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Quote from: tyke1962 on May 06, 2023, 09:32:12 pmQuote from: drfchound on May 06, 2023, 09:01:45 pmI would be interested to hear what anyone thinks about the alarming drop in the Labour lead in recent polls.When they had a twenty odd point lead recently it was mentioned a few times on here but not much has been said recently about the current position.The Tories are polling consistently at around 28% what looks to be happening is that it's the Dems who have picked up a little and eaten in to the potential Labour vote .That suggests Labour could be the biggest Party but short of a working majority as things are looking at the moment and this pattern continues .I personally think Labour have probably regained the Red Wall vote but the Dems are eating in to the Tory shires .If we see this at the GE then Keith is going to have to strike a deal with the Dems , either a coalition or some giveaways in return for the Dems support in parliament .I suspect PR would be one of them and maybe rejoining the Single Market .The other big factor is what is going to happen in Scotland - will the mess the SNP is getting into make them lose seats, and probably to Labour? That might mean Labour wouldn't need another party's support after the GE.The other thing is I'd be surprised if the LibDems would want to go into a coalition after the experience of the last time they did so ruining them as a party of protest - how can you protest by voting LibDem if they're part of the government you're protesting about? That's the main reason they were decimated in 2015. If Labour need LibDem support I think it would more likely be on a confidence and supply basis.
Quote from: drfchound on May 06, 2023, 09:01:45 pmI would be interested to hear what anyone thinks about the alarming drop in the Labour lead in recent polls.When they had a twenty odd point lead recently it was mentioned a few times on here but not much has been said recently about the current position.The Tories are polling consistently at around 28% what looks to be happening is that it's the Dems who have picked up a little and eaten in to the potential Labour vote .That suggests Labour could be the biggest Party but short of a working majority as things are looking at the moment and this pattern continues .I personally think Labour have probably regained the Red Wall vote but the Dems are eating in to the Tory shires .If we see this at the GE then Keith is going to have to strike a deal with the Dems , either a coalition or some giveaways in return for the Dems support in parliament .I suspect PR would be one of them and maybe rejoining the Single Market .
I would be interested to hear what anyone thinks about the alarming drop in the Labour lead in recent polls.When they had a twenty odd point lead recently it was mentioned a few times on here but not much has been said recently about the current position.
Albie.It's true that the raw numbers in local elections shouldn't be looked at too closely.But equally, it's wrong to refuse to take any message from them. The fact that the Tories were hit so hard, so close to the next GE is a major message. And an even bigger one is Labour's strong recovery in the Red Wall seats. That suggests that Labour will be favourite to win back most if not all of the ones they lost in 2019, at the same time that they are recovering strongly in Southern and Midlands urban areas. If they repeat anything like that in those areas next year, and retain the big city seats, that's the recipe Labour needs for a majority, even before you factor in the SNP implosion.
Someone "Blue" is taking them seriously as I have already seen mention of a "movement" to remove Sunak because he has failed as PM and replace him with ?Johnson.Well that would be interesting wouldn't it , but goes to show ( though not prove of course ) that someone IS taking note of the results whether raw data or not
Quote from: drfchound on May 06, 2023, 09:01:45 pmI would be interested to hear what anyone thinks about the alarming drop in the Labour lead in recent polls.When they had a twenty odd point lead recently it was mentioned a few times on here but not much has been said recently about the current position.Then why don't you give us YOUR opinion then hound, instead of lighting the fire for others as per usual.
There's not been that much movement in the polls. At New Year Labour were about 20 points ahead. The last 10 polls have them about 16.5 points ahead. Still a long way up on where things were before Truss set fire to the economy.
On the point of the Greens. I don't really know enough about how much power council's have to embed their own policy if they're of a different party to that in government. Does the Green's taking control of a council outright give them the opportunity to showcase what they're all about in a way they haven't been able to before, by focusing on things like more requiring homes to be more efficient and helping people making those improvements, diverting money to more EV charging infrastructure projects, etc etc?I suppose what I'm asking is, what is within a local council's area of control in contrast to central government and could we now see Mid Suffolk being used to set an example of what the Green's want to achieve?
Quote from: Superspy on May 06, 2023, 08:38:49 amOn the point of the Greens. I don't really know enough about how much power council's have to embed their own policy if they're of a different party to that in government. Does the Green's taking control of a council outright give them the opportunity to showcase what they're all about in a way they haven't been able to before, by focusing on things like more requiring homes to be more efficient and helping people making those improvements, diverting money to more EV charging infrastructure projects, etc etc?I suppose what I'm asking is, what is within a local council's area of control in contrast to central government and could we now see Mid Suffolk being used to set an example of what the Green's want to achieve?York offers an interesting view of the greens. The result in York went against the trend of a green party in the ascendancy.The council has been run by a green/lib Dem coalition for sometime. Over the last three years the green influence has really been felt. Anti car policies, roads closed, city centre car parking limited, more cycleways. It's caused frustration and anger for many.And so to this election. While the lib Dems vote held up pretty well the greens lost all their seats, replaced by Labour who have taken control of the council.It will be interesting to see if the Greens really can push their environmental agenda successfully in other areas.It will also be interesting to see if Labour backtrack on the green initiatives in York. There was a plan to shut Leeman Rd, a main route into the city. I wonder if this will still happen.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on May 07, 2023, 12:43:22 amThere's not been that much movement in the polls. At New Year Labour were about 20 points ahead. The last 10 polls have them about 16.5 points ahead. Still a long way up on where things were before Truss set fire to the economy.Why is Robert Peston telling us on the news that Labours lead is now around 7 to 9 percent from the 20% it was in January.
How do you define "fairly ordinary people" Tyke? The woman in that video was a Labour councillor in 2019. It takes about 10 seconds on Google to find a photo of Corbyn campaigning with her in that election.https://www.alamy.com/labour-leader-jeremy-corbyn-with-labour-candidate-mandy-clare-meeting-locals-during-canvassing-in-winsford-while-on-the-local-election-campaign-trail-image243757476.htmlI think someone is spinning a line here.
I've highlighted the only one l know about. The one who is in the video you posted. The video where she never once said anything about being Labour Councillor. That's enough to put big question marks over this "Ooh, were just normal apolitical local people" line in my mind. If you want to swallow it, fill yer boots.