the polls anymore and would not belive what day it was if they told me.
My clap and cheer readings that I put up and I did point out that the Torys candidate did not get one round of applause after whatever she said.This has got to do with the make up of the selected bums on seats that were present in the crowd that night.The fcuking bbc made out it was an equall share of a cross section in the crowd .what a load of b*llocks as Iam sure the crowd was stacked.No longer can the bbc be said to be neutral ,the set of d**kheads .My stance will now be to never pay a bbc leicence for their troubles and they can try and take it out of my nose.
Those of you that like to tinker with your majority might enjoy playing around on here;Electoral CalculusNowt better than adjusting your variables to give the outcome you want!Trouble with all this debate is that people keep thinking that the past tells you information relevant to this election. What if that does not hold good, and we are in a new (and more volatile) political landscape?
Quote from: not on facebook on June 01, 2017, 04:53:21 pmMy clap and cheer readings that I put up and I did point out that the Torys candidate did not get one round of applause after whatever she said.This has got to do with the make up of the selected bums on seats that were present in the crowd that night.The fcuking bbc made out it was an equall share of a cross section in the crowd .what a load of b*llocks as Iam sure the crowd was stacked.No longer can the bbc be said to be neutral ,the set of d**kheads .My stance will now be to never pay a bbc leicence for their troubles and they can try and take it out of my nose.Yet again you blurt without thought.The audience wasn't chosen by the BBC at all. It was selected by an independent body, Comres, so that there was an equal number of party supporters across the boards as well as a number of undecideds; and it also selected them so as to get a representative brexit/remain balance as well.
The most important at the moment is the use of social media as a communication tool, rather than a reliance on traditional broadcast media.That is not to say that the latter are not important, but they are of declining importance. They also speak to a different demographic. Older voters are much less likely to get political information (and disinformation) from Twitter/Facebook and the rest.All of which means that the flow of information, and its particular relevance to the individual receiving it, is more concentrated depending on the source.Changes in voting intention are likely to be more volatile imo, and this is the key to understanding future predictive responses. All the political parties have got this, but how good they are at using it remains to be seen. The issue for Labour this time is getting younger voters to the polls;Turnout of younger voters holds key to election outcome | Alan Travis | Politics | The GuardianThe issue for the Tories is not to piss off the elders, so that they just don't turn out.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on June 01, 2017, 05:40:57 pmQuote from: not on facebook on June 01, 2017, 04:53:21 pmMy clap and cheer readings that I put up and I did point out that the Torys candidate did not get one round of applause after whatever she said.This has got to do with the make up of the selected bums on seats that were present in the crowd that night.The fcuking bbc made out it was an equall share of a cross section in the crowd .what a load of b*llocks as Iam sure the crowd was stacked.No longer can the bbc be said to be neutral ,the set of d**kheads .My stance will now be to never pay a bbc leicence for their troubles and they can try and take it out of my nose.Yet again you blurt without thought.The audience wasn't chosen by the BBC at all. It was selected by an independent body, Comres, so that there was an equal number of party supporters across the boards as well as a number of undecideds; and it also selected them so as to get a representative brexit/remain balance as well.How many Doncaster/South Yorkshire accents were in evidence when question time was screened from Doncaster?
If the BBC are so biased against the Tories why have they banned their stations playing the Captain Ska song - even though it is set to be No1 in the charts? There's not much Daily Mail reader anguish at this censorship is there.http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/liar-liar-ge2017-petition-radio-one-stations-force-play-theresa-may-protest-song-captain-ska-a7766621.html
Quote from: wilts rover on June 01, 2017, 09:25:07 pmIf the BBC are so biased against the Tories why have they banned their stations playing the Captain Ska song - even though it is set to be No1 in the charts? There's not much Daily Mail reader anguish at this censorship is there.http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/liar-liar-ge2017-petition-radio-one-stations-force-play-theresa-may-protest-song-captain-ska-a7766621.htmlThey can't because of the political balance enforced on the BBC at Election times. They'll be free to play it after 10pm next Thursday.