The Forthcoming General Election

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sejintenej
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by sejintenej »

fra828 wrote: This is exactly why people are apathetic about voting - you cannot trust any of them. Grubby lot says it all and that includes both Labour and Conservative, don't know about the other parties. I would like to pose the question: Which MPs do you trust MOST- if any? ! I would consider voting Tory if William Hague was leader.
Many many years ago I threw out a challenge on Newsnet for anyone to nominate ANY politician from ANY country, living or dead, who was undoubtedly totally honest and trustworthy. I nominated Dag Hammarskjold but someone came up with reasons why he did not fit the requirements. George Washington was nominated but the Cherry Tree Story destroyed any hope for him. In the end nobody was universally accepted. (One man - a local councillor from the New Forest - thought I had cast the net too wide and should have excluded all local councillors but the courts have decided that there are a few bad apples there). I wonder if I should have put forward the name of Raoul Wallenberg but the entire question seems to demonstrate how difficult it is to find any undoubtedly reliable politician anywhere.

Hague; yes, I know nothing against him BUT a PM does need a certain flair which Blair and Kennedy had but Hague does not. I have personal reasons not to fall down before the Lib Dems or whatever they call themselves.
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sejintenej
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

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englishangel wrote: I have just watched "Requiem for Detroit" and there is 38.7% unemployment, 40% illiteracy and from a peak population of 2million, there are now 800,000 and GM and Chrysler have gone cap in hand to the US Government for funding.
Was it Chrysler (now General Motors) who had to be bailed out in 1982? Auto manufacturing is the classic cyclical. Come a recession / economic downturn and people hold on to their cars a few years longer creating a "pent-up demand". Second hand prices start to go up and people start to think it better to buy new than used; this lags the rest of the economy. The US has several problems - Japanese design and manufacturing ability, the depth of the recession, possibly poor management and Detroit was / is a One-Industry city. (assessment help from Peter Lynch acknowledged)
englishangel wrote:It was (mainly) US sub-prime lending.that toppled the first domino, admittedly GB didn't help but he hardly "single-handedly screwed up the economy".
Sub-Prime - yes BUT and a huge BUT.
In the so called "Secondary Banking Crisis" of the late '70s or early '80s I don't know how many UK banks failed - ISTR it was well over 20 - and all because of what is now called "sub-prime" morgage lending. The general public knew little about what was happening. My next door neighbour - an officer in the Bank of England - freely admitted that he changed his paycheques into cash which he hid "under the bed". Circumstances have since changed thanks to the Government / FSA / Stock Exchange
1 Publicity; the Freedom of Information Act plus different Stock Exchange rules mean that companies cannot be dealt with quietly and behind the scenes. In the secondary banking crisis there was almost no publicity so takeovers and cleanups couple be accomplished behind the scenes and few if any people lost their money.
2. The FSA (aided and abetted by the government) had brought in swinging new and horrendously complex financial capitalisation rules which I suspect even many at the FSA don't really understand and which allow smart people to get around the rules. (I understand that these have now been scrapped - too late)
3. Whilst in the throes of the recession the FSA tightened the rules at a time when it was impossible for many banks to comply; the stock market would not accept new issues / rights issues thus forcing the banks into a worse situation
4. I have personal concerns about the calibre of many of the middle management FSA staff at the time some of whom I knew personally (there were some excellent ones). They were ticking boxes - many very likely not understanding the situation and probably not allowed/fearful to take early remedial action
5. Bankruptcy and administration rules have hit the banks hard - they are forced to write off debts rather than try to get their money back.

Northern Rock (which really was the UK catalyst) was a special case; it was (IMHO) very badly run, breaking one of the most basic tenets of lending. The market knew the situation and was moving in a way which could have resulted in a quiet turnaround but the whistle got blown and panic ensued. That brought in 3 above. The FSA knew all about Northern Rock in advance but allowed it to get into that situation, acting too little and too late. IMHO it was shades of the Bank of Credit and Commerce International failure

There was another Government inspired cause. Under 2 above (and for their own purpose) banks hold freely marketable government stocks ("gilts") which figure positively in the ratios. As the stock market fell from 6300 to about 3700 the price of the stocks fell. Of course, under current rules the stocks have to be downgraded in the bank balance sheet by the amount their price fell (even though one prays that the government will pay its debts on due date). This triggered / worsened the ratio problem which helped trigger the RBS etc problem. (RBS had another problen - the unjustified price it had paid for ABN-AMRO ..............)
Then we had "Lloyds" - a most conservative bank which had to take over a bank in difficulties thereby pulling Lloyds itself down.

A bit like the American Car industry, banking is cyclical - they have times of increased bad debts and times when the vast majority of those "bad" debts are paid off. It was a question of weathering the storm.

GB might not personally have screwed up the economy but the banking problems were laid / exacerbated during Blair's watch. He is also a right ar**hole over current lending. He claims that the situation was caused by bad lending and is now trying to force the banks to lend to customers which the banks consider to not be credit-worthy.
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by jhopgood »

Well done David.

As a Lloyds Bank Pensioner, I agree and understand what you have written.
I met people who had lost jobs in the 1970's banking crisis, and they blamed the stronger banks for pulling the rug out from under them, but acknowledged that the banking system survived and there was very little panic.
I was disappointed with Lloyds for allowing themselves to be sold a piece of bad business without a suitable parachute. They also got out of International Banking, which used to sustain them when the UK was in trouble. Fortunately I believe they will survive in the long term, unless they are bought by someone, but GB was a master second hand car salesman with what he did.
Maybe all politicians are second hand car salesmen in disguise.
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sejintenej
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by sejintenej »

jhopgood wrote: Maybe all politicians are second hand car salesmen in disguise.
Surely they wouldn't get elected if they couldn't sell a "pig in a poke". Now of course the more important ones would sell you your own metaphorical mother-in-law and charge you for her - and then charge auctioneer's commission and VAT on the sale. Second hand cars? - a doddle for them. Hence my previous comment: surely voting in favour of such people besmirches all that Emily Pankhurst and associates strove so valiantly for?
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by anniexf »

sejintenej wrote: Second hand cars? - a doddle for them. Hence my previous comment: surely voting in favour of such people besmirches all that Emily Pankhurst and associates strove so valiantly for?
Fortunately I have the option of voting for a woman who has never been an MP. But David, are you suggesting that in the Pankhursts' time politicians were squeaky-clean? The principle was to obtain for women the same rights as men in the matter of governance: having no right of redress via the ballot-box was the point.
I must tell you about the New Labour shenanigans in my constituency, where the odious Sion ("I didn't know the rules had changed") Simon is the current incumbent of the "safe seat". He suddenly (and wisely) announced his intention not to run for re-election, so there was a very hurried shortlist of candidates put out. It comprised a Muslim, a Sikh, a gay man - and Jack Dromey, Harriett Harman's husband. They have a house in London and another in Suffolk, so he wouldn't be living in the constituency. All the others do.
Dromey won. You couldn't make it up. As a footnote, this week Harman was leading off about getting more women MPs, and proposing all-women shortlists. A reporter asked her why, in her husband's case, it had been all men. She quickly changed the subject.
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by fra828 »

sejintenej wrote:

Many many years ago I threw out a challenge on Newsnet for anyone to nominate ANY politician from ANY country, living or dead, who was undoubtedly totally honest and trustworthy. I nominated Dag Hammarskjold but someone came up with reasons why he did not fit the requirements. George Washington was nominated but the Cherry Tree Story destroyed any hope for him. In the end nobody was universally accepted. (One man - a local councillor from the New Forest - thought I had cast the net too wide and should have excluded all local councillors but the courts have decided that there are a few bad apples there). I wonder if I should have put forward the name of Raoul Wallenberg but the entire question seems to demonstrate how difficult it is to find any undoubtedly reliable politician anywhere.

Hague; yes, I know nothing against him BUT a PM does need a certain flair which Blair and Kennedy had but Hague does not. I have personal reasons not to fall down before the Lib Dems or whatever they call themselves.
I agree Blair is charismatic, but not so sure about Charles Kennedy, or do you mean JFK?! Gordon Brown seems a good family man, but certainly hasn't got flair!
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by J.R. »

I too, will be voting, as I consider it my duty to do so. However, as things stand at the moment, I will NOT be voting for any of the three major parties.

I think it's called a 'protest-vote'.

(I must go and check on my moat and duck-house !)
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
sejintenej
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by sejintenej »

fra828 wrote:
sejintenej wrote:

Hague; yes, I know nothing against him BUT a PM does need a certain flair which Blair and Kennedy had but Hague does not. I have personal reasons not to fall down before the Lib Dems or whatever they call themselves.
I agree Blair is charismatic, but not so sure about Charles Kennedy, or do you mean JFK?! Gordon Brown seems a good family man, but certainly hasn't got flair!
Sorry - yes, I did mean JFK. As for Charlie boy, I think one of our MEPs recently asked the right question in a different context: "Who the he** are you ?"

GB gives me the same impression that he is a family man but the only "family" he he seems to care about is GB alone (and I don't mean Great Britain)
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by Mid A 15 »

http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/Reid/index.shtml

Reference to yet another political OB, Martin Linton, in the column of 12 March 2010.
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by cstegerlewis »

Some excellent debate rages on, but to answer EA comments on GB

The reason we are still in recession (rather than the fudged 0.1% growth from National Statistics) is that GB over the last decade has systematically undermined what was good in the social enterprise economy of the UK, by unreasonably relaxing controls on the bamks, which led to some of the casino gambling which allowed NR to become unstable, and led to the interdependence of banks following Lehman's - fundamentally with his tripartite system (ie no one was responsible as two parties thought the other was watching) there was a complete lack of control on using safe deposits from individuals and companies to fuel un relenting speculaton in Private Equity and CDO's. Note Australia never even went into recession, but because it has a balanced economy (Mining, Industry, Services) and also is in the pacific rim, it is in a better place than us.

He also reduced the UK pension industry from being the envy of the western world to a basket case where many of my generation will see nothing of the security our parents generation enjoy.

And to top it off during the GB administration the only net job creation in the UK has been the public sector - there has actually been a decline in private sector jobs in the last 14 years (source IMF Chief Economist I spoke to last year). The public sector per se is not bad, but it has to be paid for, and if there is not the wealth creation to match it we end up with massive deficits, and the inability to pay them back. This is where we were before we threw billions at the beanks which will probably take 20 years to recover. Remember we now have a bigger deficit than we did at the end of the second world war, and we finished paying the Americans back in 2008!!!

The UK is now classed by the IMF and World Bank as a FIRE economy (Finance, Insurance, Real Estate) - ie these are the areas of wealth creation and growth - and through lack of control, riding the pension funds and stoking consumer borrowing, GB has managed to undermine all 3 key pillars of the economy.

And he is lying about defence spending.

You can tell I will not be voting for him, I am naturally a centrist, but like others I am not sure who to vote for, neither of the big parties represents my views and until Clegg decides what he is standing for in order to support a minority administration, I am worried that the SNP, PC or NI politicians may hold the balance of power, which I don't believe is best for the country as a whole.

I will now withdraw and watch with interest!
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NEILL THE NOTORIOUS
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by NEILL THE NOTORIOUS »

With GREAT restraint, I am refusing to enter this debate -----
I will not attempt to justify my own position as a County and District Councillor, but I WILL spring to the defence of our MP, Annette Brooke --- local girl, local teacher, locally based, who has actually been PRAISED by the prospective Conservative , as beeing "A Good MP, Well liked" in his literature through the door.
It has been thought, by the cynical, that this is due to receiving a lot of "Flak" from people, on their doorsteps, when he tried to criticise her !!

Yes she is of my Persuasion (Mostly !) but I believe that when you are fortunate to have a "Good-un" you should be grateful !

I also like Anne Widdicombe (Not of my Persuasion !) who I think is great, and to be respected !


Retires, clad in dressing gown and slippers, to his Horlicks !!
sejintenej
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

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NEILL THE NOTORIOUS wrote:With GREAT restraint, I am refusing to enter this debate -----!!
Give what follows I like it (I think, scratching head).....

NEILL THE NOTORIOUS wrote:I will not attempt to justify my own position as a County and District Councillor, but I WILL spring to the defence of our MP, Annette Brooke --- local girl, local teacher, locally based, who has actually been PRAISED by the prospective Conservative , as beeing "A Good MP, Well liked" in his literature through the door.
It has been thought, by the cynical, that this is due to receiving a lot of "Flak" from people, on their doorsteps, when he tried to criticise her !!
Yes she is of my Persuasion (Mostly !) but I believe that when you are fortunate to have a "Good-un" you should be grateful !!!
Sounds like she is the exception which proves the rule. Unfortunately she is the pearl cast before swine
NEILL THE NOTORIOUS wrote:I also like Anne Widdicombe (Not of my Persuasion !) who I think is great, and to be respected !
There is a huge UK financial site where, in certain of the many areas, it is deemed right and proper to give due obeisance to the blessed AW** at the foot of every post.

**Note: I use small "b" to distinguish her from the Blessed AE :roll: (- which I just noticed is a notorious aerospace company)
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by NEILL THE NOTORIOUS »

:lol: :lol: :lol:
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by marty »

Currently we have a Prime Minister who acquired his position via default. He has doubled our budget deficit (when he promised to half it) and he sold off all/most of the UK's gold bullion at a time when gold prices were at an all time low, thus incurring losses of over £1 billion. His party took us into a costly war that no one wanted on the basis of the flimsiest of evidence. Hundreds of British soldiers dead. Tens of thousands of Iraqis and Afghans dead. Huge debts. Murderers and criminals given pathetically short prison sentences. That's Gordon Brown and Labour. I'll never vote for them. Ever.
My therapist says I have a preoccupation with vengeance. We’ll see about that.
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Re: The Forthcoming General Election

Post by NEILL THE NOTORIOUS »

May I, humbly, suggest to our Worthy Moderators --- that as soon as the Election is called, we close, this particular Thread.

Feelings will run high and things may be posted which will be regretted, when it has all cooled down again.

Have your say, by VOTING --- whichever way your inclination is --- but VOTE (Or don't complain ! :lol: )
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