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LOL at Mandleson's cunning plan.
Also laugh/shake head at anyone who says "Corbyn is unelectable vote Cooper"!
So you are saying that with every year you remain a member of NATO the harder it becomes to leave? Seriously? 🙂
Was it "extremely hard" for France to become a fully integrated member after a 43 year lapse then, or is this just a one way thing ?
OK this isn't going anywhere. You are going to agree with jambalaya that it would be "extremely difficult" to leave NATO, I however take a different view.
And quite frankly the "extremely difficult to leave" is the worse argument I've yet heard in favour of remaining in NATO.
And quite frankly the "extremely difficult to leave" is the worse argument I've yet heard in favour of remaining in NATO.
That is true, there are much stronger arguments for staying in.
LOL at Mandleson's cunning plan.
You mean the cunning plan where the other three candidates withdraw leaving Corbyn the only one ?
For some inexplicable reason the brains behind New Labour was under the impression that the leadership election would be scrapped if that happened.
Even though in the 2007 leadership election Gordon Brown was declared the leader as he was the only candidate.
Presumably Mandleson couldn't remember that. Or did he think the rules could be simply changed to suit him ?
Why are so many Labour senior figures jumping right onto the front pages without anybody in the party stopping them? I mean surely the Mandleson thing; somebody tells him on the quiet how their own elections work and he keeps his teeth together.
I wonder if the torygraph et all underestimate Corbyn,he is a survivor that the right assume is stupid because of his left wing principles. What if he becomes electable? It is a long,long time since we have had a Labour government.
Another tangent,but if he wants to take us out of NATO,what are the compelling reasons for staying?
Putin
Why are so many Labour senior figures jumping right onto the front pages without anybody in the party stopping them? I mean surely the Mandleson thing;....
Shock and panic? Events spinning out of their control? A feeling of impotence?
Watching the other three- its obvious they have no plan B to counter corbyn's rise. No one was programmed for this result as the opening odds suggested. That's what makes the Panto so entertaining. When the heat is on, that's when you see peoples' true colours. Who is fit to govern......?
really looking forward to see corbyn as labour leader -will make politics interesting again-( westminster stylee obviously)-will also have a big effect on trade union leaderships , with lots of dead wood being replaced with people who actually want fight for change...
be-friends the terrorists as you "have to talk to everyone".
This criticism of Corbyn over talking to Hamas etc is particularly pathetic. We are heavily in bed with the Saudis - 9/11 was planned and carried out by Saudis and they are the major backers of Islamic terrorism/extremism worldwide. Our dear leader has recently been chumming up with the leader of Kazakhstan who is responsible for all sorts of disgraceful human rights abuses. And your hero Maggie continued to defend Pinochet to the hilt even when evidence of his mass murder etc came to light.
The argument that we should engage in 'dialogue' with people doing things we don't approve of and try to influence them positively that way is trotted out quite frequently, but highly selectively.
Though we could always look at it another way - from Bliairs initial election winning manifesto, the party crept gradually to the left, with classic Labour behaviour and 'big state' spending gradually replacing the footing that he came to power on, every time loosing support - Brown went further to the Left, Miliband even further - each time bleeding votes, each time loosing worse - now Corbyn looks set to throw the party back to the days of the longest suicide note in history. No wonder the election winning Blairites are pissed off.
Just dragging up a slightly older post that threw something up for me in particular.
My feeling wasn't as per the above. (Labour dropping votes because of moving left).
It was more.
[b]Early Blair[/b] = Clear, concise, believable. It felt at the time like a much-needed real alternative to the Tories.
[b]Later Blair[/b] = Showing his true colours. Lost trust.
[b]Brown[/b] = Woolly, not very believable.
[b]Milliband[/b] = A shambling mess of confusion. A joke.
[b]Corbyn[/b] = Clear, concise, believable. Seems to really talk with conviction and confidence.
Some of what's been said above about the other leader-candidates not really having any clear policies is exactly what's killing them and previously killed the Brown/Milliband periods imo. Not that they moved too far left, it was that they didn't really understand how to form a left-wing opposition.
[url= http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/aug/17/labour-leadership-andy-burnham-yvette-cooper-contest ]Well they're now getting down and dirty[/url]. Not only is it utterly pathetic, and obviously handing victory to Corbyn on a plate, but it's tantamount to an admission of defeat from both camps as otherwise they wouldn't be engaging in such mudslinging. And to think the blairites talk about 'grown-ups' 🙂
Question: Do I have to put a second and third preference on my ballot paper? Of the other candidates not a single one of them deserves it.
Why are so many Labour senior figures jumping right onto the front pages without anybody in the party stopping them?
To the contrary, so many in the party are begging them to speak up, they know that a Corbyn victory will be a disaster and they are trying to avert it. Those in the parliamentary party who put Corbyn forward simply to braided the debate are going to be persona non grata amongst their colleagues.
@ernie, so if I've got this right from your post withdrawing from NATO isn't a Corbyn foreign policy? This goes back to my earlier question, does he have any foreign policies ? We know he voted against the Labour government on virtually everything but what actual real policies does he have ?
@grum & others, if Corbyn wins there will be a tsunami of mud thrown at him over his links to terrorists. Even Gordon Brown raised this in his latest statement as have other leadership contenders. Just imagine what the Tories are going to do with this. Mo Mowlam has my huge respect as a politician and a person, Corbyn is no Mo Mowlam. Also Mowlam negotiated with the IRA as a represtative of government, Corbyn described the IRA and others as "friends" as outside government, a maverick who voted against his own party 400 times. As such meeting with Hezbollah and Hamas as a Maverick he can add nothing to the peace process, he cannot speak for the UK, he cannot add anything except give credibility to internationally recognised terrorist organisations. Trust me on this prediction if he wins the leadership election he will be attacked relentlessly on this from inside and outside the UK. How likely do you think it will be for him to meet anyone from the U.S. Democratic Party ? Syriza and Podomos, they will be his buddies giving further ammunition to the centre/right of British politics.
Having said all of that I hope he wins. If he doesn't I will have wished I'd spent the £3 to vote for him.
Trust me
No.
@Alex - what Corbyn says is quite clear (even if he has very few actual policies) its just he has to win a General election to do anything about it. IMO he cannot win an election. So he's a protest party candidate, he's just against stuff. Blair did what was necessary to get and stay elected, part of that was keeping Brown away from being PM.
@dead - few hear trusted me when I said 2.5 years ago that immigration would be a major issue at the general election and that together with UKIP would present a threat to the Labour Party. It seems more of the Scorpttish referendum voters agreed with me than STWers. People didn't want to accept my views of the outcome of the Greek debt negotiations and look where we are, a tougher austerity programme than they had in 2014 and billions wiped off Greek GDP due to Syriza's negotiating position leading to bank closures.
Let's see what happens if/when Corbyn wins, we can trawl back through my posts here. I'm pretty certain I'll be proven correct.
Just think about it, pretty odd that Ernie and I are backing the same candidate, just for very different reasons. A Corbyn victory will be the end of left/far left as a potential mainstream party in the UK for generations.
Go Jermey, go
Your self-belief, were it not so delusional would be almost admirable...if it didn't involve swaying in whatever breeze is blowing.
Just think about it, pretty odd that Ernie and I are backing the same candidate, just for very different reasons.
You might as well make a big deal out of you both choosing the same beer on a Thursday evening. What a ridiculous thing to say.
I'm pretty certain I'll be proven correct.
Indeed...just like when you, in a tumescent engorged sense of your own correctness, said that the Irish/Ireland was a primitive or backward nation. Were you as correct back then?
I'm not sure I agree. Credible opposition would be a good start and by that I mean people who are good at standing up in the HoC or on TV and illustrating exactly why Conservative policies are damaging.jambalaya - Member
@Alex - what Corbyn says is quite clear (even if he has very few actual policies) its just he has to win a General election to do anything about it.
Why do people think the leadership election is any different to a general election. If the other candidates can't gain support from non-tory voters now, how could they win based on the few tory voters they could steal?IMO he cannot win an election.
For me, this is exactly what he isn't. That's how I perceive the others - they're just against Tories, but are terrible at communicating why.So he's a protest party candidate, he's just against stuff
But what good did it do us? People seem to just be content with not letting the Conservatives in, but I feel that's a very lazy approach and is exactly what cost them the last election and what is losing Burnham/Cooper/Kendall this leadership contest.Blair did what was necessary to get and stay elected, part of that was keeping Brown away from being PM.
@grum & others, if Corbyn wins there will be a tsunami of mud thrown at him over his links to terrorists. Even Gordon Brown raised this in his latest statement as have other leadership contenders. Just imagine what the Tories are going to do with this.
So what you are saying is that you and various other spiteful, disingenuous, ill-informed parties are going to use this against him, despite the unbelievable hypocrisy involved, and regardless of whether or not Corbyn's approach might be effective?
Well that's one argument I suppose....
It's easy to be radical when you have no authority. To get a chance to implement his core ideals, a conviction politician must "get real" and gracefully compromise the less important ones. Political success or failure depends on agility at doing that.
I have no idea if he's actually a good politician.
jambalaya - MemberBlair did what was necessary to get and stay elected,
1) No he didn't. He inherited a winning hand from the 2 Johns. Not the first time this has been pointed out.
2) Why is it that even while inventing a creation myth for Blair and rewriting history to remove Smith's achievements, the best anyone comes up with is an excuse? "He did what was necessary". It wasn't his fault! He had to! Tell you, if I ever invent myself a legacy it'll not be "It wasn't my fault". It'll be "I achieved this and it was awesome".
Blair did what he wanted. He didn't "make Labour electable", he changed Labour for his own reasons. You could say he was right to; I'd be fine with that, I wouldn't agree but at least it's honest, and positive. But why is it his supporters don't say that- they say "It wasn't his fault, he did what was necessary"?
grum - MemberSo what you are saying is that you and various other spiteful, disingenuous, ill-informed parties are going to use this against him, despite the unbelievable hypocrisy involved.
Well that's one argument I suppose....
I'd say it's a legit concern... Except that experience shows that whoever wins, they'll have a shower of shit thrown at them. There's no point trying to find a candidate that the press won't throw shit at; it's a fundamental fitness of purpose issue, anyone that the Telegraph, the Mail, Sky etc likes isn't qualified to be Labour leader. What you need, is a candidate that can take the shit. And who knows, maybe rise above it and make it obvious how ridiculous the whole thing is. Is that Corbyn? Don't know, he seems to be managing it for now. But it's not Andy or Liz and it's sure as **** not Yvette.
[quote=dazh ]Question: Do I have to put a second and third preference on my ballot paper? Of the other candidates not a single one of them deserves it.
I'm not sure of the precise details of this election and it's easier for you to check than me, but if it's a normal AV then no you don't have to put a second preference - and assuming from that you're planning on voting for Corbyn it would make no difference if you did as it's only if your first choice has the least support that your second preference comes into it.
[quote=grum ]So what you are saying is that you and various other spiteful, disingenuous, ill-informed parties are going to use this against him, despite the unbelievable hypocrisy involved, and regardless of whether or not Corbyn's approach might be effective?
Well of course they will if they think it's a vote winner
Corbyn will definitely be an entertaining "Leader" of the opposition.
However if, by some bizarre circumstance, he manages to become Prime Minister, he won't last long.
The broad thrust of British domestic and foreign policy is agreed on and implemented by an establishment represented at the action end by the Civil Service. Parliament is just the front of house window display.
History shows that individuals who try to derail the status quo because the country has "voted for the manifesto policies" don't last long.
dazh - MemberWell they're now getting down and dirty. Not only is it utterly pathetic, and obviously handing victory to Corbyn on a plate, but it's tantamount to an admission of defeat from both camps as otherwise they wouldn't be engaging in such mudslinging. And to think the blairites talk about 'grown-ups'
Question: Do I have to put a second and third preference on my ballot paper? Of the other candidates not a single one of them deserves it.
It's interesting isn't it how at the start of the leadership campaign Corbyn was attacking the Tories while the other three candidates were attacking Corbyn, now as things have progressed Corbyn is still attacking the Tories while the other three candidates are now attacking Corbyn and each other.
Just that tells you what you need to know about the candidates and why Corbyn's popular support is growing.
The blairite hard-right claims that a Corbyn victory will sow disunity within the Labour Party, what they are doing is actually giving a thinly veiled threat that should Corbyn become the democratically elected leader of the party they will do everything in their power to sow disunity, cause havoc, and tear the party apart. See it as blackmail because that is exactly what it is.
dazh you can vote for just one person and not give any other preferences if you want. To be fair if you're voting for Corbyn as your first preference your second preference is meaningless unless Corbyn doesn't make it to the final round. A Burnham v Cooper final round is unlikely in the extreme.
Poor Liz. Latest poll has her on under 8%. I watched Andy Burnham on the news giving a speech last night. He looked like he'd rather be anywhere else rather than where he was. Mind you: it was Blackburn.He showed all the fiery passion of a speak-your-weight machine reading a photocopier instruction manual.
Does anyone know if Yvette has been outside North London yet?
Poor Liz. Latest poll has her on under 8%.
But Tony Blair is backing her as the best candidate to be the next Labour Prime Minister. What's gone wrong?
I always have a good laugh at the revisionist Blair storytelling. He was the luckiest politician of his generation, pretty much all he had to do was smile nicely and not say anything controversial. This complacency was reflected in his time in government where despite things like the minimum wage, devolution etc he failed to deliver the transformative change demanded of a labour government. The tories learnt from this, and whether you like them or not, they at least get the idea that in government you have to do things. Yet now the blairite wing of the labour party want it to go back to doing nothing, with a frilling round the edges, not rocking the boat strategy.
They just don't get it. I've asked a few people I know who are anti-Corbyn just what Burnham/Cooper/Kendall offer that will succeed where Miliband failed, and not one of them can give me an answer. The bottom line is that for a long time people in this country, and particularly in the labour party, believe that something is wrong with politics which requires changing. Corbyn offers the opportunity for that change. No one knows if it will be successful, but it's an opportunity that can't be missed, which explains why he's doing so well I think.
The broad thrust of British domestic and foreign policy is agreed on and implemented by an establishment represented at the action end by the Civil Service.
This is quite true. Whitehall provides the function of governance. Parliament is the executive.
[quote=dazh ]This complacency was reflected in his time in government where despite things like the minimum wage, devolution etc he failed to deliver the transformative change demanded of a [s]labour[/s] socialist government.
For which he would have had to be a socialist
They just don't get it. I've asked a few people I know who are anti-Corbyn just what Burnham/Cooper/Kendall offer that will succeed where Miliband failed, and not one of them can give me an answer.
Rock and a hard place. Remembering the discussion before Corbyn popped up, and even before all of those announced they were standing and nobody stood out as being any better than Ed. Which explains why Corbyn is doing so well, but doesn't mean he'll be successful [s]if[/s] when he becomes leader. I'm just not sure he will actually manage to change anything in the long term - if he does in the short term, but Labour still lose the next election (with or without him) then I'd expect principles to be abandoned in favour of electability (as mentioned further up, the voters Labour need to attract don't seem that interested in what he has to offer - to some extent he's preaching to the choir, might win back seats from SNP, but they need more than that to form a government).
So it's not just Philip Hammond who forgets who Liz is?
Of course Blair, was lucky. Like most "successful" politicians and businessmen, they rely first and foremost on luck and then their ability to ride it. No surprise there. Fooled by randomness.
The only surprise is (given the obvious disdain with which politicians are held) is why on earth people want them controlling the commanding heights of the economy. A truly bizarre concept in most cases.
Incredibly the gap between, the Toires being in a similar pickle and Labour now was probably choosing the wrong brother. We could have so easily been watching the disintegration of the Tories instead of Labour. The fickle nature of politics!!!
After this panto season, we will then have the fun and games of the Tory version - Boris v George v some woman who regularly seems to be apologising to the house for the latest cock up
as mentioned further up, the voters Labour need to attract don't seem that interested in what he has to offer
They could also aim to attract the majority of folk who don’t vote in order to win. They tend to not vote as it make **** all difference perhaps if he offers a difference he will win?
Do agree that he wont attract southern floating voters /tory light types
The only surprise is (given the obvious disdain with which politicians are held) is why on earth people want them controlling the commanding heights of the economy
Probably because we trust big business even less and we don’t want a return to the dark satanic mills/feudalism/slave labour type sweat shops which all make business sense but are a bit lacking in morality.
The only surprise is (given the obvious disdain with which politicians are held) is why on earth people want them controlling the commanding heights of the economy
Because the alternative is bankers, offshore media barons and tax-dodging corporate boardrooms. Another reputable and highly respected bunch. Its like asking if you'd like your huge shit sandwich on brown or white bread
Ultimately we just end up with an unholy hybrid of the two, doing each others bidding, to the total exclusion of everyone else. A bit like that Hovis neither-one nor't'other bread.
Thats what globalisation and free market capitalism have ultimately delivered us.
Still wondering why Jezza is proving more popular than expected?
Thats what globalisation and free market capitalism have ultimately delivered us.
Hard to say, nobody has tried free market capitalism yet.
True. Shall we call it corporatism instead? Socialism for the bankers, and subsidy-hoovering, tax-dodging corporate boardrooms, red-in-tooth-and-claw, let-the-market-decide capitalism for the rest of us?
Whatever you call it though, my point still stands....
If that's what we're being offered by all mainstream parties, is anyone really still wondering why Jezza is proving so popular?
Oh I see...bloody globalisation and free market capitalism (but as Woppit notes, hard to spot an examples on the latter but never mind). Let's go back to protectionism and state planning..."still wondering why Jezza is proving more popular".....no, it's clear now, thanks. Why was no one talking about this pre the election I wonder?
How about an addiction to debt?
Wage growth without productivity growth?
Weak investment?
Excess consumption?
Etc....
[quote=Junkyard ]
as mentioned further up, the voters Labour need to attract don't seem that interested in what he has to offer
They could also aim to attract the majority of folk who don’t vote in order to win. They tend to not vote as it make **** all difference perhaps if he offers a difference he will win?
Ah, maybe I should have clarified - I was referring mainly to the people who don't vote, I'm sure I saw something about them mentioned earlier and they didn't seem to be after particularly socialist stuff.
In the global capitlaism you espouse many [ the overwhelming majority all but the 0.1 %] will be losers
They want protectionsim in the same way even the most laissez fair capitlaist wants propoerty law and a ****ing great big state run police, court s and prison service and a big army against
Little people really suffer under globalisation and it gives us comapnies that treat you like an amazon employee and they dont pay tax either. Its not that hard to work out why folk might be a little unhappy with this
nobody has tried free market capitalism yet.
they always chicken out at the starving children point dont they
maybe I should have clarified
Not read the thread [ so my error] but what i have seen and anecdotally folk dont vote because they dont think it will make a difference
Ah, maybe I should have clarified - I was referring mainly to the people who don't vote, I'm sure I saw something about them mentioned earlier and they didn't seem to be after particularly socialist stuff
Indeed, which is why the current panic is even more bizarre. Still fail to learn the lessons of history....
Quiet reflection and let the Tories and the SNP be judged on their results first. First road back to redemption is to be an effective opposition, not one in disarray
How about an addiction to debt?Wage growth without productivity growth?
Weak investment?
Excess consumption?
Etc....
How about making your point without asking us questions?
Oh forget that it actually works quite well 😉
First road back to redemption is to be an effective opposition, not one in disarray
Many ways t be effective and one way may be to be an alternative rather than just liek them but not quite as nasty
Its true the party [Machinery but NOT its members] is in disarray about a left winger leading
The "moderates" have made this crisis by their refusal to accept what the party wants and flouncing before the event
Oh I see...bloody globalisation and free market capitalism. Let's go back to protectionism and state planning...
Why is it that when anyone suggests that their should be any constraints on the present market model, all the free-marketeers all just scream in hysterical default that it'll be 1977 all over again.
The world is now a different place.
A lot of people think things have swung too far in one direction for decades, leading to our present grossly unequal society. Corbyn is articulating this. Thus the popularity.
Much as people like yourself like to suggest that he wants to turn Britain into British Leyland circa 1976, thats just not the case. What he's saying, or asking, is what a lot of people are asking... there has to be a better, more balanced, less harsh and brutal, more humane way of doing things than this? The economy should benefit a broader sweep of people, not just those at the top, surely?
Presently he's the only politician in the country asking these questions. Some are pretending too, but they're not really looking for answers. Merely posturing.
Again...
is anyone really still wondering why Jezza is proving so popular?

