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Some of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.
Wilts, The Bay Horse is in Hatfield.Oddly enough though I went to Thorne this morning to get some flowers to give to the wife of a friend who died last week.I didn’t see one single Labour poster in a window despite walking half a mile from where I parked into the shopping street I visited.I should say that I didn’t see any Tory ones either.
Quote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:19:13 pmQuote from: Iberian Red on June 01, 2024, 06:09:49 pmQuote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:01:04 pmSome of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.I can summarise all those points and hypothetical questions.You are wrong.Why the constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting in everything you pit on here?You just can't help yourself.If you consider what i've posted as "constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting" then stand up and debate exactly why YOU think so.Posting constant crap to everything that people post won't cut it fella, most already think your a one trick pony, and its gone well past its sell by.Most of Iberians posts are insulting or fishing for responses dd.Just look at his posts today alone and they sum him up to a tee.Just ignore him and he gets more hyped up and posts even more crap.
Quote from: Iberian Red on June 01, 2024, 06:09:49 pmQuote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:01:04 pmSome of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.I can summarise all those points and hypothetical questions.You are wrong.Why the constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting in everything you pit on here?You just can't help yourself.If you consider what i've posted as "constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting" then stand up and debate exactly why YOU think so.Posting constant crap to everything that people post won't cut it fella, most already think your a one trick pony, and its gone well past its sell by.
Quote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:01:04 pmSome of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.I can summarise all those points and hypothetical questions.You are wrong.Why the constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting in everything you pit on here?
Quote from: drfchound on June 01, 2024, 06:45:17 pmQuote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:19:13 pmQuote from: Iberian Red on June 01, 2024, 06:09:49 pmQuote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:01:04 pmSome of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.I can summarise all those points and hypothetical questions.You are wrong.Why the constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting in everything you pit on here?You just can't help yourself.If you consider what i've posted as "constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting" then stand up and debate exactly why YOU think so.Posting constant crap to everything that people post won't cut it fella, most already think your a one trick pony, and its gone well past its sell by.Most of Iberians posts are insulting or fishing for responses dd.Just look at his posts today alone and they sum him up to a tee.Just ignore him and he gets more hyped up and posts even more crap.Lovely post old lad
Quote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:19:13 pmQuote from: Iberian Red on June 01, 2024, 06:09:49 pmQuote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:01:04 pmSome of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.I can summarise all those points and hypothetical questions.You are wrong.Why the constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting in everything you pit on here?You just can't help yourself.If you consider what i've posted as "constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting" then stand up and debate exactly why YOU think so.Posting constant crap to everything that people post won't cut it fella, most already think your a one trick pony, and its gone well past its sell by.Most of Iberians posts are insulting or fishing for responses dd.Just look at his posts today alone and they sum him up to a tee.Just ignore him and he gets more hyped up and posts even more crap.
Quote from: Iberian Red on June 01, 2024, 06:09:49 pmQuote from: danumdon on June 01, 2024, 06:01:04 pmSome of the polls quoting figures like we've seen are scary and dangerous for democracy.For an elected government to have way over 400 seats and the main opposition to be numbered in the 60's is quite frankly what you would expect in some tinpot, despot nations that have democracy as a veil for rampant dictatorial or fascist behaviour.I'm not saying Starmer's party are either of the above but it does make you wonder where the direction of travel would be with a party having this kind of majority?Would i be wrong in saying that a win like this would make any produced manifesto worthless after 22.01 on July 4th?Would the temptation to strip out the manifesto that the election had been fought on to produce a new and much more radical direction be too great for Starmer to resist? or would it be approached in a sensible and pragmatic manner?I'm thinking the former, Starmer is odds on to win with a massive majority, the vested interests in the back rooms will be tempted to go full on and attempt to correct some perceived wrongs very early and quickly, this in itself could well produce some kickback in the acceptance of this type of skulduggery. The feelgood factor that many will have could change very quickly to something very different. Im hoping that sensible and clever people in the party fight this urge. The economy is still very fragile with a great many grey clouds on the horizon, any one of them could turn at a moments notice and quite easily drop a massive pile of sh*t in our general direction. People could turn and change very quickly in this type of scenario, sometimes going all in like this can turn jubilation into nationwide despair very quickly.The warning signs are there and the party leadership need to be level headed and strong, something we have not yet seen, unfortunately.We will soon know the direction of travel.I can summarise all those points and hypothetical questions.You are wrong.Why the constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting in everything you pit on here?You just can't help yourself.If you consider what i've posted as "constant hyperbolism,Dail Heil posting" then stand up and debate exactly why YOU think so.Posting constant crap to everything that people post won't cut it fella, most already think your a one trick pony, and its gone well past its sell by.
Labour to win but not by as much as the polls suggest now.Shy Tories.
Were there any 'shy tories' around in 97?
So there could be some 'shy labour' voters?I would think there are many voters across the political spectrum that don't want to declare who they are going to vote for.
Margaret Beckett once knocked on my door whilst I was watching a particularly interesting, well-acted episode of 'Doctors'.I didn't answer. You don't want to encourage that type of behaviour do you?I mean who knocks on someone's door without calling ahead to make an appointment?(Although I may possibly make an exception in Tommy Toes case).
Quote from: SydneyRover on June 02, 2024, 08:57:17 amSo there could be some 'shy labour' voters?I would think there are many voters across the political spectrum that don't want to declare who they are going to vote for.You mean some of the indignant hard-left may just end up voting Labour despite their current protestations?It might not seem it on here or in some people’s echo chambers but they are nowhere near as important or numerous as centrist swing voters, especially in this FPTP system we have.
Quote from: SydneyRover on June 02, 2024, 08:37:44 amWere there any 'shy tories' around in 97?Not sure but the Labour lead did significantly narrow in the weeks before the GE. Click on “results”.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_1997_United_Kingdom_general_electionThe difference here is that the Conservative Party are performing a lot worse than they did in the mid-90s.But as mentioned on another post, the Labour support is potentially quite shallow. I saw Tom Harwood suggest that this election was about “punishment” more than “policy” and he may have a point to some degree. Not for whole electorate but the swing voters.
Were there any 'shy tories' around in 97?
Quote from: ncRover on June 02, 2024, 08:54:38 amQuote from: SydneyRover on June 02, 2024, 08:37:44 amWere there any 'shy tories' around in 97?Not sure but the Labour lead did significantly narrow in the weeks before the GE. Click on “results”.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_1997_United_Kingdom_general_electionThe difference here is that the Conservative Party are performing a lot worse than they did in the mid-90s.But as mentioned on another post, the Labour support is potentially quite shallow. I saw Tom Harwood suggest that this election was about “punishment” more than “policy” and he may have a point to some degree. Not for whole electorate but the swing voters.I would disagree with your assesment of Labour support being 'shallow'. The Labour support is entirely made up of people who dislike the Tories and want to vote to get them out - that's very clear whatever Tom Harwood says. OK some may vote tactically to achieve that, but it's certain the Labour vote is solid.What's less clear is what the other voters who have abandonded the Tories, the Don't Knows, Won't Vote, Reform voters will do. Do they also want to punish the Tories - or can Sunak win them back. These are the people he is aiming to get onside - and it's not looking good for him at the moment. But yes it could still change, there is plenty of time yet.
NCGenuine question.After the past 14 years, how is any voter who seriously prioritised "sound economics" ever going to support the Tories again?
Quote from: ncRover on June 02, 2024, 09:03:30 amQuote from: SydneyRover on June 02, 2024, 08:57:17 amSo there could be some 'shy labour' voters?I would think there are many voters across the political spectrum that don't want to declare who they are going to vote for.You mean some of the indignant hard-left may just end up voting Labour despite their current protestations?It might not seem it on here or in some people’s echo chambers but they are nowhere near as important or numerous as centrist swing voters, especially in this FPTP system we have.No I mean exactly what I posted, everyone wants to back a winner and there could be plenty waiting till the last minute that go down as undecided that make their mind up when the result is beyond doubt.
Quote from: wilts rover on June 02, 2024, 10:41:32 amQuote from: ncRover on June 02, 2024, 08:54:38 amQuote from: SydneyRover on June 02, 2024, 08:37:44 amWere there any 'shy tories' around in 97?Not sure but the Labour lead did significantly narrow in the weeks before the GE. Click on “results”.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_for_the_1997_United_Kingdom_general_electionThe difference here is that the Conservative Party are performing a lot worse than they did in the mid-90s.But as mentioned on another post, the Labour support is potentially quite shallow. I saw Tom Harwood suggest that this election was about “punishment” more than “policy” and he may have a point to some degree. Not for whole electorate but the swing voters.I would disagree with your assesment of Labour support being 'shallow'. The Labour support is entirely made up of people who dislike the Tories and want to vote to get them out - that's very clear whatever Tom Harwood says. OK some may vote tactically to achieve that, but it's certain the Labour vote is solid.What's less clear is what the other voters who have abandonded the Tories, the Don't Knows, Won't Vote, Reform voters will do. Do they also want to punish the Tories - or can Sunak win them back. These are the people he is aiming to get onside - and it's not looking good for him at the moment. But yes it could still change, there is plenty of time yet.Here is the real existential problem for the Tories. The blue boxes in that rightmost column are going to get more numerous for the next 3-4 elections.If they had any strategic sense whatsoever, they'd have written off this Election a year ago and started the long, hard process of figuring out how to shape Toryism so it appeals to people below 65.But they haven't even tried.They are a party packed with second raters and spivs. And they've gone all in on appealing to today's pensioners with Class War b*llocks.They are in a very, very serious position. Now. Serious question; as their old supporters die out, who out of today's younger people is ever going to vote for them?
That's because the Tories used to offer an economic path that did work for a large proportion of the working age population.This lot has delivered an utter disaster for most younger workers. And their approval rating among people of working age, in particular those 18-50 is at levels lower than anything we have ever seen for a major party.Why should a 40 year old who is never going to be able to buy a house or have a decent pension move to supporting the Tories by the time they are 70?And then there's the B word.Brexit was predominantly a thing supported by the old. The young didn't and don't want it. That's the defining legacy of this lot in the eyes of many younger voters. And folk don't forget.
I was asked yesterday if I knew ANY person who voted to Leave but now says they made an error , or mistake and now regret voting the way they did and if they got another Vote they would choose rejoinOf all the people known to the lady asking me the question she knew of nobody herself I said actually I do know 1 person who was saying they had made a bad error 18 months after voting , but only that oneI don't know if anybody on here has said they would change the way they voted or indeed know anyone that would nowI tend not to read the Political threads or other threads that degenerate into Political debates because I have often said people won't change the way I vote and I wouldn't expect anyone to change their minds because of anything I say
Quote from: Donnywolf on June 02, 2024, 10:47:21 amI was asked yesterday if I knew ANY person who voted to Leave but now says they made an error , or mistake and now regret voting the way they did and if they got another Vote they would choose rejoinOf all the people known to the lady asking me the question she knew of nobody herself I said actually I do know 1 person who was saying they had made a bad error 18 months after voting , but only that oneI don't know if anybody on here has said they would change the way they voted or indeed know anyone that would nowI tend not to read the Political threads or other threads that degenerate into Political debates because I have often said people won't change the way I vote and I wouldn't expect anyone to change their minds because of anything I say I voted leave and now regret it, I would vote to rejoin