View Full Version : Dutch Auction rhetoric?
Undesired Walrus
10th June 2010, 03:18 AM
I was at the Labour Leadership debate last night and David Miliband said something I simply couldn't understand.
Here's the summation of what he said:
He also said that the Brown slogan of "British jobs for British workers" produced the lesson that you should not have a "Dutch auction" on immigration, or Europe. He then issued what for this campaign was an unusually positive approach saying that to play into the Dutch auction rhetoric is wrong and if people want that "don't vote for me".
What's that all about?
Puppycow
10th June 2010, 03:26 AM
define: dutch auction (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=define%3A+dutch+auction&aq=0&aqi=l1g10&aql=&oq=%22Dutch+auction%22&gs_rfai=)
a method of selling in which the price is reduced until a buyer is found
How that relates to immigration, I'm not sure.
brodski
10th June 2010, 03:39 AM
A “Dutch auction” is a type of auction where the seller sets a price and then periodically lowers it until a buyer is found. The first person to accept the price wins the auction.
The metaphor is used to mean that political parties (or candidates) shouldn’t get into a bidding war with setting quotas for immigration (or the like), with each party periodically lowering the quota to “undercut” their opponent in a race to the bottom.
coalesce
11th June 2010, 09:28 AM
At least he didn't ask for a Dutch oven be given to immigrants.
Michael
WildCat
14th June 2010, 08:47 AM
At least he didn't ask for a Dutch oven be given to immigrants.
Michael
Or even worse, a Dutch treat.
Sick people those Dutch are, but apparently they're superior to Danes.
Rockingham, AH Deist
16th June 2010, 03:03 AM
A “Dutch auction” is a type of auction where the seller sets a price and then periodically lowers it until a buyer is found. The first person to accept the price wins the auction.
The metaphor is used to mean that political parties (or candidates) shouldn’t get into a bidding war with setting quotas for immigration (or the like), with each party periodically lowering the quota to “undercut” their opponent in a race to the bottom.
Ah. So Labour shouldn't cave in to democracy. Got it.
brodski
16th June 2010, 03:05 AM
Ah. So Labour shouldn't cave in to democracy. Got it.
I'm not sure how you got that from what I posted. Maybe I was talking in code and didn't know it.
Mashuna
16th June 2010, 04:54 AM
Ah. So Labour shouldn't cave in to democracy. Got it.
I'm not sure how you got that from what I posted. Maybe I was talking in code and didn't know it.
I think the code is actually in the other post. "Cave in" is code for "pander to", "democracy" is code for "mewling and whining from Daily Mail editorial pieces and the letters page".
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