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Sir! Keir! Starmer!
 

Sir! Keir! Starmer!

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The next General Election will be in 2024.

Probably.

It could be earlier if Johnson can sell the myth that we got out of the covid slump quicker than the rest of Europe due to vaccines and the true disparity of that recovery (due to Brexit) is not yet staring the electorate in the face.

They could perceive that there is a narrow window of opportunity before the true impact of Brexit is obvious enough to enough of the 'great' British public.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 10:31 am
 dazh
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You want austerity measures to come while we’re in the middle of the worst economic downturn in our lifetimes

No, I don't. You really are the master at putting words in people's mouths. It's a pretty crappy trick, like something you'd see at a university debating society. 🙄

Putting up corporation tax a few points or not will make almost no difference to anything in economic terms. What it does do however is send a signal to working people that the government is on their side and wants to redress the imbalance between those who've done very well out of covid, and those who have suffered. On one side we have man of the people Johnson trying to 'level up', on the other an out of touch city solicitor standing up for the profits of corporations. The tories are running rings around labour,  and it's cringeworthy to watch.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 11:29 am
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On one side we have man of the people Johnson trying to ‘level up’, on the other an out of touch city solicitor standing up for the profits of corporations. The tories are running rings around labour, and it’s cringeworthy to watch.

Please put speech marks around 'Man of the People'. The thought that anyone might genuinely think he is actually makes a little bit of sick want to come out.

Otherwise (and **** me I never thought I'd see the day) I am beginning to agree with you.

The problem is that the public's perception has been so warped by being told what they want to hear and having their petty prejudices played back to them as 'news' that many literally cannot see Johnson and his rabble for the frauds they are.

Stupidity is strength, it would seem.

That's why I do think there is an opportunity for Labour to come out as the 'Bollocks to Brexit' party. If most of the population think that real life mirrors a plotline in Hollyoaks then it is time to start playing down to that mindset.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 11:40 am
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You really are the master at putting words in people’s mouths.

No, I'm not. Increasing taxes is austerity. Along with restraints on public spending. And there is no need to do either right now... and to do so would be economically damaging... but more than that... it's buying into to the "start paying back the debt right now, despite the hole we're in" narrative that ALL the political parties got wrong after the 2008 crash. Delay the claw back, there is A LOT to do right now as we come back from Covid AND we are expecting our businesses to refocus from business models that assumed a large home market that has just become an export/import market. Now is not the time to increases taxes on business, or workers... or the time to cut Universal Credit and other benefits... not the time for pay freezes for public sector workers... not the time to tighten our belts... it's time to invest... rebalancing tax burdens and making then fairer comes later, if your methods involve higher taxes... if anything... a tax break/cut for the low paid should be the priority this year... paired with the same for smaller businesses, especially those with a physical presence in our communities. No taxes should rise this year... in a few years, I'd be fully behind reformed NI & CGT that doesn't let the higher paid of the hook... and additional business taxes aimed at larger companies. Not now.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 11:58 am
 dazh
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Please put speech marks around ‘Man of the People’. The thought that anyone might genuinely think he is actually makes a little bit of sick want to come out.

They absolutely do think this. The only people who don't are a few diehard lefties and hand-wringing middle class liberals. If there's one thing the tories learnt from Corbyn, it's that the on the ground hand-shaking, hard hat wearing, talking in normal language stuff works. Johnson, like Corbyn (pre-2017 election before the AS nonsense) comes across as a normal bloke surrounded by technocrats telling him what he can't do. Starmer on the other hand is the uber-technocrat. It's really quite clever, they've turned a wibbling upper class buffoon into a salt of the earth bloke 'saying it as it is' and trying his best despite the naysaying bureaucrats trying to hold him back. And as for the election, it's game set and match. I wouldn't be surprised if we get one next year.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 12:28 pm
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They absolutely do think this. The only people who don’t are a few diehard lefties and hand-wringing middle class liberals.

Ah good, I feel like we can start arguing again.

That is palpably not true as an awful lot of people I know are neither of those things. What they tend to be is reasonably intelligent and aware.

The problem is that the population at large is infinitely more gullible than anyone realised.

I do agree that the next GE may be surprisingly early to some. There is going to be a sweet spot for the Tories when we are moving out of the worst of the pandemic (maybe even slightly ahead of the rest of europe as a whole) and the onset of the realisation that the proper long-term recovery is being hobbled by Brexit and the rest of Europe is vanishing into the distance down the track. Leaving 'our' shitty Allegro conking out at the side of the track.

We have, it seems, a childish electorate. It might be time for Labour to realise that. If your average pillock in the street looks at PMQs and thinks "that's it, that is how politics is" then it is time to break out the rattles and duplo blocks for them.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 12:38 pm
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Boris is going to be absolutely itching to have an election while he's basking in the reflected glory of the one thing (admittedly a pretty important one) that him and his hopeless cabinet have managed not to * up since they came to power.

There will indeed be a sweet spot as lockdown lifts and they haven't yet *ed up the recovery as the reality of Brexit hits the real economy.

Is it right though that the labour party would have to be complicit in granting an election, because of the fixed term parliament act? Everyone told Grandad not to grant one last time, but he's an idiot so he did. We all know how that went. What would labour do this time around?


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 12:47 pm
 dazh
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The problem is that the population at large is infinitely more gullible than anyone realised.

Gullibility is a function of being disengaged and disinterested. If you want that to improve you need to do all the things I've been going on about for ages.

and the onset of the realisation that the proper long-term recovery is being hobbled by Brexit and the rest of Europe is vanishing into the distance down the track

Off the back of brexit govt stimulus was always going to be neeeded to paper over the cracks, and covid massively amplifies that. If there is to be an early election the justification will be that Boris needs a fresh mandate to go on a spending binge the likes of which we've not seen since WW2. It won't be Starmer playing the Clement Atlee role, it will be Johnson. The PR machine is already setting him up for it.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 12:51 pm
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Boris is going to be absolutely itching to have an election

There's no need for the Conservatives to call an early election. They currently feel that they are ahead of Labour, twice... they have two candidates to stand to be PM at the next election... they think they are both winning hands... that both can beat a fractured and out of the practice of government Labour party... and can play either in good time. Look how much UK gov money has been thrown at Sunak's campaign messaging and adverts (in all but name... they claim to be important government communications). They can take their time... they are as good as assuming they have nine free years to leach of us and transform the UK... why risk reducing that to 6 or 7? They'll take all five years that the last election gave them... and look forward to another five following on from that, like night follows day.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 12:55 pm
 dazh
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Is it right though that the labour party would have to be complicit in granting an election

Right now it is, but the tories are committed to repealing the fixed term parliament act. If they want an early election, you can bet it'll be in the queen's speech in October. Even if they don't though, it's not a good look for any oppositon to be running away from an election, they're almost obliged to accept the challenge, just as Corbyn was rail-roaded into it by the SNP and libdems.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 12:57 pm
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Is it right though that the labour party would have to be complicit in granting an election, because of the fixed term parliament act?

Nope. People get confused about the fixed term act and think it actually means something. Although it has the 2/3 requirement to pass there is nothing preventing parliament passing a one off act or just revoking the fixed term parliament with the normal majority vote.
As such its pointless waffle the tories created to keep the libdems happy and quiet.

Everyone told Grandad not to grant one last time, but he’s an idiot so he did

Then those people were, to put it politely, absolute morons.
He didnt have a choice.
As above it just needed a majority for it and so once the Libdems and SNP said they were going to support it Labour couldnt have prevented it.
If they had abstained or opposed it would have been double down time on the bullshit about undermining democracy and so on.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 2:26 pm
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Increasing taxes isn't automatically austerity, that's absolute horseshit. Sorry to be so blunt but I doubt anyone can actually believe it's true. And saying that someone's in favour of a particular tax increase is asking for austerity is the exact same. It's either unfathomably wrong or it's dishonest, there's no other option.

vazaha
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The next General Election will be in 2024.

How many of today’s considerations do you think will still be in play?

Well, ya know, that's kind of the problem. The last year's considerations absolutely should still be in play. A government that killed tens of thousands of people while handing huge contracts to their mates so they could do **** all with it and make the crisis worse, that's not single news cycle stuff. Hancock was like a mugger walking out of court laughing about how he made the victim cry.

The same with brexit. Even now we're hearing that it turned out fine because there aren't queues of trucks- when that's in large part because there's no point putting some stuff on the trucks. But it's already passing into "old news" even though the effects on people's lives and the economy will be absolutely fresh in 2024.

It's not exactly healthy to think about these things in terms of political opportunity, but that's what they come down to. This government has been allowed to just laugh it off. When covid and brexit is mentioned in the next general election it's going to be as much from the tories patting themselves on the back about it. And yes Starmer's leadership is a huge part of that sadly.

I actually expected Starmer to be good at this stuff- the whole prosecutor thing, holding people to account, stackling Johnston's biffle boffle with hard facts and keeping nailing home the horrendous truths of the last year. There were early signs of it.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 5:23 pm
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There were early signs of it.

To be honest, its difficult to see how anyone could have any more impact on the present government. Johnson knew he was getting taken to the cleaners at PMQ's every week so he simply started ignoring everything Starmer said and just waffling instead. He doesn't even offer any pretence that he's actually answering questions

At the same time the Tory's made sure that the media had no access to either the PM or the cabinet. They don't do media interviews, they don't do anything. They're completely invisible. Boris is still essentially hidden in a fridge. They only appear, very rarely, at carefully stage-managed press conferences, flanked by non-political medical experts, where they can't really be questioned in any meaningful way.

I think we need to acknowledge that the pandemic has allowed the government to re-write the whole relationship between the executive and the people, via the media. They seemed to have used North Korea as a model.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 5:47 pm
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Unfortunately 23rd June 2016 gave the Tories a cast-iron marker of just how stupid the general population is.

They've been leveraging it ever since.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:01 pm
 dazh
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To be honest, its difficult to see how anyone could have any more impact on the present government.

I expect you'll be saying that when Johnson extends his majority. Either that or 'it's all Corbyn's fault'. FFS man just admit Starmer's been shit and is being outclassed by a mop haired alcoholic clown.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:22 pm
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As has been pointed out infinitely to you, as it stands there isn't going to be an election for 4 years.

So if you wanted to use the footballing analogies that I know you love, we're not even half way through the first half. Yet you've got the next election as lost with an increased Tory majority


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:36 pm
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outclassed

Quite the opposite, in fact.

But it is what is successful nowadays with the 'great' british public, and that is a damning indictment of 'us' as a populace.

Johnson as PM is a living insult to anyone who takes even a little bit of pride in their intellect or has a shred of self respect.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:39 pm
 dazh
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Four years from now is 2025. The last legal date for the next election is December '24, and there's not a cat's chance in hell they'll leave it that long. I'll be spring '23 most likely, that's two years away. It could easily be next year if we come out of the pandemic and they decide a reset is the best policy. Johnson will go as soon as he thinks he can because firstly he's a gambler, and secondly he's not going to hang around whilst Sunak PR machine does it's work.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:45 pm
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Yeah, 3 years. Enjoy getting such a huge one over on Binners with your pedantry. See you out campaigning for Labour in 2024? That's when the election will be... there is no reason whatsoever for the government to go do the polls... they haven't even decided who'll lead that campaign yet, and are pilling government money into the PR campaigns of both their hopefuls. Where as Labour will stick with their candidate, till after at least one general election loss... hopefully not two this time.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:55 pm
 dazh
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Enjoy getting such a huge one over on Binners with your pedantry.

It's 3 years max. Very likely closer to two. Does nearly 50% less time pass your pedantry test?

See you out campaigning for Labour in 2024?

No chance, I won't even be voting for them unless Starmer has a lobotomy and suddenly remembers which party he leads.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 6:58 pm
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Thought not. Wouldn't put it past you to vote for Johnson/Sunak to teach people a lesson, or something.

Very likely closer to two.

Why? What on earth would Johnson gain from another election cycle any earlier than he has to? Even money on Sunak being handed the baton anyway... May 2024... he'll be sold as both a new broom, and having all the experience of being at the heart of government though "interesting" times... cake and eat... and a hell of a lot of people will buy it... again... while people who claim to be "of the left" will sit on their hands because the alternative isn't led by someone left wing in their eyes.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 7:01 pm
 dazh
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I'll vote for whoever supports real change rather than fannying around the edges with the same outdated failed solutions. Nothing will change as long as people keep voting for the same things.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 7:07 pm
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Nothing will change, because we'll keep electing Conservative governments promising change. Partly because many people will sit out the FPTP mess waiting for something that just isn't coming.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 7:09 pm
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Sorry about that... I'm ranting at myself there, not you Dazh... I didn't vote Labour 'til Corbyn moved their policy base leftwards in the 2017 manifesto... and in hindsight, not voting Labour under Blair, Brown and Miliband was self obsessed nonsense. I was wrong. In General Elections, in England, in most seats, under our system, you have two choices... ignoring that because the alternative to the Conservatives is led by someone who isn't close enough to you own wishes and politics is exactly the selfish behaviour I indulged in for most of my life. Voting based on "policies" and the best path forward... maybe one day we'll have a voting system where that makes sense... but for now we could very well be facing permanent Tory rule for the rest of our lives... which is great if you like moaning. The Greens, or someone else, having policies closer to mine is irrelevant, when 3% of people can vote that way, and get one MP to represent them. If the left choose not to support Labour in seats where it is very much Conservative versus Labour... they going to have to enjoy moaning. A lot.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 7:23 pm
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In General Elections, in England, in most seats, under our system, you have two choices

If Starmer continues on his current path, the two choices will be Coke or Pepsi. He's managing to make the Blair government look radical. And before anyone starts, I voted Labour in '97.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 8:23 pm
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WAR CRIMINAL!!!!


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 9:34 pm
 dazh
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Sorry about that… I’m ranting at myself there, not you Dazh

Rant away, this is the place for it! 🙂

Seriously though, the more and more I look at politics the more I think it's pretty irrelevant. It's becoming ever more clear to me that change can't be achieved through the political system, because it's been corrupted to such an extent by private interests that it offers nothing to normal people beyond virtue signalling and theatre. It's a game, where you pick which side to support and win bragging rights over the opposition, and a career opportunity for people with psychopathic or narcissistic tendencies. Best just to look at it for what it is, which is the sort of mild diversion provided by a soap opera.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 9:47 pm
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I agree. I just wish we didn’t have to give a bunch of Tory ****s a go for so long. By the time people vote for the changes they need, it’ll be too late anyway.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 10:00 pm
 dazh
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And talking about entertainment..

https://twitter.com/keir_starmer/status/1227500464184233984?s=21


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 10:28 pm
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All good stuff. All before we knew the terms of Brexit, and the scale and cost of the pandemic though. Both need addressing. We are not where we were a year ago.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 10:57 pm
 grum
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See you out campaigning for Labour in 2024?

I doubt many people will be out campaigning for Labour at this rate.

All good stuff. All before we knew the terms of Brexit, and the scale and cost of the pandemic though. Both need addressing. We are not where we were a year ago.

Ok so why not say that? Why not tell people that he hasn't actually abandoned all his supposed principles he's just being pragmatic?

Seriously though, the more and more I look at politics the more I think it’s pretty irrelevant.

This, sadly.


 
Posted : 02/03/2021 11:02 pm
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So… the corporation tax increase “now” thing was a trap for Labour to walk into… who’d have thunk it?!? Not happening for two years, and tapered for smaller companies (well companies with lower profits anyway). Could have been written by Dodds.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 2:56 pm
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Thought provoking piece (not sure I totally buy it) about how Shithead's 80 seat majority means he can tolerate more dissenting voices, which in turn means the tories can seem to represent disparate groups. Especially if they can filter which messages get to which people.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/mar/03/boris-johnson-tory-party-infighting-labour-government


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 4:49 pm
 dazh
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So… the corporation tax increase “now” thing was a trap for Labour to walk into

And walk into it they did. While labour were worrying about what their stance should be on corporation tax, the tories were strategically positioning themselves as defenders of working people while labour were defending the interests of business. The end result being former labour voters in the 'red wall' (f***** hell I hate that phrase!) thinking the tories are on their side while labour only care about the city-based elite. It's brexit culture war politics without brexit.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 7:00 pm
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While labour were worrying about what their stance should be on corporation tax

“Labour” weren’t worrying about it, they just laid it out straight, while “helpful” left wingers flooded their social media replies with “raise corporation tax now, stop pandering to business”. Okay, some Labour MPs joined in, the likes of Ian Lavery… but then they only have one aim… smash the party and rebuild and purify it.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 7:51 pm
 dazh
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while “helpful” left wingers flooded their social media replies

Left wingers voiced alarm at labour being to the right of the tories on tax and public spending. That's exactly how it's turned out. The next election is going to be all about the post covid and post-brexit recovery. Labour will now go into that looking like the party who are more interested in supporting profits to shareholders than supporting people. Well played Keir.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:05 pm
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Left wingers walked into the trap like eager puppies. Raising corporation tax when the UK is in its current position was just dumb economics… there is no way Starmer and Dodds could support such a move and stay credible… Conservatives used the media to dangle a “Starmer wants to help business, not workers” carrot in front of the hords, and plenty of them obliged. So predictable and depressing.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:23 pm
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“Labour” weren’t worrying about it, they just laid it out straight,

They were against it. Then they were for it. As Dodds said, it's all perfectly clear.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:25 pm
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They were against it now. They were for it later in the parliamentary term. Which is what is happening. Still… a nice shitty stick to beat Starmer with.

Starmer is dull. He won’t win the next election. But if he had the appeal needed to win over the voters, he’d still face the obvious problem… too many people on the left want “their” leader, not someone looking to lead for the whole country, and win enough seats to be able to do so. It’s blinding obvious to me, because that was me. Mea culpa.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:28 pm
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I dunno. Feels like a snapshot of around now shows that if you’re personally on the right (if we want to distill it down to a single line) then the Tories will do for you, no matter where on the right you are. Whether you’re a geezer wot geezes, dislike immigrants, hate benefit scroungers, want Brexit dun, or work in a hedge fund, the Tories seem to be a big enough umbrella under which you’ll all stand.

But if you’re on the left, the Labour Party just seems to be someone with a tiny umbrella constantly lurching around trying to shelter everyone; and the minute someone feels a drop of rain, they’re screaming about the direction that the fellow with the umbrella ran. Because there’s nobody the left hate more than the left (and this goes both directions). The days of the Labour Party being a “broad church” seem long gone. A split would probably be the best thing but under FPTP, we’d be condemned to Tory rule for ever.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:46 pm
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Ian Lavery had the line for you… hold on… let me look it up and get it correct…


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:48 pm
 dazh
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Left wingers walked into the trap like eager puppies.

Yawn. They did nothing more than stand up for their long held principles and state the blindingly obvious that the job of the labour party is to protect workers, and not shareholders. The outcome of Starmer and Dodds' failure to do the same, compounded by their incompetent comms which failed to clearly express their position, is that voters will now think labour are only interested in the corporate elite rather than normal people, and this further entrenches the tory narrative of Boris 'man of the people' vs Starmer the metropolitan establishment elitist.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:48 pm
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Lavery also angered some MPs by suggesting that the party was “too broad a church

Guardian source


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:50 pm
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😂


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:52 pm
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the labour party is to protect workers, and not shareholders

It is to govern for all us, whether we live on pensions, wages, benefits… or like many people a combination of all three.

The “business vs the workers” line is exactly what the Tories want people arguing about… Labour shouldn’t be choosing, they should be backing both.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:52 pm
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Even when the majoirty of workers are share holders through their pension schemes, and many labour voters are share holders.

Workers and share holders have more in common than you seem to understand, Dazh, and that's why a punish business left wing stand point is doomed to failure.

A modern socialist/left wing programme should have the objective of making sure workers take a fair share of the wealth they produce, not destroy employers' ability to create wealth.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:53 pm
 dazh
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It is to govern for all us

No, it's not. You can't govern for everyone, because it's an obvious fact that there are fundamental conflicts of interest within society. You can't govern for everyone unless you eliminate inequality and class. Last time I looked both of those were still very much present in the UK. I like your utopian view though, and to think people call me an idealist!


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 8:57 pm
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Ian Lavery is like a cartoon character created by the Daily Mail. He’s also as thick as mince.

If you’re quoting that idiot, you need to take a long, hard look at yourself. The bloke is, and always has been an absolute whopper.

You would think that like some others on ‘the left’ he might reflect a bit on his part in delivering labours worst election result since 1935 and STFU! Clearly, like David Cameron yesterday, self-awareness isn’t his strong point.

Interesting narrative from Rafael Behr in the Guardian today about a lot of Tory MPs being very disgruntled about the ‘socialists’ that they’ve ended up with as PM and chancellor.

His rabid right wing backbenchers are not happy with Johnson about increases in corporation tax etc. It’s going to be interesting to see how that develops


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 9:02 pm
 dazh
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the job of the labour party is to protect workers, and not shareholders.

Actually let me correct myself. That *used* to be the job of the labour party, today it's role is to do nothing more than deliver ambitious career politicians into government and provide bragging rights to it's supporters. That's it. Totally pointless!

If you’re quoting that idiot, you need to take a long, hard look at yourself.

Who? I've never quoted Lavery ever, for no other reason than he's like the ghost of my dad. His voice is the same, his accent is the same, and his body language and mannerisms are exactly the same. He even bloody looks like him. It's very unnerving. The first time I pointed it out to Mrs Daz she thought it was hilarious.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 9:03 pm
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Fact is you do govern for everybody once in power, the objective being to govern for the good of society as a whole. That means managing the conflict of interests and implementing policies that produce wealth to be shared and distributed as needs be. And that within the framework of an international community of countries and trading blocks that means your scope for tinkering is limited because the means of production will **** off elsewhere if they don't like your rules.

If you govern for one side or the other you will end up failing both: business needs healthy, well educated motivated workers and workers need employment.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 9:09 pm
 loum
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.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 9:16 pm
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They were against it now. They were for it later in the parliamentary term. Which is what is happening. Still… a nice shitty stick to beat Starmer with.

So having made a great deal of noise about it, their position is exactly the same as the government's. Nice one, Sir.

too many people on the left want “their” leader, not someone looking to lead for the whole country, and win enough seats to be able to do so. It’s blinding obvious to me, because that was me.

I think that many on the left, as well as the centre and the right, are still waiting to find out what kind of leader Starmer is. At the moment he's a total irrelevance. As for the blindingly obvious, it's probably best to not draw wider conclusions from a single data point.


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 9:30 pm
 grum
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The sad fact is that this government is now largely giving the electorate what they want. Left or centrist on the economy and hard right on immigration/culture wars type issues - with a 'charismatic' leader.

No one really seems to care that much about the incompetence and corruption "they're all like that".

What are Labour offering as an alternative?


 
Posted : 03/03/2021 10:40 pm
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Starmer made a (lame) joke in his response yesterday - something along the lines of "it's nice for once to be addressing the person who really makes the decisions" (Sunak).

What he probably hasn't clocked is that he'll still be addressing Sunak after the next election - the difference will be that it will be every Wednesday at PMQs rather than in the annual budget. Odds on that Sunak will be the PM and Starmer will still be leading the opposition - if he doesn't fall on his sword before that.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 10:46 am
 grum
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Good summary of the problems Labour face in the Evening Standard of all places

https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/comment/budget-exposes-labour-dilemma-can-t-decide-economy-b921988.html


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 11:16 am
 dazh
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Odds on that Sunak will be the PM

I can't see this happening. Firstly Boris isn't going to step aside, and more importantly never underestimate the ingrained racism of the tories. Sorry to be crude, but your average white working class tory voter will be thinking they didn't put Boris in charge to end up with a p*** as PM. That's the bottom line.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 11:27 am
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Starmer is dull. He won’t win the next election.

Correct.

As for being behind in the polls, what has been the biggest issue affecting politics in the last year? Shall I give you a clue? Begins with a C.

The simple fact is, whatever flavour of Government in charge they were always going to get an easier ride during this sort of crisis. The airwaves and newspapers are full of it. No time(intentionally or otherwise) for what the opposition thinks or does, in fact the opposition are irrelevant at this moment in time. Except when the opposition have potential problems(SNP).

He isn't attacking the Government! What about those 120,000 deaths, what about the insane levels of corruption, what about the disaster of Brexit? Well here's some news: The Government are pandering to a section of the population who really don't give a sh*t about that. And its a section of the population that under our deranged voting system, matters.

So when the left on here come back and talk about progressive taxation, or social justice, all those deaths etc, well, they don't give a sh*t about all that. Holding rigidly onto ideals without developing some sort of flexibility and adaptation will condemn the likes of the labour party to some sort of puritanical party that could have the largest membership in Europe...but remain in terminal opposition.

There is also this attitude that certain sections of the electorate will see the lefts way of thinking after all this disaster and come to socialism*. Not going to happen. I think only a world wide disaster of epic proportions will do that, this virus isn't that disaster, an environmental disaster? Possibly. (*disaster capitalism and disaster socialism use the same mechanisms to achieve what they want)

Think metaphor's such as Horses to water, mountains to Prophets etc.

The tories have taken decades to slowly shred the post war social contract, and that coupled with their unjustified reputation for fiscal responsibility, will mean average voter will vote to hold on to what they've got, how ever little it is, even though the tories have chipped away a little more from them in that particular governance cycle, over the 'tax and spend' myth that has been laid on the Labour party.

So the labour party are now proceeding through what the tory party did 1997-2001: nowhereville. The government back then were a damn sight more competent than the current shower, who are being shielded by the Covid crisis.

We will then get the end of lockdown, in time for Summer. Hooray! Feelgood times are ahead, with extra feelgood from a successful vaccination program. Obviously, this won't last.

The B word and all it has entailed will loom into view. But from the end of 2021 to 2023, the government will try to avoid the B word, and the best way to do that is to simply not talk about it, and have a client media do the same. But It has already started in some newspapers, just little stories.

Whether the Tories have an election in 2024, or after having amended the fixed term parliament act in 2023, Starmer won't win. In fact 2023 would be perfect for the tories, just at the tail end of the feelgood time. What the Labour party will do is claw back some of those constituencies lost by Starmers predecessor in 2019. We will have to watch for who the Yanks vote for in 2024, as that could throw a spanner in the works, but end of the decade is where the real action will occur.

This is a slow burner, but obviously if you are fighting for the soul of a party to impose an ideology that a significant section of the voting public rejected at the last election with disastrous results, then by all means, bash Starmer.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 5:01 pm
 grum
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Well that was a whole lot of nothing


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 5:03 pm
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Even the very anti-Corbyn New Statesman is turning away from Starmer.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 5:07 pm
 grum
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13-point lead for the Tories in the latest yougov poll, the wheels are really falling off for Starmer. Is this still Corbyn's fault somehow?

https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2021/03/04/voting-intention-con-45-lab-32-3-4-mar


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:00 pm
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Is this still Corbyn’s fault somehow?

Obviously, and anyone who says otherwise is just a PFJ placard-waving idealist.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:05 pm
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Good and in-depth post El-bent…. I shall now post a one liner rubbishing it without engaging with any of your points…


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:10 pm
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Good and in-depth post El-bent…. I shall now post a one liner rubbishing it without engaging with any of your points…

Feel free: it'll be worth no less than El-bent's diatribe, and will waste less time.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:21 pm
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Why not take them up on their points, rather than wasting your time being rude?


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:24 pm
 dazh
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13-point lead for the Tories in the latest yougov poll

33 points behind where they should be! And worse than the election result, that's takes some doing. 😂


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:35 pm
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Why not take them up on their points, rather than wasting your time being rude?

I have absolutely no intention of debating points with someone who has apparently already decided what I think, and is egregiously rude in saying so.

You of course are free to do so.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:35 pm
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33 points behind where they should be! And worse than the election result, that’s takes some doing. 😂

Yeah, but that's all your fault for caring about social justice. Or something.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:36 pm
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We’re all agreed the “vaccine bounce” is real, yes? And will only increase through the summer. Labour will fall further yet. Maybe Starmer will be ejected or step down after the May elections…? [ laughs - we all know that’s not the Labour way ]


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:42 pm
 dazh
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Yeah, but that’s all your fault for caring about social justice. Or something.

Clearly what they need is less policy and more forensic competence. Or a bit more Mandelson?


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:44 pm
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In fact 2023 would be perfect for the tories, just at the tail end of the feelgood time.

May 2023 … before the April 2023 tax increases can be felt by voters … so that the Tories can be seen to “take the difficult decisions”, but the negative effects of those decisions are a post election problem. The budget has me thinking that I’m wrong about an early election, and they could well be considering it.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:45 pm
 grum
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Why not take them up on their points, rather than wasting your time being rude?

You say in depth, I say verbose and lacking in substance. If you expect me to read an essay it had better be worthwhile.

Edit: I just tried reading it again and got nothing from it either, other than 'it's not his fault' or something. Is there a more concise version?


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:56 pm
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What's worrying for Starmer is that as the weather opens up & vaccine kicks in & economy picks up a little bit- will seem like huge increase in growth because base is so low-more people will become pro Boris, perception of EU vaccine rollout also gives them an actual brexit positive

Sunak's budget was a whole lot of meh, not much for Starmer to lay into, other than to say it was unambitious at a time when it needs to be much more than a bit more austerity

Election is 3 years off but Starmer does need to get a consistent message across, he can't rely on Tories being useless to win.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 7:58 pm
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Wow, just read a few of the posts on this page.

Never has it been truer that in the Land of the Blind, the one-eyed man is king.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 8:00 pm
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I wonder if any of us would care to admit that we underestimated Johnson’s appeal? I know I did. (I’m not making excuses for Starmer here...) I mean, I saw his appeal (not personally) but I was all, “yeah, give him a few months and people will really see...”

And yet, 5 COBRA meeting skipped, one of the highest death rates, barefaced lies about the situation in NI and s people still ****ing love him.

By most metrics, he’s failing. Even though people ****ing know he’s lying, they still love him. I find it quite worrying.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 8:25 pm
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I wonder if any of us would care to admit that we underestimated Johnson’s appeal?

No. Overestimated the intellect of the average citizen not to be taken in by such a ridiculous fraud.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 8:43 pm
 dazh
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I wonder if any of us would care to admit that we underestimated Johnson’s appeal?

Johnson represents the hopes of everyone who has fantasies of reaching beyond their station irregardless of their ability. Despite his upper middle class upbringing, everyone can see he's a bumbling idiot, but yet look where he is. Add in a bit of personal 'one of the lads', anti-establishment bravado and you have the perfect antithesis to the detached, sneering, academic political establishment of which Starmer is now the poster boy.

Starmer had one chance, and that was to be the person who he claimed to be in his slick leadership campaign videos. That version of Starmer was appealing, almost inspiring in fact. I know I fell for it, yet he abandoned it, and the political vision that goes with it at the very first opportunity in favour of box-ticking banality. I don't think I underestimated Johnson, but I vastly overestimated Starmer.


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 8:54 pm
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Overestimated the intellect of the average citizen not to be taken in by such a ridiculous fraud.

Well, not to be argumentative 😀 but isn’t that kind of the same as underestimating his appeal?


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 9:02 pm
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I wonder if any of us would care to admit that we underestimated Johnson’s appeal?

I am not sure he will hang around for long still though unless he can turn it into a situation like being London mayor.
To take the items though:
Covid: He hasnt really been challenged well on it. The media despite a few waffles mostly bounce along with the glorious leader. Just some PMQs and thats it and most people dont care about them. The current success of vaccines means that will be knocked out of peoples memory. A good public inquiry would do a lot of damage but since the tories will control the rules for it that aint going to happen and it will be designed to take years to report anyway.
NI: Reality is most people dont know or care. Of those who do care I think quite a few arent overly fussed since they see the short term pain leading towards a united Ireland so arent going to make a major case right now. Which leaves just the unionists. Who else are they going to turn to though?


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 9:21 pm
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The reality is that Starmer is a passenger in all this, for now, Johnson will control the narrative for the rest of the year, people want to hear good news & he loves to deliver it.

But Sunak's budget does nothing for growth so the pain will keep piling up for many,

Starmer has to offer a better solution for them

The other unknown is holyrood elections & the constitutional showdown if SNP get a majority, this will be on Johnson & his Brexit

What follows from that will be interesting, Labour were badly burned for supporting the Tories in the No campaign last time


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 9:51 pm
 dazh
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Oh dear..

https://twitter.com/robertnpalmer/status/1367405177490337792?s=21


 
Posted : 04/03/2021 9:52 pm
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