Too much focus on his image. It is important that a leader projects confidence etc but if you're going to grill someone I'd rather it was done on policy not personality.
On a side note, have the Conservatives not actually detailed where the additional 10 billion in welfare cuts will come? Do they plan to?
On a side note, have the Conservatives not actually detailed where the additional 10 billion in welfare cuts will come? Do they plan to?
It's also basically irrelevant. The viewership figures weren't very high, so more people's impressions will be formed by the reporting of what happened than the actual result. The Telegraph, Guardian, and Times are running with Ed wins, so that'll be the momentum maker.
Indeed. He did well enough.
ICM/Guardian have it at 54:46 in favour of Dave.
56% of the sub-sample who said they might change their mind will now plump for Labour, as against just 30% for the Conservatives.
I doubt it will move even a single vote. Tomorrow's headlines are all going to be dominated by the plane crash and the suicidal pilot. The ratings for this aren't going to be good. People who pay attention to this will be like me or you, those who already know where their X is going. The only one of these which may move votes is the 7-way debate and the leader's question time, but even those are probably going to be snorefests.
Ed beat expectations starting from a low base and may finally have put the business with his brother to bed. Both are good wins for him, but Dave played a straight bat and didn't make any mistakes so no votes will shift.
For anyone interested, the pre debate polls back in March 2010 (ie roughly where we are in the cycle now) were something like (I averaged a handful from the end of the month)...
CON 38%, LAB 30%, LDEM 18%
The eventual GE result was...
CON 36.1%, LAB 29.0%, LDEM 23.0%
If we add in the fact that, as well as the debates, there was basically the entire campaign between the first poll and the actual GE, it's hard to imagine the debates - even if they're crazy exciting - moving more than a few points in either direction. It might be relevant, though, who knows. Obviously the array of scatter brained loon parties vying for the lost MRLP vote has thrown a bit of an unknown into those - could they see similar gains as the LD's saw in 2010?
I think the headline snippets shown across the different news channels, coupled with the general commentary and feedback, will drum up some interest and at least sway some perception, mostly with respect to Ed's personality and the way he can or cannot handle himself. But who knows. I guess we'll see.
The Clegg thing was unique, 'Cleggmania' was a phenomenon. Can't see people with 'I agree with Ed' t-shirts after tonight.Wut? Nick Clegg was widely seen as having won last round and by your own data that made part of a five percentage point difference. I mean, sure, it might only change the mind of one in every two hundred people, but right now that's literally an election winning difference.
Wut? Nick Clegg was widely seen as having won last round and by your own data that made part of a five percentage point difference. I mean, sure, it might only change the mind of one in every two hundred people, but right now that's literally an election winning difference.
On a side note, have the Conservatives not actually detailed where the additional 10 billion in welfare cuts will come? Do they plan to?
Of course, but we also both know that he only reason that happened is that Clegg was basically an unknown. This is why I said that one of the smaller parties could see similar gains - because the public have a lot of space in their mind to fill with new impressions of these mysterious strangers. That's not the case for Ed (just like it wasn't for DC last time) because he's been the leader of the opposition for the best part of 5 years.
Probably voting green, need to educate myself about them a bit more though. Otherwise will be a spoiled ballet. Very disillusioned with our politics. Hopeful we kick the tories out
Yeah it's a safe seat that's why, although I don't think I could bring myself to vote labour at the moment anywayIs your seat a Con/Lab or Lib/Lab marginal? If so, if you want to kick the Conservatives out, probably worth gritting your teeth and voting Labour, even if you don't like them much. If it's a safe seat, go ahead, though. The Greens actually have their manifesto released already, it's on their website.
I'm not even saying it has to be the same scale. Go look at the predictions for seats - not single forecast has a gap of more than ten seats. Ed could get under a tenth of the boost Clegg did and it would make an election-winning difference. I agree it isn't going to make massive shifts, but... it doesn't need to.
Please don't take this the wrong way, I'm actually genuinely curious. Might even be in the same position one day. How does it feel voting for a party with no chance of winning? That aspect really holds me back from considering minority parties, fearing it's wasted vote. Is it just the idea of supporting those who appeal to you most or is it in the hope that party picks up momentum one day?Probably voting green, need to educate myself about them a bit more though. Otherwise will be a spoiled ballet. Very disillusioned with our politics. Hopeful we kick the tories out
If there is one thing I hate its tactical voting, if someone believes in something they should be able to vote for it and have it count.
Pass the post is a fixed system so the same two parties can exchange seats every 5 or 10 years. Would much prefer proportional representation.
Miliband made a decent impression despite the presenters but something smells like shit when nothing was mentioned about basically all the conservatives and lib dems undeniably voting to protect paedos.
That would hand you the election. What's going on.
PR is dead. The rich want a revolving door of Lab and Con to parade around whilst they make their money.
The only major party that wants to change that is the LDs and nobody wants to vote for them because tuition fees.
Miliband made a decent impression despite the presenters but something smells like shit when nothing was mentioned about basically all the conservatives and lib dems undeniably voting to protect paedos.
That would hand you the election. What's going on.
John Mann, Labour MP, moved the amendment to insert the following clause in the OSA:
It is a defence for a person charged with an offence under any provision of this Act to prove that he knew, or had reasonable cause to believe, that the information, document or article disclosed was a) germane to an official investigation of, or inquiry into, historic child abuse, and b) provided only to an officer of such an investigation or inquiry.
Mann told Exaro: “It would not have undermined the Official Secrets Act.”
Other than the specific exemption of course. [but apparently it's already legal is what he meant]I am not decrying John Mann’s motives and it is right that these issues are debated seriously in this way, but this amendment did not add anything
MP John Mann said: “I have met with former special branch officers and senior civil servants who have all told me that they cannot come forward to discuss the evidence they know of until such a guarantee is in place.
Home Secretary Teresa May and David Cameron assured any potential witnesses that anyone who came forward would not be prosecuted if they break the rules of the act in the process of giving evidence
And Attorney General Jeremy Wright said that he would not pursue any prosecution in respect of people breaking the act in this way.
But why has it taken so long to emerge? As Roy Ramm, the former Met police commander of specialist operations has pointed out, the threat of prosecution under the Official Secrets Act would have made the officers concerned fear for their careers.
Is it really any different to voting say, Labour in Tory safe seat? If a party won a seat by a reasonable margin in 2010, unless something significant happens to sway the entire local population then they will win it again in May and any other vote is effectively pointless.Please don't take this the wrong way, I'm actually genuinely curious. Might even be in the same position one day. How does it feel voting for a party with no chance of winning? That aspect really holds me back from considering minority parties, fearing it's wasted vote. Is it just the idea of supporting those who appeal to you most or is it in the hope that party picks up momentum one day?
Come Dine With Me: Election Special
FootballFan is a tory voter.
FootballFan is a tory voter.
So is roughly a third of the country along with plenty of people on GAF. What's your point?
My concern is of Miliband's perception to the international community - and I think it's valid given that he has a perception issue in his own party, let alone the people of this country.
If there is one thing I hate its tactical voting, if someone believes in something they should be able to vote for it and have it count.
I could never vote or trust labour again after tony blairs ten years. I feel sorry for brown, getting dumped with blairs mess but even if tony stayed, no way would labour have won in 2010.
I still am unsure who to vote for
I voted tory last time, but I don't like that the party have forced cameron to drift to the right. Won't be voting for them
I will never vote for labour until the brown inner circle - miliband, balls, cooper and alexander - are no longer part of their leadership. Will never forgive them for the 10p tax.
Can't really vote for greens after all those car crash interviews with neil and ferrari. Bennet is not cut out for this
Might vote lib dem I guess. Would rather see clegg stay as their leader then a bufoon like farron
But that's of far less relevance when we can be pretty sure there'll be a hung parliament, and "beating the other side" matters less than it ever has before. "Winning the election" isn't the same thing as "becoming the party of government" as we both know. Obviously having more MPs improves your chance but in an almost linear way, as opposed to the more definitive A or B way we're used to with FPTP. Getting a small bump in the polls - if it's then reflected in the Labour voteshare - is worth the same as the small bump before or after it, if you know what I mean.
So yeah, Ed Miliband causing a 0.5% boost in the opinion polls that nets him an extra 7 seats would incredibly valuable even at this stage and might make the difference.
Can that even be measured though? I don't think the polls are that accurate, so really we're just speculating about something that won't manifest until the GE results are actually in. Not that that's a problem (that's pretty much what this thread is for!).