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Talk Elections
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United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
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Topic: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019 (Read 94320 times)
Filuwaúrdjan
Realpolitik
Atlas Institution
Posts: 63,495
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #425 on:
November 11, 2019, 10:44:39 AM »
Quote from: urutzizu on November 11, 2019, 09:52:37 AM
Quote from: CumbrianLeftie on November 11, 2019, 09:35:33 AM
It also seems some BxP people due to stand in Tory seats had no knowledge of this decision and are
not happy about it.
Indeed. To quote the (former) Brexit Party Candidate in Crawley:
https://mobile.twitter.com/Wayne_BayIey/status/1193868199361753088?ref_src=twsrc...
Technically, of course, there's no reason why such an aggrieved provisional candidate cannot run as an independent, if they choose.
Logged
Salad
wolfentoad66
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,335
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #426 on:
November 11, 2019, 11:08:48 AM »
Quote from: urutzizu on November 11, 2019, 09:52:37 AM
Quote from: CumbrianLeftie on November 11, 2019, 09:35:33 AM
It also seems some BxP people due to stand in Tory seats had no knowledge of this decision and are
not happy about it.
Indeed. To quote the (former) Brexit Party Candidate in Crawley:
https://mobile.twitter.com/Wayne_BayIey/status/1193868199361753088?ref_src=twsrc...
...my man is a Scientologist!!!
Logged
Velasco
andi
YaBB God
Posts: 4,356
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #427 on:
November 11, 2019, 11:19:17 AM »
The Brexit Party logo is so graphic...
Logged
Arkansas Yankee
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,175
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #428 on:
November 11, 2019, 11:29:44 AM »
Good! The Brexit stand down should take a lot of the pressure of Tories in the southeast and southwest.
Sorry folks there is not going to be a hung Parliament.
The antisemitic charges will put a damper on any Corbyn recovery this time.
Logged
cp
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,451
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #429 on:
November 11, 2019, 11:58:28 AM »
«
Edited:
November 11, 2019, 12:01:41 PM
by
cp »
New poll from ComRes:
Tory:
36%
Labour:
29%
Lib Dem:
17%
Brexit:
11%
Given today's events, I think this tweet is helpful for interpretation:
https://twitter.com/benwansell/status/1193930170274590720
A straight factoring in on that ratio would give something like
40
/
31
/
17
. To be clear: doing this would be extremely simplistic and any conclusions you would like to draw from such a calculation would be faulty.
Logged
MillennialMarkey
MillennialMAModerate
Sr. Member
Posts: 2,377
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #430 on:
November 11, 2019, 01:48:14 PM »
As a political anomaly - a center left person who would be a Anti-Corbyn/Pro-Blair Labour/Leave voter in the UK and one who would have SUPPORTED Farage. I now find him to be a fraud. Not standing AND not contesting the whole nation is weak. How are you going to accomplish “Change Politics for Good” when you only send a message to half the establishment. He could’ve done great things for the UK by putting both the Torres and Labour on notice - instead he chickened out.
Logged
Cassius
Sr. Member
Posts: 3,176
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #431 on:
November 11, 2019, 01:57:37 PM »
Quote from: MillennialModerate on November 11, 2019, 01:48:14 PM
As a political anomaly - a center left person who would be a Anti-Corbyn/Pro-Blair Labour/Leave voter in the UK and one who would have SUPPORTED Farage. I now find him to be a fraud. Not standing AND not contesting the whole nation is weak. How are you going to accomplish “Change Politics for Good” when you only send a message to half the establishment. He could’ve done great things for the UK by putting both the Torres and Labour on notice - instead he chickened out.
I think Nigel Farage is largely in politics for the craic and to keep himself in beer these days, so I wouldn’t have placed much faith in him to begin with. On the other hand, deciding to stand down against the Tories is probably among the more principled acts Farage has committed in recent years, given that it doesn’t do much for his career but nonetheless helps the Tories a bit in the election, making it more likely the UK will leave the EU in one form or another (which is supposed to be Farage’s main aim in politics).
Logged
God-Empress Stacey I of House Abrams
Antonio V
Atlas Institution
Posts: 52,865
Political Matrix
E: -7.87, S: -3.83
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #432 on:
November 11, 2019, 02:44:33 PM »
Yeah, Farage has probably sunk his party's chance of having any relevance in the future. Good riddance.
This probably marginally helps Tories, but I can see it triggering consolidation of the Remain vote toward Labour (which we're already seeing some evidence for) so let's see where things go from there.
Logged
DaWN
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,384
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #433 on:
November 11, 2019, 02:49:53 PM »
Quote from: Mangez des pommes ! on November 11, 2019, 02:44:33 PM
I can see it triggering consolidation of the Remain vote toward Labour (which we're already seeing some evidence for) so let's see where things go from there.
Why do you think this? Labour, despite what Corbynites would have us believe, still don't have any credibility on Brexit. The Lib Dem polling slide after the calling of the election was only a few points, was always inevitable once a campaign began and has since stalled.
For what feels like the 400th time,
Labour are not a remain party
Besides, the Lib Dems will happily use this in every election leaflet and broadcast from now until December 12th in order to bring Tory remainers over to their side, so if anything, their share of the remainer vote will go up because of it.
Fwiw, I don't think this will change much except at the margins in a few Brexity & Lab held marginals where the Lib Dems were already mostly irrelevant.
Logged
God-Empress Stacey I of House Abrams
Antonio V
Atlas Institution
Posts: 52,865
Political Matrix
E: -7.87, S: -3.83
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #434 on:
November 11, 2019, 02:54:45 PM »
Anyone who's paying attention can see that, in most constituencies, a vote for Labour is their best bet to stop Brexit. That doesn't mean that's how they'll vote, of course. This is the last election I'd ever hazard a prediction for at this point. But I'm at least hoping they will.
Logged
Filuwaúrdjan
Realpolitik
Atlas Institution
Posts: 63,495
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #435 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:02:12 PM »
Best way to have stopped Brexit would have been to vote Labour in 2015.
That
was the most important election of our times, everything else just follows the ghastly course it set. Oh well.
Logged
Silent Hunter
Concerned Citizen
Posts: 8,484
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #436 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:13:01 PM »
Quote from: CumbrianLeftie on November 11, 2019, 08:39:18 AM
Quote from: EastAnglianLefty on November 11, 2019, 08:31:55 AM
BXP support has been on a pretty clear downward trend anyway and it's likely they'd have been below 5% by polling day anyway
They might plausibly have seen the campaign as a chance to change that. But it appears not.
Could this actually cause a few more UKIP candidates to appear in Tory held seats?
Remember it's £500 a seat just on the deposit.
Logged
DaWN
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,384
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #437 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:14:00 PM »
For what its worth, I think people seriously underestimate how badly Labour have pissed off much of their remainer voting bloc from 2017 and to assume that they will flock back between now and election day at the sight of Boris is a dubious assumption. The problem for the Lib Dems of course is that these people are, electorally speaking, mainly irrelevant, being concentrated in safe Labour seats where the majorities will no doubt fall by a decent amount but nothing like enough to put the seats in danger (a good example is my own seat), but Labour thinking that the same arguments they used in 2017 are going to work this time after the last 2 and a half years has the potential to end badly for them.
Having said that,
Quote from: Filuwaúrdjan on November 11, 2019, 03:02:12 PM
Best way to have stopped Brexit would have been to vote Labour in 2015.
That
was the most important election of our times, everything else just follows the ghastly course it set. Oh well.
This is the correct answer
Logged
Pericles
Atlas Icon
Posts: 11,833
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #438 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:14:17 PM »
Quote from: DaWN on November 11, 2019, 02:49:53 PM
Quote from: Mangez des pommes ! on November 11, 2019, 02:44:33 PM
I can see it triggering consolidation of the Remain vote toward Labour (which we're already seeing some evidence for) so let's see where things go from there.
Why do you think this? Labour, despite what Corbynites would have us believe, still don't have any credibility on Brexit. The Lib Dem polling slide after the calling of the election was only a few points, was always inevitable once a campaign began and has since stalled.
For what feels like the 400th time,
Labour are not a remain party
Besides, the Lib Dems will happily use this in every election leaflet and broadcast from now until December 12th in order to bring Tory remainers over to their side, so if anything, their share of the remainer vote will go up because of it.
Fwiw, I don't think this will change much except at the margins in a few Brexity & Lab held marginals where the Lib Dems were already mostly irrelevant.
Labour is offering a second referendum though. With Labour you get either a soft Brexit or no Brexit at all, both are clearly superior to if Boris wins a majority which would guarantee a hard Brexit. Labour isn't perfect but they're clearly better than the Tories on Brexit (and overall too).
Logged
DaWN
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,384
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #439 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:18:04 PM »
Quote from: Pericles on November 11, 2019, 03:14:17 PM
Quote from: DaWN on November 11, 2019, 02:49:53 PM
Quote from: Mangez des pommes ! on November 11, 2019, 02:44:33 PM
I can see it triggering consolidation of the Remain vote toward Labour (which we're already seeing some evidence for) so let's see where things go from there.
Why do you think this? Labour, despite what Corbynites would have us believe, still don't have any credibility on Brexit. The Lib Dem polling slide after the calling of the election was only a few points, was always inevitable once a campaign began and has since stalled.
For what feels like the 400th time,
Labour are not a remain party
Besides, the Lib Dems will happily use this in every election leaflet and broadcast from now until December 12th in order to bring Tory remainers over to their side, so if anything, their share of the remainer vote will go up because of it.
Fwiw, I don't think this will change much except at the margins in a few Brexity & Lab held marginals where the Lib Dems were already mostly irrelevant.
Labour is offering a second referendum though. With Labour you get either a soft Brexit or no Brexit at all, both are clearly superior to if Boris wins a majority which would guarantee a hard Brexit. Labour isn't perfect but they're clearly better than the Tories on Brexit (and overall too).
I can't speak for anyone else but I don't trust that Labour will give the second referendum that they offer and even if I did, its too little too late. I also don't believe a Corbyn Brexit would be any softer than a Boris one. Again, this is just me and I'd probably advise against extrapolating this to a wider voting bloc - I imagine there are a near-infinite range of opinions on this among remainer voters.
Logged
Silent Hunter
Concerned Citizen
Posts: 8,484
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #440 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:20:59 PM »
Quote from: Filuwaúrdjan on November 11, 2019, 03:02:12 PM
Best way to have stopped Brexit would have been to vote Labour in 2015.
That
was the most important election of our times, everything else just follows the ghastly course it set. Oh well.
I did. I campaigned on the doorstep too, on a trip in Thurrock where the TV actor Shaun Dooley was one of the people bussed in to the marginal seat.
Labour came third. Then Ed Miliband decided to throw open the leadership ballot to every Johnny and Jenny come lately that could pony up a sum less than what I spent on my lunch today instead of limiting it to actual members.
So we got Corbyn. Who managed to make multiple unforced errors in week one. Since then Labour supporters have spent a huge amount of time moaning about media coverage and very little working out a viable way of dealing with it.
Then there's been antisemitism. I quit partly because it was taking longer than a murder case from arrest to conviction does to deal with Ken Livingstone and things have gotten worse since then.
A Conservative majority is a realistic possibility here and to be honest, a heavy loss might be what Labour needs to bring some sense back into its politics. I'd rather have five more years of Tory rule if it gets us ten of Labour after that than vice versa.
Logged
jaichind
Atlas Icon
Posts: 15,052
Political Matrix
E: 9.03, S: -5.39
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #441 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:50:04 PM »
Quote from: DaWN on November 11, 2019, 02:49:53 PM
Quote from: Mangez des pommes ! on November 11, 2019, 02:44:33 PM
I can see it triggering consolidation of the Remain vote toward Labour (which we're already seeing some evidence for) so let's see where things go from there.
Why do you think this? Labour, despite what Corbynites would have us believe, still don't have any credibility on Brexit. The Lib Dem polling slide after the calling of the election was only a few points, was always inevitable once a campaign began and has since stalled.
For what feels like the 400th time,
Labour are not a remain party
Besides, the Lib Dems will happily use this in every election leaflet and broadcast from now until December 12th in order to bring Tory remainers over to their side, so if anything, their share of the remainer vote will go up because of it.
Fwiw, I don't think this will change much except at the margins in a few Brexity & Lab held marginals where the Lib Dems were already mostly irrelevant.
I think this entire Leave/Remain issue is more about identity than what is the technical definition of Leave and Remain. This is why Farage seems to have failed in his attack on Johnson's deal as "Not real Brexit" since very few is really that interested in that dictionary definition. By the same token I think the LAB position which is of course very vague could end up collecting a lot of Remain voters by the same logic.
Logged
Silent Hunter
Concerned Citizen
Posts: 8,484
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #442 on:
November 11, 2019, 03:51:27 PM »
What I want to know about Labour's position is which passport control queue I'll end up in if I land at Vienna airport.
Logged
brucejoel99
Atlas Icon
Posts: 13,124
Political Matrix
E: -3.48, S: -3.30
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #443 on:
November 11, 2019, 04:07:17 PM »
Quote from: Silent Hunter on November 11, 2019, 03:20:59 PM
Quote from: Filuwaúrdjan on November 11, 2019, 03:02:12 PM
Best way to have stopped Brexit would have been to vote Labour in 2015.
That
was the most important election of our times, everything else just follows the ghastly course it set. Oh well.
I did. I campaigned on the doorstep too, on a trip in Thurrock where the TV actor Shaun Dooley was one of the people bussed in to the marginal seat.
Labour came third. Then Ed Miliband decided to throw open the leadership ballot to every Johnny and Jenny come lately that could pony up a sum less than what I spent on my lunch today
instead of limiting it to actual members.
So we got Corbyn. Who managed to make multiple unforced errors in week one. Since then Labour supporters have spent a huge amount of time moaning about media coverage and very little working out a viable way of dealing with it.
Then there's been antisemitism. I quit partly because it was taking longer than a murder case from arrest to conviction does to deal with Ken Livingstone and things have gotten worse since then.
A Conservative majority is a realistic possibility here and to be honest, a heavy loss might be what Labour needs to bring some sense back into its politics. I'd rather have five more years of Tory rule if it gets us ten of Labour after that than vice versa.
Not that I'm particularly a fan of Corbyn or anything, but that's kind of a non-sequitur, as "limiting [the 2015 leadership election] to actual members" wouldn't have changed anything; the result certainly would've been narrowed, of course, but Corbyn had already secured 49.5% of the members' vote on the 1st ballot alone, so had it been a members' only election, he would've just won it on the 2nd ballot instead of the 1st, & Labour would still be right where they are today.
Logged
Pericles
Atlas Icon
Posts: 11,833
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #444 on:
November 11, 2019, 04:26:11 PM »
Quote from: brucejoel99 on November 11, 2019, 04:07:17 PM
Quote from: Silent Hunter on November 11, 2019, 03:20:59 PM
Quote from: Filuwaúrdjan on November 11, 2019, 03:02:12 PM
Best way to have stopped Brexit would have been to vote Labour in 2015.
That
was the most important election of our times, everything else just follows the ghastly course it set. Oh well.
I did. I campaigned on the doorstep too, on a trip in Thurrock where the TV actor Shaun Dooley was one of the people bussed in to the marginal seat.
Labour came third. Then Ed Miliband decided to throw open the leadership ballot to every Johnny and Jenny come lately that could pony up a sum less than what I spent on my lunch today
instead of limiting it to actual members.
So we got Corbyn. Who managed to make multiple unforced errors in week one. Since then Labour supporters have spent a huge amount of time moaning about media coverage and very little working out a viable way of dealing with it.
Then there's been antisemitism. I quit partly because it was taking longer than a murder case from arrest to conviction does to deal with Ken Livingstone and things have gotten worse since then.
A Conservative majority is a realistic possibility here and to be honest, a heavy loss might be what Labour needs to bring some sense back into its politics. I'd rather have five more years of Tory rule if it gets us ten of Labour after that than vice versa.
Not that I'm particularly a fan of Corbyn or anything, but that's kind of a non-sequitur, as "limiting [the 2015 leadership election] to actual members" wouldn't have changed anything; the result certainly would've been narrowed, of course, but Corbyn had already secured 49.5% of the members' vote on the 1st ballot alone, so had it been a members' only election, he would've just won it on the 2nd ballot instead of the 1st, & Labour would still be right where they are today.
I think it is referencing that Labour had an absurdly low membership fee and lots of people joined to vote for Corbyn.
Logged
jaymichaud
Jr. Member
Posts: 1,050
Political Matrix
E: 3.10, S: -7.83
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #445 on:
November 11, 2019, 04:35:07 PM »
So the Labor surge is... underwhelming at the moment.
Logged
brucejoel99
Atlas Icon
Posts: 13,124
Political Matrix
E: -3.48, S: -3.30
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #446 on:
November 11, 2019, 04:48:06 PM »
Quote from: Pericles on November 11, 2019, 04:26:11 PM
Quote from: brucejoel99 on November 11, 2019, 04:07:17 PM
Quote from: Silent Hunter on November 11, 2019, 03:20:59 PM
Quote from: Filuwaúrdjan on November 11, 2019, 03:02:12 PM
Best way to have stopped Brexit would have been to vote Labour in 2015.
That
was the most important election of our times, everything else just follows the ghastly course it set. Oh well.
I did. I campaigned on the doorstep too, on a trip in Thurrock where the TV actor Shaun Dooley was one of the people bussed in to the marginal seat.
Labour came third. Then Ed Miliband decided to throw open the leadership ballot to every Johnny and Jenny come lately that could pony up a sum less than what I spent on my lunch today
instead of limiting it to actual members.
So we got Corbyn. Who managed to make multiple unforced errors in week one. Since then Labour supporters have spent a huge amount of time moaning about media coverage and very little working out a viable way of dealing with it.
Then there's been antisemitism. I quit partly because it was taking longer than a murder case from arrest to conviction does to deal with Ken Livingstone and things have gotten worse since then.
A Conservative majority is a realistic possibility here and to be honest, a heavy loss might be what Labour needs to bring some sense back into its politics. I'd rather have five more years of Tory rule if it gets us ten of Labour after that than vice versa.
Not that I'm particularly a fan of Corbyn or anything, but that's kind of a non-sequitur, as "limiting [the 2015 leadership election] to actual members" wouldn't have changed anything; the result certainly would've been narrowed, of course, but Corbyn had already secured 49.5% of the members' vote on the 1st ballot alone, so had it been a members' only election, he would've just won it on the 2nd ballot instead of the 1st, & Labour would still be right where they are today.
I think it is referencing that Labour had an absurdly low membership fee and lots of people joined to vote for Corbyn.
No, that would've been the registered £3 supporter category that Miliband introduced, which was separate from the membership.
Logged
afleitch
Moderator
Atlas Star
Posts: 26,669
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #447 on:
November 11, 2019, 05:19:36 PM »
This is from Election Maps UK
This doesn't mean in anyway the same is going to happen again; but Labour are polling the same as they did during the same point in the last campaign and Brexit are only slightly ahead of UKIP (with the expectation that support will collapse) Green are also converging on their last result. For all the talk of Lab-Lib Dem switchers, the Tories are down almost as much as the Lib Dems are up.
Logged
Oryxslayer
Concerned Citizen
Posts: 6,081
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #448 on:
November 11, 2019, 05:22:06 PM »
BBC reports the Greens are not fielding a candidate against Iain Duncan Smith and endorse Labour in bid to take him down.
Logged
morgieb
Concerned Citizen
Posts: 8,512
Political Matrix
E: -7.55, S: -8.09
Re: United Kingdom General Elections: December 12th, 2019
«
Reply #449 on:
November 11, 2019, 05:47:17 PM »
Quote from: afleitch on November 11, 2019, 05:19:36 PM
This is from Election Maps UK
This doesn't mean in anyway the same is going to happen again; but Labour are polling the same as they did during the same point in the last campaign and Brexit are only slightly ahead of UKIP (with the expectation that support will collapse) Green are also converging on their last result. For all the talk of Lab-Lib Dem switchers, the Tories are down almost as much as the Lib Dems are up.
So by that logic, we can expect the votes on December 12 to be:
Con: 33.7%
Lab: 39.9%
Lib Dem: 13.9%
Brexit: 4.3%
Greens: 2.3%
Dominating!
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