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Martin Lewis polls Twitter over Lord Winston's call for cyclists to be licensed and insured - and is surprised by the replies

Money Saving Expert guy says last time he got a similar reaction was from cabbies when he ran a poll about Uber

Martin Lewis, owner and founder of the website Money Saving Expert, got rather more than he bargained for when he posted a poll on Twitter asking people what they thought of Lord Winston’s call for cyclists to be licensed and insured – likening the response it provoked from some users of the social network to the one he got from members of the black cab trade when he ran a poll about Uber.

Since the Labour peer made his appeal, which has been rejected by the government, the subject has been covered across the national media including newspapers, radio and TV, receiving still more publicity after he claimed to have been assaulted by a woman he says was cycling on the pavement.

Lewis, who has more than half a million followers on Twitter, regularly posts polls to the social network on a whole range of issues, but few provoke the level of response this one has got, with more than 20,000 people having now responded.

He posted the poll this morning as made his way by train to an event in Cardiff – and it looks like dealing with the many replies from both the pro- and anti-cycling Twitterati took up a chunk of his time on the journey. Here’s a selection.

Here is Lewis’s final thought before he signed off Twitter earlier.

As for the poll itself ... well, at the time of writing 19 per cent of respondents said that they are a cyclist and disagreed, while 13 per cent said that they are a cyclist and agree with Lord Winston.

Of the other people replying to Lewis's poll, 14 per cent said they were a non-cyclist but disagreed, while a whopping 54 per cent said that they were a non-cyclist and backed Lord Winston's proposals.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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67 comments

Avatar
FluffyKittenofT... replied to Simon E | 5 years ago
3 likes
Simon E wrote:

I'm really bored of this bullshit argument. Your posts on this thread are rubbish.

 

I started writing another response, but then it dawned on me - when he went for the stream of abuse while accusing others of being 'hostile' option - that sriacha is just another petrol-head troll.  Waste of time responding - he's just one of those who has some sort of paraphilia about his car and so is consumed with hatred for anyone he perceives as threatening his love affair.

 

Edit - I wonder if he's one of the old ones returned under _yet another_ forum ID?  It was always pretty clear that several of them were the same guy, but maybe not all of them?

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ConcordeCX replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
3 likes
hawkinspeter wrote:

Maybe have sound-bites at the end such as "Cyclists - they don't foul the very air you breathe".

well, maybe occasionally, but only if I had beans on toast for tea.

 

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burtthebike replied to Sriracha | 5 years ago
2 likes
Sriracha wrote:

So of the total respondents 2/3 agree with Lord Winston. Of those who agree, just shy of 1 in 5 are themselves cyclists. And of cyclists in general, just over 40% agree with Lord Winston. So we can argue about the questionnaire design, the demographic of his followers, the guilt of the non-participants, the merits of the proposal, or the character of Lord Winston and Martin Lewis. Or we can ask ourselves, how can we address the situation where so many have this view of cyclists.

You might like to do some research on the accuracy of self-reporting polls.

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Deeferdonk | 5 years ago
3 likes

Today's Twitter Poll: Sir Robert Winston is calling for all cyclists to have number plates/visible ID so they can be "accountable for their actions". (On the back of him being attacked after telling a cyclist to get off the pavement)

Do you agree that you should be able to kick a Lord who is bossing you about?

I'm a Lord: yes [ ]

I'm a Lord:  No [ ]

I'm a Pleb: yes [ ]

I'm a Pleb:  No [ ]

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ktache | 5 years ago
5 likes

Nice Scoob, though I would offset it to the right, and have scratchy things on the end.

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wycombewheeler replied to ktache | 5 years ago
1 like
ktache wrote:

Nice Scoob, though I would offset it to the right, and have scratchy things on the end.

i want one as wide as a car with the number plate 

y0u asked for 1t

then i can take the whole lane at all times, like the knobs who can't wait 5 seconds to join the next queue of cars.

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wycombewheeler replied to ktache | 5 years ago
3 likes
ktache wrote:

Nice Scoob, though I would offset it to the right, and have scratchy things on the end.

i want one as wide as a car with the number plate 

y0u asked for 1t

then i can take the whole lane at all times, like the knobs who can't wait 5 seconds to join the next queue of cars.

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Scoob_84 | 5 years ago
0 likes

double post

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Scoob_84 | 5 years ago
4 likes

Could work

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Kendalred replied to Scoob_84 | 5 years ago
2 likes
Scoob_84 wrote:

Could work

Is there an aero version?

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PRSboy | 5 years ago
6 likes

I thought Martin Lewis was a money saving expert.  I would have thought he'd be all over cycling as a way for people to save money commuting, not to mention wider health benefits and saving the taxpayer money.  He could also have pointed out as RobD above that if you have car insurance you are likely covered third party anyway to ride a bike.

Disappointing he could not make a useful contribution to the debate rather than this Twitter nonsense.

 

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TedBarnes replied to PRSboy | 5 years ago
5 likes
PRSboy wrote:

I thought Martin Lewis was a money saving expert.  I would have thought he'd be all over cycling as a way for people to save money commuting, not to mention wider health benefits and saving the taxpayer money.  He could also have pointed out as RobD above that if you have car insurance you are likely covered third party anyway to ride a bike.

Disappointing he could not make a useful contribution to the debate rather than this Twitter nonsense.

 

  1. MoneySavingExpert.com (presumably) makes a large amount of money from the insurance price comparison feature on its website. 
  2. Martin Lewis AKA MoneySavingExpert holds a poll to see whether a further area of compulsory insurance for the general public should be introduced.

 

I'm not sure about anyone else, but I for one am entirely satisfied that the above points are entirely unrelated...

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wycombewheeler replied to TedBarnes | 5 years ago
0 likes
TedBarnes wrote:
PRSboy wrote:

I thought Martin Lewis was a money saving expert.  I would have thought he'd be all over cycling as a way for people to save money commuting, not to mention wider health benefits and saving the taxpayer money.  He could also have pointed out as RobD above that if you have car insurance you are likely covered third party anyway to ride a bike.

Disappointing he could not make a useful contribution to the debate rather than this Twitter nonsense.

 

  1. MoneySavingExpert.com (presumably) makes a large amount of money from the insurance price comparison feature on its website. 
  2. Martin Lewis AKA MoneySavingExpert holds a poll to see whether a further area of compulsory insurance for the general public should be introduced.

 

I'm not sure about anyone else, but I for one am entirely satisfied that the above points are entirely unrelated...

cycle insurance* can be had for about a tenner . I doubt anyone is getting rich on commissions on that

 

*(3rd party liability, not theft coverage which it seems will buy you a new bike about every 6 years)

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Pilot Pete replied to PRSboy | 5 years ago
1 like
PRSboy wrote:

I thought Martin Lewis was a money saving expert.  I would have thought he'd be all over cycling as a way for people to save money commuting, not to mention wider health benefits and saving the taxpayer money.  He could also have pointed out as RobD above that if you have car insurance you are likely covered third party anyway to ride a bike.

Disappointing he could not make a useful contribution to the debate rather than this Twitter nonsense.

Where do you get the idea that third party cover for a motor vehicle will cover you when you are riding a bicycle? I stand to be corrected, but as far as I am aware it ONLY covers damage to a third party made by you when driving your car, unless you specifically have a clause written into the policy covering such damage when you are riding your bike.

Most home insurance policies do cover an individual for third party liability, so it may be possible for a third party to make a claim against such a policy. However, the amount of cover may vary from policy to policy and there may be specific exclusions. Always best to check the small print before assuming that you have any such cover.

PP

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srchar | 5 years ago
2 likes

Yep, we have reached peak zero f*cks. This is the logical destination when everyone and everything is given a label. The word "community" no longer means the people you rub along with on a daily basis, but defines a special interest group. (Example: "The cycling community" ARRGGHH!)

It's not just people wandering down the street with headphones in and eyes on a screen, it's not just the driver endangering another human being to save themselves three seconds, it's almost everywhere. I feel genuine surprise when I hire someone to do a job and they turn up on time and do it competently, or when I complain about something in a restaurant and am met with an apology rather than a shrug. Courtesies that were once par for the course are now a rare treat.

I'm sure someone will be along in a moment to blame Thatcher, but I lay the blame at a combination of identity politics and the "everyone gets a medal, you're all very special" approach to teaching that became popular in the late 90s, coupled with the arrival of those taught like that into a world where most of their whims can be fulfilled almost immediately by tapping on their phone. Want a taxi? It's outside in 30 seconds. Gonna be late (again)? Just send a text. Cyclist delaying your arrival at the back of the next traffic jam? Honk your horn at them, verbally abuse them, punishment pass them, fuck it, knock 'em off!

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handlebarcam | 5 years ago
6 likes

I like the way Mr. Lewis framed the question. If we must insist on holding binary polls they should be split into at least four options:

  • Yes but I wouldn't personally be affected either way
  • Yes and I reckon I would be affected
  • No and I wouldn't
  • No and I would

The reason is that people are so selfish nowadays. Every day - on the roads, in city centres, in offices, on public transport - you witness little acts of selfishness. People barging out of shops without looking. People watching TV on a mobile phone in a bus without headphones. This morning I saw a stream of cars overtaking vehicles parked on their side of the road, holding up an ambulance with flashing lights coming the other way.

You just cannot expect people to think about the effects on others of their choices anymore. Don't like the extra few seconds that cyclists add to your car journeys? Make 'em wear helmets and have a license. Doesn't matter to you that it would be unworkable, because you won't personally be affected. Want blue passports? Vote leave, who cares if others lose their jobs.

There are selfish people who ride bikes, of course, but only the motorcar promotes selfishness by design. It selfishly takes up public space when not in use, it unsustainably pollutes the environment, and it cocoons its users in a bubble when driven. That is why driving needs to be taxed and regulated, whereas cycling does not.

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RobD | 5 years ago
2 likes

So I have a car driving license and insurance, I'm already covered right? As are probably 75%+ of adults who cycle, I don't get why people who are non cyclists assume all cyclists are non people.

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Hirsute replied to RobD | 5 years ago
2 likes
RobD wrote:

So I have a car driving license and insurance, I'm already covered right? As are probably 75%+ of adults who cycle, I don't get why people who are non cyclists assume all cyclists are non people.

I doubt your car insurance would cover you, but most people have got home insurance which gives 3rd party cover.

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burtthebike replied to Hirsute | 5 years ago
0 likes
hirsute wrote:
RobD wrote:

So I have a car driving license and insurance, I'm already covered right? As are probably 75%+ of adults who cycle, I don't get why people who are non cyclists assume all cyclists are non people.

I doubt your car insurance would cover you, but most people have got home insurance which gives 3rd party cover.

Home insurance may cover you for third party risks when cycling, but only may, not definitely, so you have to read the small print.

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TedBarnes replied to burtthebike | 5 years ago
2 likes
burtthebike wrote:
hirsute wrote:
RobD wrote:

So I have a car driving license and insurance, I'm already covered right? As are probably 75%+ of adults who cycle, I don't get why people who are non cyclists assume all cyclists are non people.

I doubt your car insurance would cover you, but most people have got home insurance which gives 3rd party cover.

Home insurance may cover you for third party risks when cycling, but only may, not definitely, so you have to read the small print.

The simplest answer to me would be to make this a compulsory addition to car insurance. 

There is already the Motor Insurers Bureau (MIB) scheme, which effectively covers 3rd parties where the negligent driver doesn't pay car insurance, and a similar scheme for untraced drivers i.e. hit and runs - though from memory it is a less generous scheme than where the driver is known but uninsured. 

It is objectively unfair that drivers that do pay for insurance have to cover those that don't, but society has decided that it is more unfair for injured people to be left without compensation for injuries. It was decided that what is effectively a tax on car insurance (albeit self-administered by the insurance industry as a whole), is the most pragmatic way to deal with it. 

So, since such a large proportion of cyclists are drivers with car insurance anyway, simply extend that scheme: 

  • The (mahooossive) admin overhead of assessing and collecting premiums from millions of cyclists, including very occasional cyclists, is neatly side-stepped.
  • The occasional cyclists and those wanting to try/get back into cycling are not put off by admin headaches of arranging insurance
  • Those affected by injuries caused by cyclists can now claim - whether pedestrians, other cyclists or - no laughing at the back - drivers and other occupants of 1-2 tonne boxes of metal that are somehow injured by cyclists.
  • It wouldn't matter if the cyclist was effectively a hit and run, as the MIB scheme covers those
  • Drivers would see a near neglible increase to their premiums. 

Of course this will never happen. The idea of drivers paying for cyclists' insurance would be incendiary, notwithstanding how many cyclists are drivers anyway. But if injuries (and damage to other vehicles?) caused by cyclists with no insurance is a real problem, this strikes me as the simplest way of dealing with it. 

Oh - and if people really complain, we could point them to the changes the government have made to effectively remove lawyers from low value RTA injury claims involving whiplash. That's expected to massively reduce the numbers and costs of such claims, and the insurance industry was very vocal in how much it would reduce premiums for decent, honest & hard working motorists (or some such bollocks).

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quiff replied to burtthebike | 5 years ago
1 like
burtthebike wrote:
hirsute wrote:
RobD wrote:

So I have a car driving license and insurance, I'm already covered right? As are probably 75%+ of adults who cycle, I don't get why people who are non cyclists assume all cyclists are non people.

I doubt your car insurance would cover you, but most people have got home insurance which gives 3rd party cover.

Home insurance may cover you for third party risks when cycling, but only may, not definitely, so you have to read the small print.

Just checked this out - my car insurance definitely does not cover me when riding a bike (all cover relates to driving my car or another car I have permission to drive), but my home insurance (arguably) does - it covers me for personal injury / property damage I cause to others as a private individual. 

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burtthebike | 5 years ago
11 likes

Some wag, Clive Andrews, has posted this poll on the twitter feed:

Martin Lewis is running a poll about restrictions on cycling.   Why is he doing this?

  Actually cares

  Jumping on some clickbait

The first is at 4% , the second at 96%

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Sriracha | 5 years ago
0 likes

So, the poll is wrong, the question was wrong, the votes are wrong, etc etc.
On a previous thread about a cyclists fined for cycling in a non-cycling zone it was the fault of 'plod' for enforcing the regulation, the cyclist should be excused due to the culpability of motorists, 'plod' should exercise 'discretion' (i.e. turn a blind eye on account of it being a cyclist). And the prevailing advice was that the cyclist should just have ridden off. Any wonder the rest of society wants cyclists held to account?

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hawkinspeter replied to Sriracha | 5 years ago
2 likes
Sriracha wrote:

So, the poll is wrong, the question was wrong, the votes are wrong, etc etc. On a previous thread about a cyclists fined for cycling in a non-cycling zone it was the fault of 'plod' for enforcing the regulation, the cyclist should be excused due to the culpability of motorists, 'plod' should exercise 'discretion' (i.e. turn a blind eye on account of it being a cyclist). And the prevailing advice was that the cyclist should just have ridden off. Any wonder the rest of society wants cyclists held to account?

Okay, I'm not going to bother addressing your irrelevant bits as I think we should keep these comments relevant to the story.

It's easy to throw a poll together but it's difficult to make sure that it's done well or is fit for purpose.

Imagine a society where 40% are vegetarian, 30% love beef but won't eat pork and 30% love bacon and pork chops but won't eat beef.

Now imagine that for some reason there's a poll to decide what everyone is going to eat tonight but the only options are for "meat" or "no meat". Assuming that everyone votes for their own preference, you'd end up with 60% voting for "meat" and 40% voting for "no meat". A nice clear result you may think.

However, when the pollster goes to buy ingredients, what should they buy? If they choose pork then 70% are going to be unhappy. If they choose beef, then again 70% will be against it. (If they went for vegetables then only 60% would be unhappy, but that would also highlight the uselessness of the poll).

Obviously the "meat" option is poorly defined and the poll needs to be redesigned so that the voters know what exactly they are voting for.

Avatar
ConcordeCX replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
4 likes
hawkinspeter wrote:
Sriracha wrote:

So, the poll is wrong, the question was wrong, the votes are wrong, etc etc. On a previous thread about a cyclists fined for cycling in a non-cycling zone it was the fault of 'plod' for enforcing the regulation, the cyclist should be excused due to the culpability of motorists, 'plod' should exercise 'discretion' (i.e. turn a blind eye on account of it being a cyclist). And the prevailing advice was that the cyclist should just have ridden off. Any wonder the rest of society wants cyclists held to account?

Okay, I'm not going to bother addressing your irrelevant bits as I think we should keep these comments relevant to the story.

It's easy to throw a poll together but it's difficult to make sure that it's done well or is fit for purpose.

Imagine a society where 40% are vegetarian, 30% love beef but won't eat pork and 30% love bacon and pork chops but won't eat beef.

Now imagine that for some reason there's a poll to decide what everyone is going to eat tonight but the only options are for "meat" or "no meat". Assuming that everyone votes for their own preference, you'd end up with 60% voting for "meat" and 40% voting for "no meat". A nice clear result you may think.

However, when the pollster goes to buy ingredients, what should they buy? If they choose pork then 70% are going to be unhappy. If they choose beef, then again 70% will be against it. (If they went for vegetables then only 60% would be unhappy, but that would also highlight the uselessness of the poll).

Obviously the "meat" option is poorly defined and the poll needs to be redesigned so that the voters know what exactly they are voting for.

Let them eat nuts!

Except when it's trolls. Don't feed the trolls!

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to ConcordeCX | 5 years ago
1 like
ConcordeCX wrote:
hawkinspeter wrote:
Sriracha wrote:

So, the poll is wrong, the question was wrong, the votes are wrong, etc etc. On a previous thread about a cyclists fined for cycling in a non-cycling zone it was the fault of 'plod' for enforcing the regulation, the cyclist should be excused due to the culpability of motorists, 'plod' should exercise 'discretion' (i.e. turn a blind eye on account of it being a cyclist). And the prevailing advice was that the cyclist should just have ridden off. Any wonder the rest of society wants cyclists held to account?

Okay, I'm not going to bother addressing your irrelevant bits as I think we should keep these comments relevant to the story.

It's easy to throw a poll together but it's difficult to make sure that it's done well or is fit for purpose.

Imagine a society where 40% are vegetarian, 30% love beef but won't eat pork and 30% love bacon and pork chops but won't eat beef.

Now imagine that for some reason there's a poll to decide what everyone is going to eat tonight but the only options are for "meat" or "no meat". Assuming that everyone votes for their own preference, you'd end up with 60% voting for "meat" and 40% voting for "no meat". A nice clear result you may think.

However, when the pollster goes to buy ingredients, what should they buy? If they choose pork then 70% are going to be unhappy. If they choose beef, then again 70% will be against it. (If they went for vegetables then only 60% would be unhappy, but that would also highlight the uselessness of the poll).

Obviously the "meat" option is poorly defined and the poll needs to be redesigned so that the voters know what exactly they are voting for.

Let them eat nuts!

Except when it's trolls. Don't feed the trolls!

...but they voted for "meat"!

Avatar
Awavey | 5 years ago
6 likes

sheesh he claims its just a random fun poll, since when did money saving advice need to run twitter opinion polls anyway, but then only retweets the Kim Briggs campaign, and then moans alot about cyclists attacking him, way to go for balance there, not. At least the "Im a cyclist, no"  has moved into 2nd place now,  but those  circa 3666 odd cyclists saying yes Winston is right, assuming they are really cyclists, need to take a long hard look in the mirror.

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billymansell replied to Awavey | 5 years ago
4 likes
Awavey wrote:

sheesh he claims its just a random fun poll, since when did money saving advice need to run twitter opinion polls anyway, but then only retweets the Kim Briggs campaign, and then moans alot about cyclists attacking him, way to go for balance there, not.

For someone who has done so much work in challenging misselling he was sold and bought a fallacy simply because it came from someone who calls themselves a scientist. He never thought to check out the validity of the unsubstantiated claims or the history of the seller in peddling post-truths and lies as part of a campaign against cycling.

As innocent and fun as such polls by the media appear by ignorantly promoting such whack-a-doodle ideas they give credence and validity to the ideas and embolden their creators to continue pursuing a campaign of lies that go unchecked.

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srchar | 5 years ago
4 likes

Now let's have a poll for clearing out the crusty old fools in that giant gin palace known as the House of Lords.

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Hirsute | 5 years ago
9 likes

54% showed they have no idea of what is involved or how much it would cost, not if there would be any benefit at all.

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