Here are my 10 predictions for the next 12 months:
1. Benn and gone
In January, Jeremy Corbyn will sack Hilary Benn as shadow foreign secretary
It's great to have a foreign affairs spokesman who can eloquently and passionately dismantle the argument of the opposition ... But not if you are the opposition and he's supposed to be on your side.
Mr Benn will be replaced by someone who didn't vote for airstrikes in Syria.
2. EU miracle
In February, or March, David Cameron will claim a miraculous breakthrough in EU negotiations and prepare for a 2016 referendum on whether to stay or leave the EU.
What diplomat Dave describes as "great deal" for Britain will be dismissed by Eurosceptics as a horrible fudge.
3. Cabinet Members will be allowed to campaign to leave the EU.
The Conservative manifesto promised to hold a referendum – it did not state which way the government would campaign.
Cameron will not want to be accused of gagging his team. Iain Duncan Smith, and possibly even Theresa May could join the outers.
4. SNP stands strong in Holyrood.
Cracks are starting to show in the SNP's management of Scotland, but Nicola Sturgeon's star is still rising and she'll want to win this one for herself.
Labour's Kezia Dugdale has yet to make an impact. In 2011 the SNP got 44% of the vote – this time they will get between 50 and 60%.
5. Labour will lose ground in the local elections.
Analysis for the Sunday Times puts the figure at 200 of its 1,200 seats with many Labour voters turning to the Liberal Democrats.
The local elections could be the first bit of good news for Tim Farron's party in since that "cruel day" in May 2015.
6. 51% chance Zac Goldsmith will become London Mayor.
Cool, independent-minded Zac Goldsmith pushes plenty of buttons for Londoners, but then again Sadiq Khan, son of a Pakistani migrant bus driver, has promised to "roll his sleeves up" and tackle London's housing crisis.
Remember that Labour gained seven London seats in the last general election, bucking the national trend. But in the end it will probably turn into a personality contest and Goldsmith has the edge.
7. Fog lifts at Heathrow and Gatwick.
His Mayor might be opposed to it, but in 2016 Cameron will have to delve into the long grass and pick an airport to expand.
Politics Blogger Paul Goldsmith suggests the PM could emphasise the independent report by Sir Howard Davies and dub Heathrow’s expansion as “the Davies reforms to airport capacity" in the same way that 1960's railway reforms were pinned on Dr Beeching.
He'll have to contend with cabinet level opposition and face down criticism that in 2009 he said: "The third runway at Heathrow is not going ahead, no ifs, no buts."
This could tempt him to kick it into even taller shrubs for Boris and Osborne to fight over - but that would make the delays intolerably long.
8. Boris Johnson will be given a portfolio in the Cabinet.
Education, Business, Home are all options but good money is on Boris getting the Foreign Secretary job. It could be the best way to bring him on board to campaign to stay in the EU.
9. The UK will vote to stay in the EU.
Let's say the EU referendum does take place in 2016. The latest polls suggest voters are evenly split and it's hard to predict the result before the campaigns have really begun.
But recent research by Lord Ashcroft suggests only two-fifths of voters are strongly decided one way or the other, meaning there is a largely persuadable electorate.
A lot will come down to the power of the campaigns.
What is fairly certain is that the result will be more pro-EU than the polls suggest. Risk-averse, undecided voters are always more likely to take what is perceived as the "safe" option and that is how staying in will be sold to the public. "In" seems more likely than "out".
10. Jeremy Corbyn will still lead the Labour Party next Christmas.
There may well be a serious attempt to oust Mr Corbyn after the local elections but MP’s will struggle to justify a coup against the man who secured such as strong mandate from his party members.
A healthy victory at the Oldham West and Royton by-election only consolidated Corbyn’s position and firmed up his belief that he should remain leader. And he will.
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