Viewing 40 posts - 17,921 through 17,960 (of 21,377 total)
  • Jeremy Corbyn
  • binners
    Full Member

    I do wonder what makes someone dedicate themselves so heavily to attacking Corbyn and so aiding the hard right.

    Aiding the hard right is exactly what the labour party is doing at the moment under Corbyn, through his/its stance on Brexit… a 3 line whip for triggering article 50 and leaving the single market. They’re going to get their longed-for Hard Brexit, and what exactly do you think they’re going to do then….?

    Deregulate everything, Decimate workers rights and environmental controls, privatise the NHS, etc, etc, etc…..

    What a result for the labour party eh?

    To them, Corbyn’s just a useful idiot. I bet they can’t believe their luck just how useful. He’s going to be entirely complicit in, and culpable of, allowing the right wing of the Tory party to turn back social progress 70 years. The Labour leader who gifted them everything they’ve ever longer for.

    olddog
    Full Member

    Binners – what do you think Labour policy on Brexit should be?

    binners
    Full Member

    Labour policy should be remaining in the customs union and the single market, and accepting whatever price needs to be paid for that, ie freedom of movement. Theres a majority in both the electorate and parliament for that. Brexit in Name Only, if you like

    The status quo would be the best option, obviously, but I doubt they’d get away with that

    Anything else is just economic self-harm and a gift to the free market ultras, who will then be empowered to take us god-only-knows-where. Somewhere just off the coast of America

    But Corbyn doesn’t want, and has never wanted that. He wants what the free market ultras want… a hard Brexit as he imagines (ridiculously) it’ll free him from the capitalist shackles of Europe to create a socialist utopia. Its a pipe dream. What will happen in reality will be the polar opposite of that. We’ll become a neo-liberal wet dream. A sweatshop, money-laundering tax-haven

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    Their policy should reflect what their membership wants. This is what Corbyn promised about all labour policy. Anyone know what the majority of labour membership would like to do?

    olddog
    Full Member

    Labour policy should be remaining in the customs union and the single market, and accepting whatever price needs to be paid for that, ie freedom of movement. Theres a majority in both the electorate and parliament for that.

    Isnt that current Labour policy? Albeit not exactly well articulated.  As I said before – this position is not all that popular.  Labour members (and a big chunk of voters) are second referendum remainers but many (more?) traditional voters  are hardcore leavers. Personally , I agree this is the best we could get out of the cluster **** that is Brexit

    (Edited for clarity)

    DrJ
    Full Member

    Isnt that current Labour policy?

    Indeed, but don’t tell binners.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    No, that is not Labour policy… if you’re listening to what the front bench say, and how they whip their MPs (rather than what the members say they want).

    dazh
    Full Member

    It has already been passed to someone else…. The Tories. In perpetuity.

    Don’t be daft. How many times have we heard ‘x or y party is unelectable for a generation’, and then things happen and the electorate changes their mind on who they want in power. These things come in cycles. What I’m interested in is not the baton being passed back and forth between the tories and labour who basically do the same stuff but from opposite ends of the spectrum, but the breaking of the cycle altogether.

    The current political system largely serves a tiny few at the top whilst feeding scraps to the rest of us, and in the process is destroying the environment, mortgaging the future of our kids and causing untold death and suffering of millions along the way. I couldn’t care less whether that system is governed by labour or the tories, what I want is for someone to change it. The only way that is going to happen is for new broad based poitical parties and movements who don’t ask for power, but sieze it through the force of their arguments, their actions and ultimately their numbers. Corbyn for all his faults is on a path to changing the labour party into something like that. It may not work, but it’s the best opportunity to radically change the way society works that has existed for decades, and that’s why inspires so much passion in it’s supporters.

    binners
    Full Member

    Present labour policy is remaining in ‘a’ customs union, but not ‘the’ customs union, retaining tariff-free access to the single market, while being outside the single market and ending freedom of movement

    Its a nonsense cloud-cuckooland pipe dream which the EU would laugh out of the place

    Bravissimo – I would imagine that the labour membership would overwhelming be in favour of scrapping Brexit completely seeing as  86% of them support a second referendum, but I’m sure they’d back remaining in the customs union and the single market. Jezza doesn’t seem in a hurry to ask them though.

    When push comes to shove, behind the rhetoric I don’t think Jezza is any more committed to this much-lauded internal democracy than Blair

    Only when it suits

    cornholio98
    Free Member

    Isnt that current Labour policy?

    If Labour Party policy was effectively remain why are they so quiet about the progression to hard leave?

    almost everyone I speak too feels disenfranchised

    olddog
    Full Member

    I’m not sure Labour are being quiet about it particularly – I think not having a strong/clear remain (or leave) position means their  policy is indistinct from the brexit miasma that is hanging across most of mainstream politics. There is such an overlapping range of opinion across both main parties.

    And if Labour were to come out v strongly remain they would be hammered with the “undermining democracy” stick.

    As I said before it’s hugely disheartening as Brexit is basically killing all other political debate – when austerity is both driving public services into the ground and stifling economic growth. That is what the political debate should be about.

    dissonance
    Full Member

    Bravissimo – I would imagine that the labour membership

    Dont confuse labour membership with labour voters. It is the latter which has a lot more mixed opinions.

    binners
    Full Member

    True – but I do believe that for the last few years the idea that traditional labour voters in northern and midlands constituencies who would switch their vote to the Tories over Brexit has been massively over-egged. I doubt many would actually do that, but obviously this is the impression given by the Brexit-supporting press

    dazh
    Full Member

    When push comes to shove, behind the rhetoric I don’t think Jezza is any more committed to this much-lauded internal democracy than Blair

    Well if if that turns out to be the case then it will be incumbent on the membership to depose him. Given his supposed incompetence that shouldn’t be too difficult should it?

    cchris2lou
    Full Member

    Labour dont need à Brexit policy at such.

    All they need to do is attack the government on their actions but Corbyn doesn’t even do that!

    olddog
    Full Member

    Binners – It has happened already – have a look at North East Derbyshire and Mansfield. Both Tory for first time in living memory (ever in the case of Mansfield). Voters went from Labour to UKIP in 2015 then UKIP to Tory in 2017.

    TurnerGuy
    Free Member

    Isnt that current Labour policy?

    no, they explicitely say that free movement will end, but then say lots of guff about keeping all the same benefits as the single market and the customs union – which will be impossible without free movement.

    They will have the same problem about the irish border, so unless they have a solution then they will be in the same situation.

    I think we need something like Norway – it’s a big gamble to assume that the rest of the UK can evolve ot pick up the financial hit that London and the SE will get, in tems of tax revenue.

    Then, when the countries stabilised a bit, start trying to devolve London and the SE northwards and develop other strengths so we are not so reliant on financial services.

    Then the question could be made again in the future with another referendum. By that time the financial imbalance between the north and south might have been addressed and the result might be fairer and not so influenced by people disgruntled by the lack of investment in their part of the country.

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    Norwegians tend to say, “if we could get what you have, we’d be in tomorrow.” 🙂 It’s a mad world.

    Anyway, anyone know what the labour membership would like to do about Brexit? Did they have a vote on it at conference or anything?

    olddog
    Full Member

    Isn’t the problem that there is not a good or even moderately ok outcome. The best we can hope for is not catastrophic

    There are only two coherent s positions. Fully in ie ignore the referendum or hard brexit and negotiate trade deals as with any other state. The former politically impossible and the latter- a total economic and political disaster. Everything else is some degree of fudge with a Norway being the least  bad. This means that any position is going to sound confused and be open to attack from both side

    Let’s not forget why we are in this shit storm. A weak Tory leader called a referendum on a fundamental constitutional issue purely to address his own problems with internal Tory party politics. This was held without a coherent debate or properly articulated endstate positions. Labour position was not strong enough at the time but it is a disaster created of Tory hubris.

    dissonance
    Full Member

    I doubt many would actually do that, but obviously this is the impression given by the Brexit-supporting press

    They dont need to become tories though do they? All they need to do is desert labour for ukip and co.

    Although as olddog points out those parties could be a gateway drug.

    cornholio98
    Free Member

    Then, when the countries stabilised a bit, start trying to devolve London and the SE northwards and develop other strengths so we are not so reliant on financial services.

    If ministers have not cared about moving north and developing other strengths when they had capacity and cash to do this why when the money runs out do you think they will do it? They are more likely to say that we should consolidate our existing strength as they are afraid of risk (that does not line the pockets of a private sponsor at public expense).

    its sad but you can’t look to the governments to make your life better. As well meaning as many people might be there are more feckless and grabbing around. The best we can hope for is for them not to run the place into the ground.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    A weak Tory leader called a referendum on a fundamental constitutional issue purely to address his own problems with internal Tory party politics.

    I very much doubt he called you to explain his motives, so if we’re going to guess why he did it I’m going to guess that the overwhelmingly most important reason was to win some votes off UKIP. He was on course to lose in 2015. When you’re about to lose an election keeping your rebels under control can only ever be a secondary objective!

    Of course, buying votes with a Referendum wasn’t a tactic that he was alone in, Vince Cable called for a referendum in November 2007 and an in/out EU referendum on the next big change was in the Liberal manifesto in 2010.

    Some more reading here:

    https://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/the-staggers/2011/10/referendum-membership-lib

    kimbers
    Full Member

    First poll post a budget widely perceived to have been a success for the Tories & bungled by labour supporting high earner tax cuts shows….

    A 3 pt rise for labour…. Just goes to show that pepsology is bobbins!

    ( this was obviously b4 sports minister resigned over government caving in to gambling industry over FOBT.  https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/tracey-crouch-resigns-sports-minister-delay-betting-fixed-odds-government-a8613256.html )

    outofbreath
    Free Member

     bungled by labour supporting high earner tax cuts shows….

    A 3 pt rise for labour

    Perhaps the latter means the former wasn’t bungling after all?

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Why does he keep giving them ammunition. 🙁

    johnnystorm
    Full Member

    Perhaps he’s playing a blinder. Let the Tories cancel Brexit while he’s still seen as supporting it, get the support of the Left and disgruntled Brexiters, cruise into power and then never mention leaving again. Hope springs eh?

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Perhaps he’s playing a blinder. Let the Tories cancel Brexit while he’s still seen as supporting it, get the support of the Left and disgruntled Brexiters, cruise into power and then never mention leaving again.

    I agree he’s played a blinder on Brexit from the very beginning. I was referring to his remembrance day choices. (And the fact that once he gets the inevitable bad press his strongest supporters all share the bad press on FB – linking to the bloody story! I seriously wonder if the Tabloids give him a share of the profit all those clicks are generating.)

    rene59
    Free Member

    If you mean his raincoat, then I can’t see why that should get any flack whilst those wearing military outfits adorned with medals for doing hee haw except being born don’t.

    Klunk
    Free Member

    Don’t think the falklands is going hove into view to save the Maybot so he can wear what ever the **** he likes

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    I can’t see why that should get any flack

    It shouldn’t, but it’s entirely forseeable that it would. (As would anything other than the ‘vanilla’ plastic and paper poppy.)

    Why give the gutter press any more clickbait than you absolutely have to….

    squirrelking
    Free Member
    breatheeasy
    Free Member

    Got a feeling Corbyn might have done a Michael Foot moment at the memoraisl today.

    dissonance
    Full Member

    Why give the gutter press any more clickbait than you absolutely have to…

    Because they will just make shit up anyway. Best to give them something obvious to look foolish about.

    I am guessing, like last time, he stayed around a tad longer than most of the great and good who got the quick service in before sodding off for tea away from the plebs.

    dazh
    Full Member

    If you ask me he was taking the piss out of Donald Trump.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Because they will just make shit up anyway. Best to give them something obvious to look foolish about.

    Eh? Why is that best?

    hopeforthebest
    Free Member

    If he wanted to make a deliberate error because the media was going to make stuff up anyway, then he should have blown a raspberry as Charlie was bending to lay a wreath. It would at least have got a laugh.

    dissonance
    Full Member

    Eh? Why is that best?

    That anyone sensible would quickly see this is bollocks. Whereas left to their own devices they might invent something a bit more interesting and harder to point out its rubbish

    mickmcd
    Free Member

    So who would vote for him …..now I’ve found the thread because some of us don’t spend every waking **** minute of our lives on here.

    MSP
    Full Member

    So who would vote for him …..

    With the current alternatives, I would. He has been ineffectual in opposition to brexit, but that is still a cluster **** of the tories making. He hasn’t really done much else wrong (although that is a biggie) and most of the criticism against him is based on unsubstantiated media slurs.

    ransos
    Free Member

    So who would vote for him …..now I’ve found the thread because some of us don’t spend every waking **** minute of our lives on here.

    People who live in Islington.

Viewing 40 posts - 17,921 through 17,960 (of 21,377 total)

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