Current Affairs 2017 General Election

2017 general election

  • Lib Dems

    Votes: 24 6.5%
  • Labour

    Votes: 264 71.0%
  • Tories

    Votes: 41 11.0%
  • Cheese on the ballot paper

    Votes: 35 9.4%
  • SNP

    Votes: 4 1.1%
  • Plaid Cymru

    Votes: 4 1.1%

  • Total voters
    372
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"And in other news this evening, the Labour party have announced the appointment of Hullefc, formerly of Grand Old Team, as their official pollster for the upcoming general election campaign"

Does that mean I will have to resign as the official Tory pollster? The most recent poll - the undecided has now said they would vote Labour which has 80%, LibDems 10% Tories 0% and they're all the same 10%.
 
Disenfranchised Labour voters who didn't want Brown and disenfranchised Conservative voters who didn't want to vote for Cameron and sought for any alternate. Lots of them had probably decided to vote for the Lib Dems before the tv debates simply to punish their respective party's for their failures adequately represent them.
Go and view the before and after polls and come back to me mate
 
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"And in other news this evening, the Labour party have announced the appointment of Hullefc, formerly of Grand Old Team, as their official pollster for the upcoming general election campaign"

Reminds me of when the people of Hull thought Everton played fantastic football in the second Martinez season.

A group of people not to be trusted with opinion polls
 
Does that mean I will have to resign as the official Tory pollster? The most recent poll - the undecided has now said they would vote Labour which has 80%, LibDems 10% Tories 0% and they're all the same 10%.

I'm afraid so mate - you're going to have to go down with the red ship.
 
Just some strange banners and comments when I went to respond earlier.......I expect some mod is winding me up.......where's Bruce btw.........
Googling somewherelol
TBH I guessed this GE would eventually arrive when Corbyn did not do the right thing for the Labour movement last summer, May should have never ruled it out tbh - I hope her manefesto goes after the House of Lords in reducing it in size in some form of ppr voting system so it is balanced - I voted Brexit 10 months on to sign article 50
May should have called this election last Autumn or early on in the new year maybe?
 
Googling somewherelol
TBH I guessed this GE would eventually arrive when Corbyn did not do the right thing for the Labour movement last summer, May should have never ruled it out tbh - I hope her manefesto goes after the House of Lords in reducing it in size in some form of ppr voting system so it is balanced - I voted Brexit 10 months on to sign article 50'may should have called this election last Autumn!

No, I think she's played it to perfection. Had 9 months of economic boom to help convince or at least calm down many remainers, and seen how it's gone herself. Allowed the ginger one to nail her colours to a referendum, slapped it down then stitched her up with a GE...........
 
Imagine tories increase their majority but labour don't do too bad and Corbyn decides to say on...lol

In seats where we're already strong, I can see Labour increasing our majorities. Our share of the vote overall will likely be better than what the polls might suggest, so there'll be some crumbs of comfort for the wafflers to cling onto, but we'll likely lose marginals and fail to make gains where you might reasonably expect us to after the Tories have effectively been in charge for seven years.

Seven years, Christ, with the spectre of another five years that's bloody depressing.
 
Polls are wrong all the time mate. Truthfully they can't really gauge the public any other way but it's far from accurate reading as a rule.

Yes, they polls are frequently wrong, but when they change dramatically overnight following the TV debates and show a huge trend in favour of the Lib Dems, and the Lib Dems then go on to form part of the next Government for the first time in the party's history, there is clearly substantial evidence that the TV debates had a big impact on the election result.

You may "think more of the electorate" than to believe they would be swayed by debates, but 10 million people tuned in to watch - it's a big opportunity to swing some voters.

The media has always been, and always will be, an significant way of influencing public opinion. It's remarkable that so many people posting on here fail to see it.
 
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It is being reported that May has changed her mind about calling an election. Yet another u turn this year.

Theresa’s U-Turns: A Full List Of The Government's Reversals
15 March 2017, 12:01 LBC.

"As the Chancellor abandons his plan to increase National Insurance Contributions, here is a full list of Theresa May's U-turns during her time at 10 Downing Street.

National Insurance Increase
In the 2017 Budget, Philip Hammond announced he would be increasing National Insurance Contributions for self-employed
people, despite a promise in the Conservative manifesto not to do so.

The idea caused controversy, despite it costing no more than 60p per day. And a week on, the Chancellor did an about-turn and revealed that he would no longer be increasing NICS in this parliament.

Taking In Refugee Children
Ministers accepted the Dubs amendment last year, saying they will take in 3,000 unaccompanied children from the Jungle migrant camp in Calais. But after accepting just 350 children, the government changed their mind and decided not to accept any more.

Responding to the decision, Lord Dubs said: "During the Kindertransport, Sir Nicky Winton rescued 669 children from Nazi persecution virtually single-handedly. I was one of those lucky ones. It would be a terrible betrayal of his legacy if as a country we were unable to do more than this to help a new generation of child refugees."


Foreign Worker Quotas
Barely a week after Home Secretary Amber Rudd announced a controversial proposal to force companies to publish the amount of foreign workers they employ at the Tory party conference, the government was forced into a humiliating climbdown.

A cacophony of condemnation helped topple the policy, with commentators from across the political spectrum lining up to slate the policy. LBC’s very own James O’Brien’s take on the policy took the internet by storm.

Surprisingly even figures from UKIP condemned the proposal. Here is MEP Roger Helmer comparing the plans to ‘North Korea.’

The government now say the data will be collected, but not made public. It will be use it to identify skill shortages in key industries. However, Labour’s Harriet Harman pointed this data may still come to light under freedom of information laws.

Hinkley Point
Theresa May sparked widespread speculation that she was poised to can the controversial Hinkley point deal with French utility EDF, when she announced a pause in the process shortly after taking office. However, only months later the deal has been signed, on terms broadly similar to those agreed by David Cameron’s government.

Key concerns focus on the significant tax payer contribution to the project, with the general public guaranteeing EDF a price for the electricity it produces for decades at nearly double the price it can be bought in the wholesale market from other sources.

The role of China in the project has also raised eyebrows. However, with the PM signalling a more interventionist role for government in key industries at the Tory party, this deal may fit in well with her new vision for the state.

New London Airport
Theresa May's precarious position in the Commons may have been a key factor in her decision to kick the long awaited decision on new airport capacity for London into the legislative long grass.

The government is due to announce a proposal on whether to build a new runway at either Heathrow or Gatwick on Tuesday. Any vote on the plans, however, has been delayed for at least a year, staving off mutiny by Tory MPs until a later date.

May faces opposition from Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who has said he will 'lie down in front of the bulldozers' to stop Heathrow being built. Boris, along with other members of the cabinet, have been granted a 'derogation' allowing them to oppose a new runway, with some conditions attached".

And in other news, the so called anti Tory BBC Newsnight programme - 25 minutes to the Tories, 5 minutes to Labour and 20 minutes to the LibDems.
 
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