Next UK Prime Minister odds: The favourites for 10 Downing StreetLadbrokes wrote:a flurry of bets on Reform UK winning most seats at the next General Election
Well, the bookies were right about Trump '24, so maybe I'll bet the farm on Farage.
Next UK Prime Minister odds: The favourites for 10 Downing StreetLadbrokes wrote:a flurry of bets on Reform UK winning most seats at the next General Election
Well, I guess that's a way to avoid inheritance taxBrightonian wrote: ↑Sat Dec 21, 2024 11:40 amWell, the bookies were right about Trump '24, so maybe I'll bet the farm on Farage.
An acquaintance of mine who is filthy rich, and has some skill in minimising his tax liabilities, was pointing out that that when you look at the small print of the right wing "cancel inheritance tax" project, it is a bit of a poisoned chalice. What they are loudly giving with one hand, they are quietly proposing to take away with another hand.
Which takes us to What are the political donation rules in the UK (Electoral reform society). They are much more constrained than in the US. It is a bit harder to buy an election in Britain, because we have rules against splashing the cash.
The Electoral Commission might give him a minuscule fine, but not until long after the election's been and gone.
Exactly. We have relied on people adhering to the rules in spirit as well as letter.
I should have made clear the Electoral Reform society link is to an article complaining that the enforcement of political funding controls is very lax, and increasingly ineffective. Free gifts of on-line advertising is probably an example of something that is particularly hard to write effective rules against, at least within our democratic rule-of-law tradition. In less well ruled places, it depends who's in charge. When the Brazilian government - currently left wing - had a beef with Xitter recently, a judge found it guilty of an offence and turned it off. And Musk had to go all humble pie to get it turned on again.
And he really doesn't have a few hundred electable hangers on.wilsontown wrote: ↑Mon Dec 23, 2024 6:24 pmMy instinctive take here is that Farage is too divisive, the same problem that Corbyn had. While lots of people think he's great and will vote for him, there are many more who find him utterly repellant and will vote, tactically if necessary, to keep him out.
But 2029 is a long way away.
Some bits of PR are coming in, in the next couple of years or so. There's the Welsh Assembly, and something else I forget. So Reform could get some decent number of representatives in various assemblies. Previously UKIP won quite a few reps in local council elections, even taking control of some local councils. But being the typical kind of people who stand for UKIP, they did not cover themselves in glory, anywhere near, and got greatly reduced representation at the next election.El Pollo Diablo wrote: ↑Tue Dec 24, 2024 10:15 amThe story in the UK is now that of a country that believes it has a proportional system when it doesn't. In a FPTP system, that's going to lead to wildly unpredictable outcomes even six weeks out from an election, never mind four and a half years. Farage has a similar chance of becoming prime minister to Sir Ed Davey in my opinion, and that's not even an insult.
Musk has been making noises in favour ofYaxley-Lennon. Yaxley-Lennon is in prison for something that is an offence even in the Great Land of Freedom of Speech, though Google AI tells me there is a maximum sentence of 1 year. (Couldn't be arsed checking it.) Even right-wingers' definition of Freedom of Speech doesn't extend to repealing defamation laws.sTeamTraen wrote: ↑Fri Dec 27, 2024 5:27 pmSo maybe Reform will get lucky with a winnable by-election and a candidate who scrubs up well and has never been filmed shaking hands with Tommy Robinson.
Though given Musk's slanderous tendencies ("paedo" isn't a common banter, especially if one then hires private detectives to see if one's supposed banter insult was actually valid) he probably would be in favour of that in some instances, at least for him.IvanV wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2025 12:45 pmSome bits of PR are coming in, in the next couple of years or so. There's the Welsh Assembly, and something else I forget. So Reform could get some decent number of representatives in various assemblies. Previously UKIP won quite a few reps in local council elections, even taking control of some local councils. But being the typical kind of people who stand for UKIP, they did not cover themselves in glory, anywhere near, and got greatly reduced representation at the next election.El Pollo Diablo wrote: ↑Tue Dec 24, 2024 10:15 amThe story in the UK is now that of a country that believes it has a proportional system when it doesn't. In a FPTP system, that's going to lead to wildly unpredictable outcomes even six weeks out from an election, never mind four and a half years. Farage has a similar chance of becoming prime minister to Sir Ed Davey in my opinion, and that's not even an insult.Musk has been making noises in favour ofYaxley-Lennon. Yaxley-Lennon is in prison for something that is an offence even in the Great Land of Freedom of Speech, though Google AI tells me there is a maximum sentence of 1 year. (Couldn't be arsed checking it.) Even right-wingers' definition of Freedom of Speech doesn't extend to repealing defamation laws.sTeamTraen wrote: ↑Fri Dec 27, 2024 5:27 pmSo maybe Reform will get lucky with a winnable by-election and a candidate who scrubs up well and has never been filmed shaking hands with Tommy Robinson.
Farage is carefully distancing himself from it.
Brightonian wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2025 3:17 pmMusk sacks Farage (in his dreams): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c70ep8lp4jjo
Oh dear, right wingers having internecine arguments about how right wing they should be, and which bits of nasty rightwinginess are the, er, right ones.