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• #18777
That would be illegal, as I understand it, so he's paying people to sign a petition to say that they intend to register to vote.
Which I guess means that anyone can sign up an get paid.
But will probably be used as "evidence" of voter fraud / stolen elections, or some utter fabricated nonsense.
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• #18778
I think the idea is to gather contact details for unregistered voters in key swing states that care about first and second amendment rights. Then they will receive a constant stream of emails claiming Harris is going to take away their guns and pets and give them to Haitian immigrants and it will be against the law to mention racism or something something.
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• #18779
Would be interesting to see the large folder of small print that accompanies the sign-up.
Probably a paragraph in there waiving any right to a court trial in connection with musk and his companies. Would save Tesla a lot of money, for sure.
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• #18780
How will Juggalos vote?
It's actually well worth a watch.
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• #18781
Pretty good odds of winning for a $1m lottery. One person has been given a cheque so far. Maybe a second person by now.
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• #18782
Hopefully a non-citizen legal alien from a developing country wins the next cheque.
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• #18783
Labour party members went to the US as volunteers to help the Harris campaign. Trump has filed a legal complaint. Stephen Bush in the FT says that if Trump wins it "will be the defining moment in the life of the Labour government." https://www.ft.com/content/820ab317-a479-4c1f-8538-c9b2dc263ef1 https://archive.ph/wgkAY
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• #18784
Obviously they can volunteer but you've got to wonder how stupid Sofia Patel (Labour Head of Operations) would have to be in order to post on LinkedIn to say that 100+ volunteers were going to the US to help the Harris campaign. You know the orange one is vindictive, so why poke a bear, even if you think he's unlikely to win?
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• #18785
Trump way ahead in the betting odds at the moment.
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• #18786
Have you got money on this or something?
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• #18787
The FT tracker is at stalemate. I think it's been that way for ages https://ig.ft.com/us-elections/2024/polls/
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• #18788
Yet Farage is welcome any day.
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• #18789
Here's The Economist's current prediction for what it's worth.
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• #18790
NYT has Harris two percentage points ahead, whatever that means. To all intents and purposes, they're essentially tied.
What has to be a crumb of comfort is that these polls are generated by telephone canvassing. So not only are people picking up a phone call from an unknown number, they're saying 'yes' when asked whether they want to take part in a survey. Who even are these freaks?
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• #18791
Polling's a mess - they underestimated Trump so much last time(s) round, they've put in all kinds of changes in methodology to cover the Trump equivalent of 'shy Tories' and change their weightings re: propensity to vote (Trump voters were previously being discounted as they didn't think they'd vote). So, they haven't a clue if these new, untested methodologies will actually work.
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• #18792
The winner, i.e. not voting at all, will be at 40%. Both parties will be at about 30%. It's always this way https://www.ft.com/content/a29d4815-2a77-4acc-9375-c441ed7ca5bb
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• #18793
To all intents and purposes, they're essentially tied.
This.
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• #18794
With all these characters* coming out for Harris then surely it’s all over?
*actors not characters
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• #18795
Bookmakers tend to be more reliable than pollsters
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• #18796
Bookmakers calculate their odds based on how people are betting as much as how they think it'll go.
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• #18797
And they need to hedge. Long odds are risky.
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• #18798
If only Rishi would've given a speech on how great Bobby Moore's cock was, things might be looking very different for the Tories right now.
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• #18799
This. The odds are set so that the bookmakers maximise their gains, irrespective of the actual outcome.
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• #18800
If it is a 50:50 then their is a lot of value in a bet on Harris at the moment
https://x.com/DaveHan06/status/1848006292415074425