Chippy_boy
Well-Known Member
Ah what lovely straws you clutch there my friend. Fortunately from my perspective, yours is but one poll whereas the latest summary of all polls (from the FT today) shows no such narrowing:
And duff advice it would be too.Labour are not going to win a majority. Vote to prevent a disastrous Tory majority would be my advice.
You're welcome ;-)
Got a call from a polling company the other day. First time ever, I was very excited.Ah what lovely straws you clutch there my friend. Fortunately from my perspective, yours is but one poll whereas the latest summary of all polls (from the FT today) shows no such narrowing:
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Ah what lovely straws you clutch there my friend. Fortunately from my perspective, yours is but one poll whereas the latest summary of all polls (from the FT today) shows no such narrowing:
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And duff advice it would be too.
You're welcome.
So you're ambivalent or even supportive of a Tory victory then? That's good to hear.I'm clutching at nothing my chippy friend, just passing on an interesting tidbit.
As you were.
What "chip" would that be mate? I think you will find that the term refers to someone who is resentful of a particular situation or status quo, someone who is unhappy in some way and who feels hard done by?Says the little man with a massive chip on his shoulder.
You are very welcome !
Did you tell them you were going to vote Green, just to confuse them? You could have doubled the Green vote.Got a call from a polling company the other day. First time ever, I was very excited.
What "chip" would that be mate? I think you will find that the term refers to someone who is resentful of a particular situation or status quo, someone who is unhappy in some way and who feels hard done by?
I have no such feelings, I am very happy with my lot and with the status quo and hope it shall remain that way. Are you?
So anyway, your comment is entirely inaccurate as well as being incredibly ironic.
Thank-you.
So you're ambivalent or even supportive of a Tory victory then? That's good to hear.
Not clutching at anything, my arse.
That is not how you come across my friend.
No, you didn't mate. You and yours hanging on every sniff of a bit of news which might give you a glimmer of hope is very plain to see.I posted the Times article to play a little game with you and predictably ....
Anyway I have things to do now, enjoy your afternoon.
Told them sod off. I like people ringing me or knocking on my door so I can tell them to sod off. Probably put me down as a Brexit Party supporter.Did you tell them you were going to vote Green, just to confuse them? You could have doubled the Green vote.
You called it right in your earlier post mate......Not once have I done a cash job.
Like I said in previous post, there is absolutely zero point in paying myself holiday/sick pay.
I don't only pay tax on dividends, I also pay Corporation Tax.
Don't we see YouGov polls being slagged off when it suits their narrative?Ah what lovely straws you clutch there my friend. Fortunately from my perspective, yours is but one poll whereas the latest summary of all polls (from the FT today) shows no such narrowing:
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All the time.Don't we see YouGov polls being slagged off when it suits their narrative?
I'm afraid your recourse to interest rates appears deeply dishonest. Thatcher hiked high rates even higher in 1979 (17%). Rate was 7% when Labour took over in 1997. The rate was reduced to 0.5% after the crash.It's either undeliverable or would involve FAR greater tax rises, hitting virtually everyone. Of course Labour cannot admit to this so they've chosen to just lie instead.
Moreover, the base rate is 0.75% at the moment. Government borrowing on anything like the proposed scale would necessarily mean interest rates going up. The base rate could *easily* double or treble. (For reference, base rates in 2007 under Gordon Brown were over 5%.) Especially when the pound collapsed, which it would. McDonnell even admitted that in 2017.
Just a 1% rise would mean anyone with a £200k mortgage is £167 a month worse off. But not only mortgages, rents would go up as well, and if the government tried to prevent rent rises, the landlords would pull out of the rental market.
And it would actually be worse still. Increased government debt interest would mean less money to balance the books and more tax rises as well.
And if rates went up more than say 1% it would be a catastrophe with hundreds of thousands or even millions of people unable to afford their mortgage payments and risking losing their homes.
The Labour manifesto is an act of vandalism on the UK economy and British public, with John McDonnell and his stated objective of smashing the capitalist system behind it.
Why is it you have your head so DEEPLY in the sand all the time? It's quite bizarre.I'm afraid your recourse to interest rates appears deeply dishonest. Thatcher hiked high rates even higher in 1979 (17%). Rate was 7% when Labour took over in 1997. The rate was reduced to 0.5% after the crash.
I know the Tories like to claim credit for low interest rates but it's another con.