goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
goldfinger
- 14 Feb 2014 10:10
- 36627 of 81564
I blame these floods on Camoron and the Tories.
This thing never used to happen when labour were in power.
Same in summer aswel, all these droughts since Tories came to power.
All down to SPENDING CUTS.
Haystack
- 14 Feb 2014 10:57
- 36628 of 81564
YouGov recently ran a competition, open from January 17th-31st, that asked participants to estimate the end-of-year voting intention figures to win a prize, after Steve Thompson won last year's competition by guessing each party's position exactly (except for UKIP – he was 2 points high). The same question was then asked to the general public in a nationally representative survey.
The predictions, averaged together, give a window into what direction British people see the winds of political change heading this year, in the run-up to the general election next May. And if the popular wisdom is correct, the Conservative Party will be within striking distance of a lead, but really 2014 will be a year for the 'alternative' parties.
Only Labour voters expect their party to be in the lead. The Liberal Democrats have Labour and the Tories tied on 32%, with their own party back at its highest level since the month before the last general election (June 2010), double its current level. Conservatives have themselves at a five point lead and UKIP supporters, the most bullish group of all, have themselves up 14 points and within seven of the lead.
goldfinger
- 14 Feb 2014 11:00
- 36629 of 81564
And your point is????????
you seem a little confused Hays.
Whats your point bud???????
MaxK
- 14 Feb 2014 11:02
- 36630 of 81564
He's trying to forget about this date: Thursday 22 May 2014
I suspect Cameroon is as well.
MaxK
- 14 Feb 2014 11:14
- 36631 of 81564
Fred1new
- 14 Feb 2014 11:26
- 36632 of 81564
goldfinger
- 14 Feb 2014 11:35
- 36634 of 81564
I also blame the tories for the assholic NHS we are delivering at the moment.
Gosh I was shocked when I went to visit a aunt in my local Kirklees NHS hospital on tuesday.
Talk about privatising it, SKY TV..... bingo channels......a local bookie taking bets.
And thats just for the staff.
Nurses sat around playing cards and drinking tea. I swear aswel they had a bottle of cider.
What a mess Hunt is making of it.
But get this ...........I kid you not.......they had a list of take aways that patients could ring . One of them was called Big Abduls.
In front of my own eyes in walked a Domino Pizza chap and delivered this bed ridden bloke a palonie and cheese pizza with double chips and two jammy doughnuts.
This country is falling apart under the Tories.
Haystack
- 14 Feb 2014 11:45
- 36635 of 81564
The polls are indicating UKIP in third place in the EU elections in May.
goldfinger
- 14 Feb 2014 11:51
- 36636 of 81564
Last nights results suggest otherwise.
MaxK
- 14 Feb 2014 11:54
- 36637 of 81564
Whats with the postal vote problem?
Wythenshawe byelection: Cameron denies Ukip success
PM says second place result for Ukip is not the breakthrough the party had hoped for as Labour cruises to victory
Rowena Mason
theguardian.com, Friday 14 February 2014 09.39 GMT
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/feb/14/wythenshawe-byelection-cameron-denies-ukip-breakthrough
Haystack
- 14 Feb 2014 11:58
- 36638 of 81564
UKIP got just 11% of the vote. That is worse than their normal polling figures.
MaxK
- 14 Feb 2014 12:02
- 36639 of 81564
it's ok to try and make a positive out of a disaster Haystack, but even you cant polish the turd that was this result.
doodlebug4
- 14 Feb 2014 13:15
- 36640 of 81564
British retailers have reported a rise in the sale of Wellington Boots, waterproof mascara and wet weather wear as the country faces another week of storms and floods.
John Lewis's rain accessories category was up 65pc last week, with hats, cagoules and ponchos proving particularly popular amongst shoppers. Glove purchases at the department store increased 59pc, and buyers snapped up 192pc more knitted women's accessories than in the same week last year.
Sales of wellies were up 252pc at Debenhams, and John Lewis reported a 146pc increase for Hunter Boots; the brand recently worn by Philip Hammond, Defence Secretary, on a visit to Wraysbury.
A long list of politicians have been photographed wearing wellies this month while viewing affected areas, in what has been labelled "flood tourism" by Conservative MP Alok Sharma.
Umbrella sales have doubled at Argos since December, while Debenhams reported a 67pc lift. At John Lewis, purchases of the wet weather essential jumped up by 138pc.
Amanda Scott, head of buying for women's accessories at the department store, said that the bad weather has had a strong impact on their online sales.
"The product sales are partly based on survival, and partly on functional requirements for products to cope in the wet weather which people didn't think they would necessarily need to buy," she said.
"It's been so damn depressing that I think people have been uplifting themselves with a bit of shopping, mainly through online because they have not been getting out and about."
Waterproof mascara has shown a "noticeable" sales increase during the last month, according to a John Lewis spokesman.
However, footwear retailer Schuh said that the recent bad weather has had no effect on sales of Wellington Boots in their shops.
Curry's and PC World announced yesterday that they plan to give kettles, toasters and fridges to flood victims staying in emergency centres.
Sebastian James, chief executive at Dixons Retail, said that the companies will also provide free delivery and installation for large electrical replacements "as and when the big clean-up begins".
A Sainsbury's spokesman said that staff members are delivering essentials, such as bottled water and warm clothes in affected communities. The supermarket has also released emergency funds for stores to provide local support.
Haystack
- 14 Feb 2014 13:21
- 36641 of 81564
There was an interesting comment from a UKIP spokesman on the daily politics show just now. He was asked about success in the EU election. He said he expected around 20 seats. There are 78 UK MEPs. That mean's UKIP getting around 25% of the vote. That puts them probably in 3rd place.
goldfinger
- 14 Feb 2014 13:35
- 36642 of 81564
Stop telling porkies Hays and more so manipulating figures.
We can all do that but we respect fellow posters.
Haystack
- 14 Feb 2014 13:53
- 36643 of 81564
There was only a 28% turnout in the by election, so it is pretty meaningless.
cynic
- 14 Feb 2014 14:08
- 36644 of 81564
it's the 28% t/o that's scary, albeit that the weather is vile and the result (winner) a foregone conclusion
doodlebug4
- 14 Feb 2014 14:15
- 36645 of 81564
I agree cynic, it's the 28% that sends out the biggest message.
goldfinger
- 14 Feb 2014 14:26
- 36646 of 81564
Yep but as Hays often says its the trend that counts, and the trend is for labour.
Look you cant have it both ways.
In fact Cyners think about 10 years from now and the traditional Tory pensioner voter will be wiped out. Obviously natural causes.
What are the Tories going to do???????????
Most young middle class vote labour. And thats a fact. (if I can find the memo)