Home Forums Chat Forum Jeremy Corbyn

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  • Jeremy Corbyn
  • jambalaya
    Free Member

    Dazh I think it’s a stretch to say everyone thought UKIP would win in Stoke, as I posted oppostion vote was split UKIP/Tory. I think most comemtaors thought the result would likely go to Labour.

    cranberry
    Free Member

    The much more interesting thing that happened yesterday was the reception given to Angela Rayner by the Stoke QT audience. She’s clearly being groomed for bigger things.

    Bigger things than being in the shadow cabinet ?

    Toilet attendant ?
    Park warden ?

    UKIP lost Stoke rather than Labour retaining it – their candidate was, in the end, shown to be a Walter Mitty character. There was very partial reporting of all of his ( very many ) shortcomings, whilst I didn’t see any reports of the labour staffer who sent text messages telling muslims that they would face judgement from Allah if they didn’t vote labour, which is rightly just a little bit illegal. Not fake news – all they reported was true, but fake journalism as they did not report with fairness and impartiality. Much as I like C4 news, the cost of some of their reporting should go on to the the Labour campaign expenditure report.

    binners
    Full Member

    Copeland is different, and needs to be put in the context Corbyn’s avowed anti-nuclear principals. It’d be like expecting Liverpool to vote for a party led by Kelvin McKenzie.

    But Daz, thats the whole point. Its just one issue, but Corbyn has spent his entire career vocally gobbing off juvenile, fringe leftist ideas, of no interest or appeal to the grown ups outside the common room.

    So now he has to vocalise ideas that have to have a mainstream appeal, nobody believes a bloody word of it! And why would they? Because when you’ve spent 3 decades saying the complete opposite, its laughable.

    The whole nuclear thing is just one of a multitude of issues on which he has absolutely zero credibility. And all the Tory’s need to do is point at his previous statements to highlight that.

    Happy birthday Theresa!

    cranberry
    Free Member

    Oh and Corbyn this morning:

    ( and he is not the one in the white )

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    “He’s a different type of leader. He is that sort of person who does listen, who is decent and honest and does bring people together.”

    JMcD

    dazh
    Full Member

    So now he has to vocalise ideas that have to have a mainstream appeal

    He doesn’t really because you’re under the misapprehension that he’s positioning himself to be the next PM. After recent reports about maneuverings to identify the next leader and seeing the likes of Rayner emerge I’m more convinced than ever that he won’t fight the next election. You’re all obsessing about something that probably won’t happen.

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    Disappointing that nobody is talking about policies.
    One thing that was clear to me during ‘on the street’ interviews, is that many people were voting based on newspaper headlines and personalities without actual regard for policy.
    Nobody could actually say why UKIP were going to change things and what they were going to do – they were just fed up and wanted change. They’d heard that UKIP were different.

    Same with Corbyn. People were damning the man, until people started to discuss actual policy, and then they started to realise that they agreed with him.

    But people don’t have time for investigation.

    Watching some of the videos of people wandering around the boarded up, crumbling parts of Stoke was totally depressing. They really have been left behind. They just don’t realise that it was first Thatcher, then Blair who left them there and that May will only deliver more of the same.

    DrJ
    Full Member

    “He’s a different type of leader. He is that sort of person who does listen, who is decent and honest and does bring people together.”

    JMcD

    That would certainly be different from the shower of sh1te we have running the country.

    cranberry
    Free Member

    ITV’s Chris Ship asks Jez “Have you at any point this morning looked in the mirror and asked yourself, could the problem actually be me?” Corbyn’s reply: “No. Thank you for your question.”

    https://order-order.com/2017/02/24/corbyn-im-not-problem/

    Lifer
    Free Member

    Wow, what a scoop!

    dragon
    Free Member

    “He’s a different type of leader. He is that sort of person who does listen, who is decent and honest and does bring people together.”
    JMcD

    Evidence please? He didn’t listen to the voters in Cumbria did he?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    He doesnt bring people together very well either, but let’s not let that get in the way.

    His conviction on Europe, nuclear power etc are as strong as ever and that’s what counts.

    binners
    Full Member

    He’s a different type of leader. He is that sort of person who does listen, who is decent and honest and does bring people together.

    He’s brought a lot of people in Copeland together to vote against him. I’m sure he’ll have the same unifying effect on constituencies all over the country at the next general election.

    Theresa must be today gleefully drawing up her programme for the next 9 years of unopposed rule

    Something to look forward to eh?

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    DrJ Corbyn’s record of “providing a safe space” to Anti-Semites (Commons select committe quote) would seem to prove JMcD very much misguided in his quote. That plus all the stories from Labour MPs of Corbyn just staring at the floor when faced with a difficult issue or having to make a decision.

    I see Labour’s new poster child Baroness Chakrabati is keeping a low profile

    Copeland. UKIP vote went to the Tories it seems. Given (roughly) 30-40% Kippers are typically ex Labour that’s quite a switch. Telegrapgh’s prediction for 2020 based on the by-election results is 175 Labour seats

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/02/24/labour-obliterated-fat-majority-tories-results-had-general-election/

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    @binners I am sure Mrs May will not be complacent but we both know the Tories aren’t really attacking Labour yet. When that comes it’s going to very ugly for Labour

    milleboy
    Free Member

    @binners I am sure Mrs May will not be complacent but we both know the Tories aren’t really attacking Labour yet. When that comes it’s going to very ugly for Labour

    Why would they bother?

    mattyfez
    Full Member
    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Shaggy – It Wasn’t Me – Tip Top Tropical Edit. 8)

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    There seems to be very little incentive for May to attack Corbyn/Labour. I would imagine that she is quite comfortable with the current set up, if not with the nightmare of executing Brexshit.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Given (roughly) 30-40% Kippers are typically ex Labour that’s quite a switch.

    I am fairly confident any survey or study would not be so imprecise in a claim but may I pretty please see a source that substantiates that claim

    UKIP vote went to the Tories it seems. Given (roughly) 30-40% Kippers are typically ex Labour that’s quite a switch

    Secondly 50% of the UKIP switched to the tories and it seems entirely plausible that the tory[ or non labour ones if you wish to precise] UKIPers switched not the labour UkIPers- ie right wingers combined to beat labour.

    I assume we will have to wait a while to now for certain

    TBH with so much to hit labour with i am not sure why you chose something so tenuous.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Agreed may does not need to do anything[ its self destructing without her help] and she cannot be as effective as the PLP or Binners or corbyn

    IHN
    Full Member

    One thing that was clear to me during ‘on the street’ interviews, is that many people were voting based on newspaper headlines and personalities without actual regard for policy.

    Which is what people do, and why any serious politician has to understand the importance of the news cycle. It’s all well and good being principled, but you have to know how to play the game.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Junky read it on a blog ages ago following 2015 GE analysis, I forget the exact number something in the 30’s

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Well that is me well convinced now.

    My second point still stands as to what the UKIP shift shows.

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    Which is what people do, and why any serious politician has to understand the importance of the news cycle. It’s all well and good being principled, but you have to know how to play the game.

    If you accept that (instead of trying to change it) you’re always going to have the same type of narcissistic game-playing politicians that we’ve had for the last 25 years.

    IHN
    Full Member

    If you accept that (instead of trying to change it) you’re always going to have the same type of narcissistic game-playing politicians that we’ve had for the last 25 years.

    Not necessarily; if Corbyn is the ‘better class’ of politician that he and others think he is, he could get a team around him that will help to spread his message to a wider audience, i.e. help him to play the game. But he doesn’t, he seems happy to appeal solely to the membership of the Labour party.

    binners
    Full Member

    Just had a conversation with one of the local labour bods this afternoon who pointed out that the normally labour voting constituency of Bury South is now ****ed because the huge Jewish community have now deserted the party completely. All due to Corbyn and the whole anti-semitism issue around him.

    Another previously solid labour seat in the bag for the Tories. Another victory for this ‘honest and principled’ man eh?

    johnx2
    Free Member

    If you accept that (instead of trying to change it) you’re always going to have the same type of narcissistic game-playing politicians that we’ve had for the last 25 years.

    I’ve heard similar things from corb supporting friends, and stuff like “this is the first time I’ve been excited about politics, compared to the dull spinning of the blair/brown years” etc etc.

    All well and good, but convincing the public, getting messages across via media that people use, and the tedious job of actually making a big complex party hang together, let alone actually running things, is a job for grownups. It might not be that inspiring for those hoping for some kind of politician-free wonderland. But where/when has that sort of wonderland existed? Best we can hope for is a vaguely competent and well run opposition holding this awful government to account, and displacing it in a general election. This will involve competent politics and politicians, I’m afraid. Don’t worry though. This is not likely to happen.

    IHN
    Full Member

    ^ what he said ^

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    All due to Corbyn and the whole anti-semitism issue around him.

    there is no anti semitism issue ther eis a big huge smokescreen of pish that just hurl terrorist sympathiser till they realised anti semite got more traction and was just as honest

    No one thinks corbyn personally is anti semitic or that he is even racist just like the DM did not think Red ed was red or that his dad was a coward or traitor or whatever lie they said that i have mercifully forgotten

    they would probably have accused him of anti semitism if they could have
    Its just RW BS that some buy into*
    TBH anyone who thinks racism will reduce with right wingers and UKIP getting more power and us leaving the EU is seriously delusional

    * yes if you search all the party and their claimed supporters you can find isolated incidents of racists within them
    I hate the tories I dont think they are racist just because i can google and find some examples.

    binners
    Full Member

    no one thinks Corbyn personally is anti-semitic

    Erm….. yes they do. Plenty. Not least the entire Jewish population. And with good reason.

    But you’re right. It’s probably the Daily Mails fault

    AlexSimon
    Full Member

    I see it a different way. I think a lot of the voting apathy is due to the blair/brown years and in some part the Milliband years (in that he could never actually say what he thought for fear of attack). You see similar from Burnham and many more. That’s what provided this sense of “it doesn’t matter who I vote for, nothing changes” attitude and Corbyn has inherited that. Same with Brexit. It’s a culmination of the last couple of decades.

    The difficulty is in trying to communicate that things will change if you vote for Labour, when the full force of the elite/media/establishment really doesn’t want anything to change.

    I agree that they aren’t doing a good enough job (I keep wondering when in PMQs he’s doing to do the big “oh – a strong economy you say? The strong economy that borrows more…can’t support services, etc, etc”. Surely they’ve got one ready!

    I’m not even a ‘Corbyn the man’ supporter, but I do think that he was necessary to bring Labour out of the spin/weathervane era.

    As others have said, I hope that one of the current bubbling-under politicians like Clive Lewis can take over soon, but I don’t envy them the challenge of facing the hostility that anyone who genuinely wants change will face.

    dazh
    Full Member

    Erm….. yes they do. Plenty. Not least the entire Jewish population. And with good reason.

    Christ we’re through the looking glass now. Jeremy Corbyn is neither a racist or anti-semite. Anyone with half a brain can see that. He’s spent his entire life campaigning against the things he’s accused of. Are the Corbyn haters going to deny and rewrite 30 years of history where he’s on record, or regurgitate a bunch of Daily Mail and Scum headlines? If the ‘local labour bods’ were out in their community trying to persuade the Jewish Community that they’re being sold a lie by the real racists instead of sitting idly by because it suits their anti-Corbyn agenda to see him smeared, then maybe those voters wouldn’t have left so readily.

    ransos
    Free Member

    Erm….. yes they do. Plenty. Not least the entire Jewish population. And with good reason.

    What good reason? Come on, that’s a serious accusation.

    binners
    Full Member
    outofbreath
    Free Member

    “What good reason?”

    He hates Isreal and supports the Arabs in their (perhaps legitimate) desire to drive the Israeli Jews into the sea. That might not make you anti-Semetic but it probably isn’t going to win the Jewish Vote over.

    Given the modern habit of describing hatred of a country as racism I suspect he is racist.

    But yeah, I don’t think he meets my personal definition of racist. (Unlike Diane Abbot who is openly racist.)

    As for pro terrorist, it was John MacDonald who is on record as approving of terrorism as a method of achieving political aims, not Corbyn. I think the case against Corbyn on that front is a bit weak – but he has been on rallies with Terrorists which might raise doubts in some people’s minds.

    Personally I wouldn’t relish going into a general election having to explain day after day the crazy stuff these people have been spouting for decades – and I doubt they do either. They’re gonna get crucified.

    mrlebowski
    Free Member

    I love the fact that he’s trying to blame Bliar – No Jeremy, you lost & you need to man up!

    DrJ
    Full Member

    Are the Corbyn haters going to deny and rewrite 30 years of history where he’s on record, or regurgitate a bunch of Daily Mail and Scum headlines?

    That’s exactly what they are doing. Have you missed all Jamba’s posts?

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    I noted the guardian never opened those articles* [ mainly cohens]for comment and the DM would be proud of this sort of tripe

    Unfortunately for Britain, representatives of the darkest left factions control Labour and much of the trade union movement, and dominate the intelligentsia.

    Quick check under your bed there might be one lurking there

    Zionism is the nationalist belief that the Jews should have a homeland

    this is what it meant just like semitic refers to the semitic language speaking people of that region and includes the Palestinians [ and the arabs]
    These days it largely refers to whether you support the apartheid state of israel rather than Jewish home rule and anti-semitic means you dislike Jews – which is what they claim anyone who criticises Israel is and its false.

    its perfectly possible to be anti zionist in the modern context and pro Zionism in the historical context.

    Its also entirely impossible to argue that the removal of the scourge of racism has been anything other than campaign led by the left and opposed [ still] by those on the right of the spectrum- of course not all of them.

    That they can get a lefty like binners to parrot out this drivel shows either how effective it is or how gullible some are.

    * probably scared f anti semitism eh rather than everyone pointing out it was complete BS

    I wish i had gone back and read this first

    Erm….. yes they do. Plenty. Not least the entire Jewish population. And with good reason.

    self evidently its not every single Jew in the world everywhere who thinks this but they do seem as suscptible to newspeak as you
    FROWNS

    Corbyn and labour are many things why go to the trouble of making up anti semitism?

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