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Month: April 2009

Another ANC landslide…

Another ANC landslide…

BBC News …but will it be a two-thirds majority? As Alistair Darling rises in the Commons for the Budget speech, thousands of miles away voters will be casting their ballots in South Africa’s fourth national election since the end of apartheid, with provincial elections also taking place on the same day. For the first time since that historic 1994 election, the ANC, on paper at least, finds itself facing a serious challenge – but as with football, it’s what happens…

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Will we be saying: “Were you up for Ed Balls?

Will we be saying: “Were you up for Ed Balls?

General Election constituency betting Could the Morley seat be the “Portillo moment – 2010 version”? We can all, I’m sure, remember it well. In the days immediately after Tony Blair’s stunning landslide in May 1997 the moment everybody seemed to be talking about was the result from Enfield and Southgate where Michael Portillo’s shattering and unexpected defeat seemed to epitomise the whole election and the total collapse of the Tories. For Labour’s performance there was absolutely staggering and went way…

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Will it be the second People’s Budget ‘09?

Will it be the second People’s Budget ‘09?

Will Labour aim to gain the initiative by steering for Clear Red Water? Amid the carnage of dreadful Sunday newspapers, two opinion polls giving the Conservatives leads sufficient to produce a landslide if reproduced at a general election (see previous threads), the continued rumblings of smeargate dragging Ed Balls and Labour General Secretary Ray Collins into the scandal, and the criticisms of former MP Alice Mahon, one would imagine that some thought must be being given in Downing Street to…

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..and the papers get even worse for Labour

..and the papers get even worse for Labour

Times online As well as the Telegraph poll reported on the previous thread there’s another poll tonight – from the unregistered BPIX in the Mail on Sunday This has the Tories on 45% to Labour’s 26% with no figure for the LDs reported. I don’t usually have much time for BPIX because it’s not part of the British Polling Council and doesn’t make its detailed data available. Away from the polling are two further potentially explosive stories for Labour in…

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Labour down to 26% in first post-smeargate poll

Labour down to 26% in first post-smeargate poll

CON 43 (-1) LAB 26 (-5) LD 21 (+3) Will the Sunday Telegraph survey give Cameron a boost A new survey by an ICM associated company for the Sunday Telegraph reports a sharp reverse for Labour after its terrible week. I’ve assumed that the methodology has followed the standard ICM format and my comparisons above are with the last poll from the firm. This is the second lowest Labour share ever from the polling group and the only consolation for…

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Pirates losses in both Sweden and Somalia

Pirates losses in both Sweden and Somalia

What impact will piracy have this century? This has been a fortnight in which piracy has seen more news coverage than at any time since Blackbeard. Sadly, for all the romance of the name, piracy is no longer the wooden-legged, eye-patched, be-parroted world of Captain Hook and Long John Silver. In the 21st century, a ‘pirate’ will tend to belong to one of two distinct species: pirata mogadisciensis and pirata suionese (sometimes known as pirata cyberspacensis) The former can be…

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Guest slot: Nick Palmer MP – the Case for Labour

Guest slot: Nick Palmer MP – the Case for Labour

Why are 30% still saying they’ll vote Labour? A couple of rules of engagement first, partly to avoid this being 16 screens long. I’m not going to focus on the past, good or bad, since I interpret Morus’s challenge as “Why should we support Labour now?” rather than “Did you do a good/bad job on the minimum wage/Northern Ireland/Iraq/Lisbon etc.?” Second, I don’t expect anyone to change their allegiance as a result of reading the article. What I’m trying to…

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