required field
- 28 Apr 2010 22:41
Anybody any idea who's going to form the next government ?...
required field
- 29 Apr 2010 11:05
- 11 of 226
A year ago, I was convinced that it would be a Tory landslide....it's that guy with the east end gangster name again that's taking away votes...grrrr....
Clubman3509
- 29 Apr 2010 11:22
- 12 of 226
The one eyed Scottish twit no doubt. Can you imagine that pussy Clegg trying to get his point over at any International meeting. Cameron talks a good game but is a typical public schoolboy, and we know what they get up to.
I would vote labour if they made Mandy Prime Minister, gay he maybe but he takes no shit.
halifax
- 29 Apr 2010 11:44
- 13 of 226
labour thought they could generate more votes by letting millions of immigrants into England but they have made the classic mistake of ignoring the adverse effect this has had on their core voters. The conservatives have made the same mistake in the past by cosying up too much to minority groups and losing some of their traditional support to opposition parties.
Camelot
- 29 Apr 2010 15:28
- 14 of 226
If you wish to bet on an overall majority, the latest odds are 7/4 Conservatives at
bet365 and 20/1 Labour at Paddy Power with a hung parliament now just 1/2 with
Skybet .
Camelot
- 29 Apr 2010 15:32
- 15 of 226
odds for most seats
cons 1/6
lab 5/1
lib 16/1
mitzy
- 29 Apr 2010 15:53
- 16 of 226
PaddyPower have Tories winning by at least 50 seats.
hilary
- 29 Apr 2010 16:31
- 17 of 226
hilary
- 29 Apr 2010 16:33
- 18 of 226
Ahead of tonight's BBC leaders debate in Birmingham, the Conservatives are back in the hunt, according to both the ComRes polling and Betfair betting markets.
Betfair Predicts: Hung Parliament, Conservatives Dominant Party
Con: 316
Lab: 214
Lib Dem:92
Other: 28
Latest Betfair Predictions: (Odds in brackets)
To win an overall majority: 56% (4-5) Hung Parliament, 41% (6-4) Conservatives, 2% (39-1) Labour, 1% (79-1) Lib Dem
To win most seats: 72% (1-5) Conservatives, 13% (7-1) Labour , 5% (21-1) Lib Dem
ComRes Predicts: Hung Parliament, Conservatives Dominant Party
Con: 282
Lab: 259
Lib Dem: 77
Other: 32
Latest ComRes Poll: (Taken 28/4/10)
Con: 36%
Lab: 29%
Lib Dem: 26%
Other: 9%
hilary
- 29 Apr 2010 16:34
- 19 of 226
cynic
- 29 Apr 2010 16:52
- 20 of 226
for RF
and as for all those damn jews cluttering up st john's wood and golders green and hampstead!!!!
why can't they be shipped to palestine where they belong?
halifax
- 29 Apr 2010 16:57
- 21 of 226
cynic are you trying to play the race card as a last desperate move to support brown!
partridge
- 29 Apr 2010 17:44
- 22 of 226
Gordon Brown's last chance tonight and although I consider him an unctuous, pompous and arrogant man, whose true character was revealed yesterday, I do think he did the right thing when the banking crisis came to a head - the taxpayer may do very well out of its stakes in RBS and Lloyds in time, although I hope not before Brown and Co are shown the door.
cynic
- 29 Apr 2010 18:09
- 23 of 226
absolutely!
anyway, bradford and several other fine cities would become but ghost towns without their immigrant populations
2517GEORGE
- 29 Apr 2010 18:25
- 24 of 226
partridge, meanwhile thousands of businesses and individuals are going bankrupt because of the banks' unwillingness to lend, or calling in their loans. True the taxpayer may well benefit over a period of time, (provided GB's spending wasters don't get their hands on the money). I have no idea what the right call was, whether letting a bank fail (HBOS) or the action they took, time I suppose will tell if their actions eventually pay off for the taxpayer.
cynic are you related to chemical ali?
2517
cynic
- 29 Apr 2010 18:36
- 25 of 226
he's my first cousin and brother of toxic tania
partridge
- 29 Apr 2010 19:13
- 26 of 226
2517 - I think if HBOS and/or RBS had been allowed to fail there would have been queues outside every bank and complete financial chaos, maybe even a return to barter. For too long the banks lent money too freely and borrowers were greedy - the pendulum was bound to swing the other way eventually. Fault imo on behalf of both lenders and borrowers acting irresponsibly, with regulators lamentable in their supervision. We are already seeing the return to significant profitability within the banking sector, most certainly helped by forcing unrealistic margin increases on borrowers who now have no alternatives, but no doubt all political parties see windfall return for the Treasury as a result - justifiably imo.
Camelot
- 30 Apr 2010 08:08
- 27 of 226
The Lib Dems were more pointed. "Brown is a dead man walking", said one. "He was trying to defend the indefensible and he didn't even do that very well."
In the spin room, the Tories were already making mischief, spreading a story that Alastair Campbell had been heard saying: "That's it, we're done for". Campbell denied it, via Twitter, of course. "Tories desperate. Some lowly spin doc heard me telling security man Burnley had had it.
Burnley ?
lol
2517GEORGE
- 30 Apr 2010 08:35
- 28 of 226
partridge - HBOS was an accident waiting to happen, unfortunately for Lloyds they were 'encouraged' to take them over, RBS paid way over the odds for ABN. You are absolutely right of course that both lenders and borrowers were irresponsible and the regulation non existant. Profitability is returning at the expense of borrowers (as you say), I feel that there are still many 'toxic' secrets lurking in the banks vaults, commercial property, credit card debt, and when interest rates start to rise many borderline mortgages will fall into default. I hope I'm wrong.
2517
Clubman3509
- 30 Apr 2010 08:45
- 29 of 226
Better to send them to New York as it is allready known as Jew York
required field
- 30 Apr 2010 08:48
- 30 of 226
So, who won last night if I can put it that way ?...apart from Fulham and Atletico Madrid....