Forum menu
Sir! Keir! Starmer!
 

Sir! Keir! Starmer!

Posts: 4236
Free Member
 

Ah great. Good to know there are no wasted votes under first past the post, may as well stick with it then.

(I'd argue this has been tested - sure it would work if everyone er, just voted differently.)


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 11:36 am
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 8021
Full Member
 

But as has been pointed out on numerous occaisions there arent that many people in that camp that wont already be voting Labour.

But as has been pointed out on numerous occasions you need to keep those people voting labour.
The "who else will they vote" for has been demonstrated to be false. They vote for things like brexit since, reasonably, they see all politicians as the same.

People in this country as a whole are centre right.

It isnt. Otherwise the tory party wouldnt be dancing to the hard right tunes and the conservatives would get a constant majority of the votes as opposed to relying on a biased voting system.

If they were I’d expect a left wing disruptor party to be out dragging Labour leftwards in the same way UKIP dragged the Tories to the right and into loony land.

The problem is unlike the "centre right" who are happy dancing to the loons commands just to keep those nasty lefties out those on the left are more willing to compromise.
However thats going to have limits. When labour turn into a party compensating the centre right idiots for losing their party then people will go for alternatives.
Its why the right wingers are shouting "if you dont vote for Starmer you might as well vote tory"


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 11:39 am
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Have you been asleep since 2016? This is all about winning over those Brexit voters in key seats.

Are you still flogging that line to justify racism?!?

You are as deluded as the current right-wing Tory government who think making "stop the boats" their number own priority will win them the next general election.

Wake up! Smell the coffee!


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 11:53 am
Posts: 6991
Full Member
 

You believe there’s no such thing as a wasted vote under first past the post? It would be lovely were it so.

Yep, all those votes for UKIP/Reform over the years have been completely wasted.  Made no discernible change to the country whatsoever.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 11:55 am
Posts: 4236
Free Member
 

The problem is unlike the “centre right” who are happy dancing to the loons commands just to keep those nasty lefties out those on the left are more willing to compromise.

I'd say they're more willing to become entryists ala Militant in the 80s and Momentum more recently, ensuring we get Tory govts. Let's see how successful the far right's take over of the Tories has been in the next election.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 12:37 pm
Posts: 4236
Free Member
 

Yep, all those votes for UKIP/Reform over the years have been completely wasted. Made no discernible change to the country whatsoever.

If they split the right wing vote in the next election i'll consider them very well wasted indeed. I'd prefer we didn't split the progressive vote.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 12:38 pm
scotroutes, kelvin, scotroutes and 1 people reacted
Posts: 6991
Full Member
 

If they split the right wing vote in the next election i’ll consider them very well wasted indeed. I’d prefer we didn’t split the progressive vote.

If they split the right wing vote then the Tories will follow after them in the exact same way they have for the last decade or so.  Then Labour will follow the Tories as they have done for the last 3 decades or so.

These 'wasted' votes will be far more effectively used than all the people who vote Labour even though they disagree with them.

Voting for a party you fundamentally disagree with is the only way to truly waste your vote.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 12:45 pm
Posts: 8021
Full Member
 

I’d say they’re more willing to become entryists ala Militant in the 80s and Momentum more recently, ensuring we get Tory govts.

What an odd statement. Why shouldnt they join the labour party? Is it supposed to be reserved for the self proclaimed moderates with everyone else simply being required to vote for them.
As for ensuring we get tory govts. The centrists did far more to help that with their inability to compromise and hence support for the hard right brexit.

I’d prefer we didn’t split the progressive vote.

Then as a radical ****ing notion Starmer and his fellow right wingers should offer some policies to appeal to the left rather than simply chasing the hard right whilst whining about splitting the vote.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 12:49 pm
Posts: 12668
Free Member
 

Yep, all those votes for UKIP/Reform over the years have been completely wasted.  Made no discernible change to the country whatsoever.

That is more about timing and who is in power at the time.  Tories were afraid of losing votes to UKIP, votes they couldn't afford to lose when in power.  Labour are not in power and the green vote seems to stay very static in the polls but what you are suggesting is that if Green vote went up by 5% then Starmer would adopt more left wing policies and we would have a more left wing potential Labour government (ignoring the fact he may lose some centrist votes who see him going left wing)

Winning elections is a game of numbers and just because UKIP steered the Tories it doesn't mean that works in all scenarios.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 1:45 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 31098
Full Member
 

I think votes for the Green Party have already moved Labour policy (on energy and investment at least).

At the next election though, it's about getting rid of Conservative MPs. That is the next step for everyone.

Future pressure on Labour on green (and economic and social) issues will be of more use if the Tories currently in power get completely marginalised.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 1:51 pm
Posts: 12668
Free Member
 

Future pressure on Labour on green (and economic and social) issues will be of more use if the Tories currently in power get completely marginalised.

Yes, that is the "timing" that I mentioned.  So let's all vote green as soon as Labour are in power and see how that goes.


 
Posted : 14/12/2023 1:56 pm
dissonance, kelvin, dissonance and 1 people reacted
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

Streeting is actually dangerous in my opinion.

He's definitely not got the success of the NHS in his sites, and I have absolutely no idea how he forms his opinions. His knowledge of economics and the NHS itself crumbles the minute someone with half a brain challenges him.

https://twitter.com/LBC/status/1736307228926214145?t=LmYWQWayxtJ50MTFSZZBag&s=19

He's wrong. Spending is never unsustainable - government can't run out of what it issues.

They're the using the Tory failure to justify more Labour restraint. It absolutely doesn't make any sense.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 5:08 pm
Posts: 44814
Full Member
 

and I have absolutely no idea how he forms his opinions.

He is a paid shill for private medical companies


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 5:15 pm
leegee and leegee reacted
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

the Conservatives have crashed the public finances, so that I can’t promise that if we come in there will be loads more cash to splash around.

Like Starmer Streeting is getting his excuses for failure in nice and early.

And I found this question he asks interesting :

"Patients can see it too - how many of us have received the letter for the appointment after the appointment has taken place?"

That has never happened to me. Is it really a common example of NHS wastage? I would have thought that PFI was a much better example?

Of course Streeting wants to reform the NHS, every Health Secretary for the last 30 years has wanted to do that. There is nothing that they apparently enjoy doing more than causing major upheavals in the NHS.

And yeah I agree, I also believe that Streeting is dangerous, he has no commitment to Labour values. Unfortunately he is far from unique, Steve Reed, an MP close me and Shadow Minister is equally dangerous imo, and for the same reason. Starmer's team is full of similar examples.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 6:21 pm
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

https://news.sky.com/story/israel-hamas-war-david-cameron-calls-for-lasting-peace-piling-more-pressure-on-netanyahu-13032411

With the UK's position starting to shift in line with the United States shifting position I guess we can also expect Keir Starmer to follow soon.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 6:30 pm
Posts: 11650
Full Member
 

With the UK’s position starting to shift in line with the United States shifting position I guess we can also expect Keir Starmer to follow soon.

By the time starmer gets his head out from between Tzipi’s arse it’ll be too late

https://twitter.com/TzipiHotovely/status/1735029398074531985?s=20

https://twitter.com/LaylaMoran/status/1736379495785836710?s=20


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 6:41 pm
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

He is a paid shill for private medical companies

Well yeah because it's not public purpose for sure.

Starmer’s team is full of similar examples.

They don't even give well thought out arguments as to the reasons why.  Any scrutiny would absolutely tear them to shreds.

But we have no scrutiny.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 6:59 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

With the UK’s position starting to shift in line with the United States shifting position I guess we can also expect Keir Starmer to follow soon

Yes I thought this - and my target will be every Centrist that said a cease fire is unworkable, because establishment geo-politics put a suit on and told them that.

By the time starmer gets his head out from betweenTzipi’s arse it’ll be too late

My old ex MP John Mann lingering around there in the background.

My Dad gave him a piece of his mind when Mann came knocking, doing some canvassing a few months ago.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 7:04 pm
somafunk and somafunk reacted
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

I like how the word 'sustainable' has been put in front of cease fire.

It's a cease fire - but it's got to look different to the cease fire than was requested by people that didn't want the death toll this high.

Word salad.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 7:19 pm
Posts: 5164
Free Member
 

Yes I thought this – and my target will be every Centrist that said a cease fire is unworkable, because establishment geo-politics put a suit on and told them that.

Why, every 'centrist', or is it easier to say 'those who disagree with me', have always based their arguments on here on simple facts, one of those being that the Israeli's will only really listen to the US, and that Israel have never really adhered to ceasefires, same as Hamas.

Again, as stated many times, let those who can influence this conflict continue to do that, i.e. Qatar as the brokers for any ceasefire/cessation of fighting/pause/etc, and the US 'advise' Israel. I doubt this'll happen, as the opposition leader of the UK appears to be the cornerstone of any ceasefire between two aggressors that are over 2000 miles away.


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 7:41 pm
stumpyjon, kelvin, stumpyjon and 1 people reacted
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Any scrutiny would absolutely tear them to shreds.

But we have no scrutiny.

That is one of the luxuries of being in opposition - the lack of scrutiny.

One the roles of Parliament is to scrutinise the Government, but not the Opposition.

However things will change for Starmer and his team in probably about 6 months time. Obviously when the shit hits the fan everything will be the fault of the Tories. They are already blaming the Tories for the fact that Labour can only offer so little, if any, hope.

But that defence will have a limited shelf life, so things should get interesting. Especially if the Tories are reduced to a parliamentary rump with no credibility. Who will benefit from the political vacuum this will cause?


 
Posted : 17/12/2023 9:28 pm
Posts: 4699
Full Member
 

A mate of mine penned this for cityAM today. I do worry that the electorate is expecting so much and the scope for executing on delivery is effectively a void. Electorates have a habit of backfilling voids with promise-the-earth mad orators.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 12:24 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 6905
Full Member
 

Obviously when the shit hits the fan everything will be the fault of the Tories. They are already blaming the Tories for the fact that Labour can only offer so little, if any, hope.

Are you suggesting the Tories will be leaving behind a functioning NHS, a healthy economy and social harmony? If not then at least for a while it will be perfectly reasonable to place the blame for the state of the country on the previous administration.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 12:47 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Posts: 6991
Full Member
 

If not then at least for a while it will be perfectly reasonable to place the blame for the state of the country on the previous administration.

It's fine to blame them.

It's not fine to blame them and then continue with essentially the same policies.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 12:52 pm
Posts: 419
Free Member
 

Streeting is actually dangerous in my opinion.

He is. He's utterly vile. The only hope is that if/when Labour do become the government, that he proves so unpopular with his intentions, he is quickly removed from his position. That someone so venal and self-serving is anywhere near the Labour party is a disgrace.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 1:13 pm
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Electorates have a habit of backfilling voids with promise-the-earth mad orators.

I don't really understand what that means but I am particularly intrigued as to who these "promise-the-earth mad orators" are.

Any examples which might shed some light?


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 1:50 pm
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Obviously when the shit hits the fan everything will be the fault of the Tories. They are already blaming the Tories for the fact that Labour can only offer so little, if any, hope.

Are you suggesting the Tories will be leaving behind a functioning NHS, a healthy economy and social harmony?

I wouldn't call winning a general election "the shit hitting the fan".


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 1:53 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

Are you suggesting the Tories will be leaving behind a functioning NHS, a healthy economy and social harmony?

They clearly are leaving it all in a total mess (and it's not been good for a long time.)

But let's not go down a path of Labour's hands being tied. And we all know things will take time to fix.

But Labour need to offer up  change and stop following in the Conservative footsteps as if they don't ideologically want to fix things, or can't fix things.

That's the sentiment coming from pissant Streeting.

In fact his path is at utter odds with decent progressive values, sound resource allocation and state investment.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 4:26 pm
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

And we all know things will take time to fix.

Good point. It took a Labour government 3 whole years to create the National Health Service from scratch.

Obviously the UK emerging from years of global conflict with a wrecked economy and massively damaged infrastructure helps to explain why it took the 1945 Labour government so long to create the NHS.

But there was no shortage of determination.

Keir Starmer claims to be "Lazer focused" on what needs to be done. So that sounds encouraging.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 4:37 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

I'm just aghast at the idea that Starmer can't offer anything positive - that's why we're in this mess because Conservatism is about destruction and concentration of wealth.

I mean, simply push in the opposite direction start changing the narrative - but it will all be ' Corbyn blah blah Communist broadband.' (Corbyn was in an irreconcilable position. Starmer the lucky sod doesn't have that.)

Well face it off! Push back. FFS.

The 'left' are push overs - but at least Zack Polanski knows what to put out it appears.

(James O'Brien the other day said if Labour came up with good ideas the Tories would nick them. The lamest most Centristy response ever.  )

1) they'd never nick  anything besides when are they going to implement it? When?

2) if they did a nick a good labour idea - (doesn't exist) - it would be good surely?

Good for us all.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 4:58 pm
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

You are too pessimistic imo rone. Firstly Labour doesn't really need to have much in the way of policies to win the next general election.

Secondly once in government all that will change - unlike Tony Blair Keir Starmer will inherit a failing economy.

He can decide to either follow the neoliberal austerity path or choose an alternative route.

Austerity will prove very hard to sell to the British people which is why it has become a dirty word which Tories now never use, despite previously championing (along with the LibDems) the alledged virtues of austerity.

Faced with a failing economy Starmer will be an extremely difficult position - I have little doubt that he will up end up wondering why he ever agreed to stand for the Labour leadership.

I can realistically see Starmer overseeing the full-blown pasokification of the Labour Party, something which hasn't really happened yet, unless he changes his tune.

And remember that in Greece PASOK went from 44% support to 5% in just 6 years, precisely because of its poor handling of an economic crisis and the implementation of austerity.

There simply won't be the option for things to carry on as they are now.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 6:18 pm
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

There simply won’t be the option for things to carry on as they are now.

Maybe. Things are hard to predict. I've been saying for a long time Neolibralism is on its arse but it has half-life where there's just enough people doing 'well' out of inflated assets etc.

Several times we've come close to collapse and the state does its job and supplies the money to fix things (by design ) then it's back to full blooded Capitalism - as Johnson so ignorantly pointed out just 'after' Covid.

But I will say this - the current. Labour party believes money comes from the private sector which will magically grow to fund the state.

So by that illogical and demonstrably incoherent economic landscape - how do they think it's going to happen?


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 6:36 pm
Posts: 16210
Free Member
 

Keir Starmer claims to be “Lazer focused” on what needs to be done

He is a bit of a helmet, tbf.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 7:44 pm
Posts: 11650
Full Member
 

A Kryton (red dwarf) shaped helmet.


 
Posted : 18/12/2023 10:46 pm
Posts: 12668
Free Member
 

Starmer hasn't cut through with my mum. Had a chat with her about politics/state of country yesterday (which I haven't done for a few years) and while she agrees that country is in a state after 13 years of tories she doesn't see what difference anyone else will make.
She simply didn't see Starmer as any different which is not surprising is it because he is not different enough to make anyone care (in my mums case)
Also had to put her straight on immigration (again) which is a constant battle against the BS in the papers and again Starmer is not really helping to clear that up is he.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 8:04 am
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Also had to put her straight on immigration (again) which is a constant battle against the BS in the papers

That's a big problem imo. A lot of people, including on here, assume that if voters tell pollsters that they consider immigration to be a big problem it must be because they are bigots or racists.

Whilst often that is of course the case also often they are simply parroting what they hear politicians saying.

The same is also true with other issues. For example if voters hear politicians constantly saying that inflation is a very serious problem which must be treated as a priority then when they are asked by polestars what they consider to be an important issue they are very likely to reply "inflation", whether it is actually true or not. And whether they actually care or not.

That phenomena was first pointed out to me back in the Thatcher years during a one-to-one conversation with, of all people, the current Labour Party general secretary (and adviser to Starmer) David Evans.

Thatcher more than double unemployment despite fighting the 1979 general election on the central issue of high unemployment under Labour. Unemployment therefore became huge issue in the 1980s and when voters were asked by pollsters what was the most important issue they unsurprisingly replied "unemployment".

The problem was that it wasn't translating into serious electoral misfortune for the Tories. The reason for this was because it wasn't directly affecting approx 90% of the workforce (add to that the retired). So when asked by pollsters "what is the most important issue to you and your family" unemployment didn't figure in over 90% of cases.

Unemployment of course affected far more people indirectly in terms of causing lower wages, increased crime, weakening the social fabric of communities, substance abuse, increased taxation, etc, etc.

And yes I agree that Starmer should be challenging more forcibly Rishi Sunak's narrative that currently the most important issue is stopping the boats. If he emphasized how little it affects most people's lives, despite what Sunak says, it would diminish in importance.

Although presumably a lot of people already understand that which explains why Sunak doesn't appear to be benefiting from his endless small boat rhetoric.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 10:14 am
Posts: 31098
Full Member
 

A lot of people, including on here, assume that if voters tell pollsters that they consider immigration to be a big problem it must be because they are bigots or racists.

Now how I think of my mum, or any of the other older folk I know that fall for this pernicious stuff.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 10:38 am
 DrJ
Posts: 14010
Full Member
 

I don’t really understand what that means but I am particularly intrigued as to who these “promise-the-earth mad orators” are.

Any examples which might shed some light?

Argentinian dude, f'rinstance.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 11:22 am
Posts: 31098
Full Member
 

Now how I think of my mum, or any of the other older folk I know that fall for this pernicious stuff.

That should have be "Not how.." whoops.. 😬


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 11:29 am
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Argentinian dude, f’rinstance.

Ah, I had assumed that it was with reference to the UK since it mentioned Keir Starmer and provided this link:

https://www.cityam.com/starmer-is-set-to-win-but-an-election-of-indifference-will-come-back-to-bite/

Argentine politics is significantly different to UK politics. I am certainly not aware of any obvious British “promise-the-earth mad orators”.

TBH I can't think of any current British politician which I would describe as an "orator". The lack of inspirational public speakers in UK politics is quite remarkable imo.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 11:34 am
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

Evita's last speech to the Argentine people.

Like all successful fascists she had excellent oratory skills. Especially when delivered from balconies.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 11:45 am
 dazh
Posts: 13392
Full Member
 

He can decide to either follow the neoliberal austerity path or choose an alternative route.

He'll choose the path inbetween. Not much will change at a systemic level, and to all intents and purposes the public will see very little difference to the austerity driven narrative that they see today. Behind closed doors though things will change, money will be found, and spent, and things like the NHS, council funding, schools etc will begin to improve. The next parliament is going to be all about spending as much money as they can whilst being able to hide that fact in complex technocratic accounting practices. MMT-lite through the backdoor basically, just like is happening in the US. They'll have just enough escape clauses in the manifesto to make spending happen whilst calling it 'investment'.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 2:11 pm
Del, kelvin, Del and 1 people reacted
Posts: 31098
Full Member
 

Yup, there has already been extra spending announced for health, education and energy transition. That they also talk about changes in tax take down the line whenever they are asked about that spend is just something to take on the chin... it's essential when talking to everyone else outside the little bubble of people taking MMT as the new great hope, rather than just a small change to economists' understanding. The public and media will still focus on "balancing"... so Labour politicians have their careful answers ready. Just embrace the spend, but ask for more. The tax changes they've earmarked so far are to be welcomed as well, they are basically just closing some huge gaping loopholes only available to the well off. The fact that they pretend the two are directly connected, when they know they are not, is just politics. It doesn't make them "Tories".


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 2:29 pm
Jordan, Del, Del and 1 people reacted
 rone
Posts: 9787
Free Member
 

USA's economy has been doing very well - the total opposite of what they thought high interest rates would achieve.

It's time to take note.

You add new money to the economy either through interest rates or deficit spending - it grows the economy.

(I'm not talking about distribution, that could always be better for sure.)

(And I know there are plenty on here that get MMT but remember  we already operate MMT but governments (mostly) pretend/believe that we tax first and spend later.  Operationally  it's impossible - simply put - spending has to happen first so the government can collect tax! You can't collect tax if money is not spent. Therefore spending is not reliant on tax take which is where the lame arguments are being made.)

I don't share the optimism above really. Tinkering around the edges is managed decline.

It's all so fascinating and depressing at the same time.


 
Posted : 19/12/2023 2:55 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
Page 451 / 500