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Jeremy Corbyn
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brFree Member
Self employed / small limited company tne two go together imo[/I]
They don’t in HMRC/Govt land, both have distinct rules.
But, I will agree that we’ve a far too complicated tax system and IMO all income to an individual should be taxed exactly the same no matter where it comes from, and no matter whether that individual is working/not-working or retired. This would also include the ‘retirement’ of employee NI, with a corresponding rise in income tax.
This would also restrict the Govt on its ‘schemes’, so income from renting out a bedroom is treated for example the same as renting out a house.
And also citizens are entitle to the same benefits (and state pension), or maybe we could bring it all together as a guaranteed citizens ‘income’?
ninfanFree MemberWhat labour members expect is not a hard-left marxist revolution, but a leadership which listens to them and a government which represents them..
All too easily forgotten is the fact that the job of the LP isn’t just to deliver what it’s members want – it’s constitution is very clear on this:
The party shall bring together members and supporters who share its values to develop policies, make communities stronger through collective action and support, and promote the election of Labour Party representatives at all levels of the democratic process.
cranberryFree MemberWhat labour members expect is not a hard-left marxist revolution, but a leadership which listens to them and a government which represents them..
As the number of people who join and remain members of political parties has reduced massively over the last few decades, so the members who remain are, politically often rather removed from the mainstream electorate. The labour party membership seems to be made of the remnants of the 80’s hard left and a large number of younger people, who have never learned the lessons of the 80’s and 90’s. The labour party membership is never going to have a government that represents them – the rest of the country have moved on and the votes needed to form a government are in the centre, not on the hard-left wing.
This is why, pre-Milibean the MPs had a large say in selecting the leader (they have, logically a desire to shape a vote-winning party ) and the members voice was much reduced. As long as the party members get to say who the leader is the labour party will be condemned to irrelevance.
TurnerGuyFree Memberhim and his sixth form followers
I don’t think that is fair – they are a bit more advanced than that.
More like the angry pre-graduate lefties that hung around in the student union bars argueing loudly and banging their fists angrily on the bar, or deploying the ballot boxes during student union elections, but moving them slightly to locations that only the lefty voters knew about.
dragonFree MemberI remember the type who were completely welcoming to foreigners while handing out abuse to those who came from the ‘wrong’ part of the UK. Lovely folk 😥
Anyway why is Corbyn still the ‘leader’, he is so irrelevant he hardly gets any press time anymore.
ctkFull Membercranberry – Member
As long as the party members get to say who the leader is the labour party will be condemned to irrelevance.Without the members who would the PLP pick?
dragon – Member
Anyway why is Corbyn still the ‘leader’, he is so irrelevant he hardly gets any press time anymore.Poisened chalice?
cranberryFree MemberWithout the members who would the PLP pick?
Well, that is another part of the problem for Labour – they started off with the choice of the right Miliband, picked the wrong one, talent left the party. Lost an election, talent left the party. Picked Corbyn, talent left the party. Picked Corbyn a second time, talent left the party.
Momentum/Unite take-over – Anyone want to guess what will leave the party ?
Soon Rebecca is going to look like part of the talent pool of the party. I am not sure how the party gets out of its self-imposed death spiral, if it can.
kerleyFree MemberI am not sure how the party gets out of its self-imposed death spiral, if it can.
I am not sure it will. Labours chances of getting power went seriously downhill with the loss of Scotland to SNP. You can’t lose that many seats and get away with it.
I would guess it will be at least 15 years of Tory government before anyone else has a chance. It is the standard pattern isn’t it. Tories in for many terms until their policies become more and more extreme and the population suddenly wakes up to how bad they are for the average person.
outofbreathFree Member“I am not sure how the party gets out of its self-imposed death spiral, if it can.”
This.
Corbyn’s election will remain an open goal for years after he’s gone. What floating voter is gonna vote for a party which is known to be hard left at it’s core?
I just don’t see the way back.
Having said that, I thought Trump would lose, and I got that wrong. Core party voters can be surprisingly loyal.
binnersFull MemberThe thing is that he’s now considered to be such a liability, and so useless, that once you’ve hit those depths (19 points behind in the latest polls) there’s just no coming back from it. Its been a death spiral from day one!
He was on the north west news the other night, visiting a local council. The local labour bods tried to look enthusiastic, but the rictus smiles screamed “will you please **** off back to Islington before we all get contaminated by your awful 1970’s lefty veneer”. About as welcome as a fart in a space suit
Then local news guy interviews him. His first question… and I’m paraphrasing slightly, but… “you’re a bit shit, aren’t you really? Everyone thinks so. So when are you going to do the decent thing, and **** off?”
He then parroted off his usual “blah, blah, blah… elected by the membership… blah, blah, blah… mandated from the people…..”
So its clear that no matter how bad it gets, he’ll cling on like a particularly determined chug-nut
I’d imagine that this goes on in different parts of the country from time to time, but less and less, until even little local papers won’t bother to cover his visits any more. Why would they? Its not like he’s got anything to say. And unless he’s visiting a 6th form common room, absolutely nobody is going to be glad to see him
AlexSimonFull MemberI think all this talk of 15/20-years of tory government, etc is nonsense.
If the recent past has told us anything, it’s that anything can turn around in an instant.One of the most eye-opening things for me recently though is that the more right-wing you are, the more impervious to scandal you become.
All the stuff being thrown at Trump and nobody seems to care, except all the people who never liked him in the first place. As soon as someone on the left gets a tiny bit of scandal, all the centrists seem to leap on it.
It seems that as soon as you are accepted as being right wing – you are expected to be pretty mercenary/morally corrupt or you’re not doing it right.StonerFree Memberand, of course, even if he falls on his sword after a calamitous election performance, the structure that milli put in place for electing a new leader will lead to the same kind of freakish result. Yes, less contaminated, but still no more likely to be electable by the wider population, and that’s even before any wider Lansmann stitch up of the machinery of the party.
outofbreathFree Member“seems to care, except all the people who never liked him in the first place. As soon as someone on the left gets a tiny bit of scandal, all the centrists seem to leap on it.”
Trump has the lowest approval ratings ever. I’m not sure you can offer him as an example as popular with Centrists.
Not sure Trump is right wing either. He’s basically been elected on Corbyn’s economic policy.
binnersFull MemberTom Watson just pulled the pin out of the hand grenade
Let battle commence. At least the phoney war can make way for the real thing now. Hopefully this will lead to the inevitable split. Corbyn, the grizzled old lefties, and 6th formers going one way, the grown ups the other
jambalayaFree MemberStatement of the Obvious really Binners. As I have posted before I rate Tom Watson very highly.
The PLP no inatuoms where meant to ensure leadership candidates where capable of leading the party in Parliament and forming policy that was electable at a GE. Corbyn was nominated by many MPs who knew he was neither of those things.
Momentum has always been about entryism.
Alex I fear you are dangerously optimistic, Labour is closer to becoming as ineffective electorally as Scottish Labour than it is to forming even a coalition Government. As parties shrink in terms of MPs they lose funding (wages, short money etc) and also people need work and the best MPs/ministers just get other jobs. Look at the Lib Dems they get less questions at weekly PMQ’s than do the SNP
tjagainFull MemberArrgghhh
I knew I shouldn’t have reopened this thread.
Corbyn is not hard left by any rational assessement.
Watson is a dinosaur that is in the wrong party and has not a clue – he is the problem not corbyn. All he keeps on doing with statements like that is giving the tory press ammo
The problem remains the rebels in the labour party not corbyn. All they have done is give the right wing press ammo
a split may well come – and watch all the right winger vanis from parliamentas no one wants tory lite
cranberryFree MemberIt is a bit like rain on your wedding day or a free ride when you’ve already paid that Tom Watson is the last remaining non-nutter available to stand up against secret plots with Unite
binnersFull MemberAll they have done is give the right wing press ammo
Have you read the Nick Cohen article Uncle Jezza? As he points out, the Tory press don’t bother with Corbyn at all. Like Theresa, the rest of the Tory party, and everyone who’s reached political puberty, they ignore him. He’s an irrelevance who gets zero press coverage. Come an election, they’d savage him. Right now all they have to do is keep feeding him more rope.
It tells you everything you need to know that Momentum/Unite want to change the leadership election rules so that you only need 5% support within the parliamentary party to get on the ballot. It presently stands at a whopping great 15%. Yet they know full well that they haven’t got a cat in hells chance of reaching that figure, because they’re all batshit mental, and politically clueless! The electorate knows this. So do Labour MP’s.
That’s ambition for you eh? Securing 5% support within the party you allegedly lead? It seems that they seem to be heading to the same percentage support within the electorate as a whole.
Still big in the 6th form though, eh? And that’s all that matters…
jambalayaFree MemberOf course the Tory party and “press” ignire him, the longer he’s in charge the better. That was the point we where all making back in the original post Milliband leadership contest and why I was close to paying £3 to vote for him.
ctkFull MemberPoint of order: David Milliband would have lost the same way as his bro.
jambalayaFree MemberPossibly yes, the economic credibility had been shot to bits by Brown post financial crises but I wonder whether David might have fended off the SNP threat rather better.
edit: cfh 🙂
ctkFull Member@binners yes who knows? Yet some are so sure he would’ve won. I think he had a few too many skeletons in the closet/ banana skins.
cranberryFree Member.. but he was more popular with voters and his party than Mr Ed. So, if anyone had a chance of rescuing the party it was him.
Do you think that David would have changed the voting rules, so that the inmates got to decide who should run the asylum ?
After this wonderful video, Jezz We Can will need to spend today making jam:
https://twitter.com/jeremycorbyn/status/843947779957248000/video/1
Did he set out to satirise this ?
big_n_daftFree MemberWatson is a dinosaur that is in the wrong party and has not a clue – he is the problem not corbyn. All he keeps on doing with statements like that is giving the tory press ammo
Tom Watson has his own mandate from the same people who elected JC
MrWoppitFree MemberMomentum seeks to ensure members have a greater voice in the party as it is its mass membership that will help Labour win the next general election.
That’s Jon Lansman.
Cloud Cuckoo. Is he a teapot?
binnersFull MemberWatson is a dinosaur that is in the wrong party and has not a clue – he is the problem not corbyn.
A statement that in so few words perfectly summarises the total and complete detachment from reality of your average Corbyn fanboi/apoligist/supporter/lefty mentalist.
Don’t tell me…. its only the bastard PLP that stands in the way of Jezza, John and Dianne… oh…. and good old Len…. totally reversing their catastrophic polling, and leading the revolution with a massive labour landslide, as they march a grateful nation to the sunny socialist uplands
😆
jambalayaFree MemberBaroness Shakrabati, you forgot her binners. Sir Keith seems to have stopped towing the Corbyn line too.
It wasn’t so much that Labour lost in Scotland they have been totally obliterated. Its at the point that voters there see no point voting Labour as “they can’t win”. That’s the danger Labour faces in England and Wales now too.
binnersFull MemberSpeaking to our local labour party bods, they just have an air of resigned despair. They know whats coming. They fully expect to be decimated in the local elections in May. losing swathes of councils across the north, that have been labour since the dawn of time. To a sitting, second term Tory govenment. Previously unimaginable before Jezza’s ‘Project’. Now just expected.
But even then, I doubt it’ll make much impact in the Islington Bunker…
The only light at the end of the tunnel is that Andy Burnham will be elected as Manchester mayor. By employing the same tactic as Sadiq Khan in London. Distancing himself from the Corbyn madhouse, while not being openly publicly hostile. Basically doing what the electorate are doing. Just ignoring him
I doubt we’ll be seeing Jezza up here to ‘help out’ with the campaign anyway. I expect they’ve been told in no uncertain terms that they’re not welcome. Corbyn wanted his place-man as candidate – The totally anonymous, useless (a man in his own mould) and corrupt Tony Lloyd. So there’s no love lost
jambalayaFree MemberAgreed binners. The Labour highlights will be Kahn and Burnham and hopefully for the Labour Party enough members will see that is the sort of politician they need going forward.
On a lighter note 🙂
ctkFull MemberI like Burnham but he looked completely lost in both the
leadership elections he has contested.dazhFull MemberJezza once again thinking outside the box at PMQs with a series of questions about police funding. I suppose it’s not like anything else is going on today.
CaptainFlashheartFree MemberJezza once again thinking outside the box at PMQs with a series of questions about police funding
Yeah, but look at his massive man
hooddate!Phwoar, eh? Phwoar!
ctkFull MemberI preferred it when he looked like he wasn’t trying. Brown blazer, biro in pocket etc. “Jill from Lewes has wrote to me about bin collections…” etc
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