Oh my fucking god. Can you imagine my smug level if the unthinkable happens? I mean, I'll try and not be a c*** but y'know..Oh blimey! Don't do this! I'd reconciled myself to a huge Tory majority. Don't let me get my hopes up, they'll only be HORRIBLY DASHED
I won't...Oh my fucking god. Can you imagine my smug level if the unthinkable happens? I mean, I'll try and not be a c*** but y'know..
Oh my fucking god. Can you imagine my smug level if the unthinkable happens? I mean, I'll try and not be a c*** but y'know..
If Corbyn gets elected the need for organising is still going to be vital. The reactionary backlash will be massive. I'm not suddenly going to drop the antifa/ anti raids/ community defence because of Corbyn. Perhaps there could be an opportunity to convert the genuine momentum into a wider interest in grass roots activism.We've been planning to use the two weeks where everyone is depressed about elections, and five more years of Tories and suddenly becomes interested in grassroots campaigns against state violence as an opportunity to fundraise. Gonna be livid* if Corbyn fucks up all our plans by winning ffs.
*not really, but also kinda
If Corbyn gets elected the need for organising is still going to be vital. The reactionary backlash will be massive. I'm not suddenly going to drop the antifa/ anti raids/ community defence because of Corbyn. Perhaps there could be an opportunity to convert the genuine momentum into a wider interest in grass roots activism.
The Times says its YouGov poll (see11.07am), if replicated at a general election, would give the Conservatives a majority of just two.
But there is some better news for the Tories tonight. Two polling experts who are running sophisticated models to try to predict the election result have updated their figures are they both point to Theresa May securing a very big win.
Lord Ashcroft, a former Tory deputy chairman who is now a polling specialist, is running a model based on multilevel regression and poststratification, or MRP (don’t ask.) He says his model now implies a majority of 142.
Based on an update survey conducted at the height of the “dementia tax” controversy following the Conservative manifesto launch, the combined probabilities currently give the Tories a total of 396 seats (down from 406 last week), or an implied potential majority of 142.
The model allows us to see the likelihood of different outcomes in each turnout scenario, as shown in the graph below. If turnout next month matches that of the last general election, there is currently a 23% chance of the Tories winning a majority between 140 and 159, a 36% chance of a majority between 160 and 179, and a 19% chance of a majority of 180 to 199. If we base the model on all those who say they voted in the EU referendum – which includes greater numbers of demographic types who incline more towards Labour – the biggest probability (34%) is of a majority between 80 and 99.
And Steve Fisher, the Oxford psephologist who works with John Curtice on the BBC exit poll, has a “combined forecast” that takes account of all the systematic forecasts available, based on polling, betting and wisdom-of-the-crowds predictions. His team’s latest combined forecast is for a Tory majority of 100.
Only one poll conducted since the attacks has been published, so most of the changes in the opinion poll data, and the models that are built on them, reflect polls conducted late last week; shortly after the Conservative manifesto launch and mostly before Theresa May’s announcement of a cap on social care funding. Those polls showed a considerable tightening of the Conservative lead and so a reduction in the predicted Tory majority.
Overall, our combined forecast of the Conservative majority has dropped to 100, down from 123 last week and from 132 two weeks ago.
Beat me to it.this interview ambush is kind of a guilty pleasure
https://twitter.com/HichamYezza/status/868182862415228929
And get this [emoji6]
Only very recent history, TBF. Turnout was about 72%. That's higher than the figures for the general elections we've had from 2001 onwards, but it's still rather crap given the magnitude of the event. As a point of comparison, turnout was 85% for the referendum on Scottish independence. It's also quite poor in a historical context. Between 1922 and 1997, turnout for general elections was almost always well over 70%.Didn't more people vote in last year's referendum than any general election in history? Possibly just recent history, but I remember a large turnout.
Corbyn is on the defensive now, releasing statements responding to Theresa May's accusations. Can't remember where I read it but someone made the case recently that, because most people aren't very engaged with politics, the most important coverage in elections is at the very top of the 6 o'clock news, and that's why Labour were having a good campaign. If what people are hearing is "Labour are pledging to abolish tuition fees..." etc then that's the message that will cut through. Now they're going to hear "Jeremy Corbyn has rejected claims that he is a danger to national security," which is, erm, not as good.
The headlines should be "Theresa May has denied that cutting 19,000 police officers led to Britain being unsafe," or something. He's let her off the hook.
Oh god, when's that from? I can feel the slimy, sexually awkward desperation seeping through in every word of this hackery.They will always find a way to attack him, regardless of what he says or does. Just look at this:
Only very recent history, TBF. Turnout was about 72%. That's higher than the figures for the general elections we've had from 2001 onwards, but it's still rather crap given the magnitude of the event. As a point of comparison, turnout was 85% for the referendum on Scottish independence. It's also quite poor in a historical context. Between 1922 and 1997, turnout for general elections was almost always well over 70%.
The "more/most" stat you have in mind may be the one about more people voting for Leave than anything else in our democratic history. This owes very little to turnout. It's a combination of (a) population growth, and (b) the referendum offering a simple "yes or no" type question, which meant the vote wasn't split across multiple parties. Also, the % of spoiled ballots was eventually rounded down to zero.
Mark's contention that a higher turnout among young people could have swung the result strikes me as fairly sound.
Oh god, when's that from? I can feel the slimy, sexually awkward desperation seeping through in every word of this hackery.
Folk actually get paid for this
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