Viewing 40 posts - 18,281 through 18,320 (of 21,377 total)
  • Jeremy Corbyn
  • ernielynch
    Full Member

    I’m surprised that anyone still thinks Jeremy Corbyn is capable of being a Prime Minister.

    And yet you end your post with : “If we had an election next week, they may just scrape in.”

    tjagain
    Full Member

    The problem with Corbyn is right from the start he was attacked by the right wingers in his party in a way I have never seen a party leader attacked. This then allowed the press to form a false narrative about him that too many of you have bought. I actually think his consensual and collegiate style would make for good PM. Unfortunatly the damage is done and its utterly disgusting that labour MPs did this. Some of them would clearly rather be in opposition that in a Corbyn led government.

    Its as bad as scottish labour and their non agression pact with the tories that actually meant May remained in power. Without that we would have had 8 or so less tory MPs and thus a labour government. The sight of labour party woikers cheering tory gains is something I can never stomach.

    alanl
    Free Member

    Yes, they may just get in, not due to their great policies (what are they?), but because the other parties are so bad.
    Dont think the Brexit party will repeat their success in a GE, they wont, it was a protest vote 2 weeks ago, and the majority of their votes will go to the Tories.
    The point still stands, Labour should be so far clear in the opinion polls now that the Tories should be flying a white flag. They arent. The Tories will suddenly pick up a lot more support when they have a new leader, and Corbyn cannot compete.
    It isnt a good thing, Labour should be stronger than this, and be a credible opposition.

    ernielynch
    Full Member

    The Tories will suddenly pick up a lot more support when they have a new leader, and Corbyn cannot compete.

    Are you sure about that? If Boris Johnson becomes Tory leader you are convinced, with complete certainty, that he will defeat Corbyn in a general election? Remember, there was complete certainty that Teresa May would win a landslide victory against Corbyn, that was the ONLY reason that she called an early election. But she didn’t even win a majority, let alone the universally predicted landslide.

    The reason his enemies inside the Labour Party can’t get rid of him, apart from the fact that they are mostly discredited Blairites, is because Labour hasn’t actually done very badly under his leadership. The predicted Labour meltdown in national elections has never materialised.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Labour should be so far clear in the opinion polls now that the Tories should be flying a white flag.

    It’s hilarious. May has been publicly kicked out of the leadership of the Tory party because she’s so utterly dreadful. …and on the day she loses the leadership in abject humiliation her personal approval rating is *higher* than Corbyn’s.

    instead of Labour electoral armageddon Labour’s share of the vote increased by more than any time since the end of World War 2 and the Conservatives lost their parliamentary majority. … So what the **** happened?

    Theresa May happened. She turned out to be a massive can of vote repellent.

    ernielynch
    Full Member

    BTW :

    Labour should be so far clear in the opinion polls now

    Don’t put too much emphasis on opinion polls. But if you are really that interested bear in mind that the Tories haven’t led in an opinion poll for over 2 months, in that same period Labour has led in 28 opinion polls.

    ernielynch
    Full Member

    outofbreath until the day they replace general elections with “personal approval rating” your point is meaningless.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    And if the scots labour party had not shacked up with the scots tories to attack the SNP we would not have had a tory government.

    Too many labour politicians have forgotten who the enemy is. Its not the SNP, Its not Corbyn. It the tories

    That is why no amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party that inflicted those bitter experiences on me. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin”

    Nye Bevan

    dazh
    Full Member

    Labour should be so far clear in the opinion polls

    I keep reading this, and it’s so ridiculous I have to laugh. It’s like the brexit vote never happened, and we’re in a parallel 1990s universe where Tony Blair has conned everyone into thinking he’s a leftwinger and Brian Cox is still playing keyboards. For christ’s sake, times have changed, politics is unrecognisable to the days when opposition parties held 20 point poll leads, and the only policies that mattered were taxes, schools and NHS funding.

    rone
    Full Member

    most extreme right wing project this country has ever seen unfolds around you, with you nodding it through.

    Then and you I have different views of the most extreme right wing project this country has ever seen.

    And that’s where this debate had gotten all messed up.

    The EU may have started with some sort of social democratic intention but has very much moved to serving big business over time. (I’m not saying it’s all bad and I did vote remain for the sake of focusing on other issues, and stability.)

    As power as shifted from trade unionism to the financial sector over the last 30 odd years. I would say that was one of the most extreme right wing projects. We had all the evidence we need in 2008.

    rone
    Full Member

    actually think his consensual and collegiate style would make for good PM.

    Yep, hugely overlooked.

    All this centrist talk of lack of being a statesman…

    He as a moral compass, and that’s what we need.

    It’s funny how we are all in love and protective of the most socialist construct we have (had) – the NHS. But we don’t want that to work in other sectors.

    And stop using Venezuela as any sort of example. Venezuela has a large private sector and a reliance of oil prices for its success – it has both thrived and failed under different regimes. Not just because of socialism – which wasn’t even truly enacted.

    BillMC
    Full Member

    The AS claims explained:

    kelvin
    Full Member

    actually think his consensual and collegiate style would make for good PM

    Best to not talk to any Labour MPs, especially female ones, if you want to keep this fantasy alive.

    rone
    Full Member

    mind you the labour party did whip for a second ref twice and almost all of them voted for it – including Corbyn

    For sure I keep bringing this up too. Why do people ignore this?

    There is no appetite for it in Parliament. Just jump ship Chuka, fog horn austerity Soubry and Campbell Iraq noise box. Not one of them particularly democratic.

    Remember the Tories largely vote against everything that has been any sort of compromise.

    chewkw
    Free Member

    Best not tell those about to be airbrushed out of politburo photographs for insufficient loyalty to the glorious leader

    Looks like the two main political parties are all “champions” of brexit now, in their own definition, having seen the Tory by-election result at Peterborough. 😀

    The race is now on to see who will get to No.10 first with brexit as campaign slogan in the next GE. 😄

    rone
    Full Member

    Consensual and collegiate style?

    Emily Thornberry perhaps you have a point – as she’s been decent overall, was maybe put on the spot recently.

    Tom Watson however has done nothing but oppose Corbyn throughout this entire process. He’s clearly out to undermine Corbyn using all manner of inappropriate noises.

    And the vile Hodge well she often threatens to quit. Hurry up.

    So what would you do?

    I think a reshuffle is more than fair.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Watson is in step with the party members, and his job as deputy leader is literally to be the voice of the party at the “high table”. If he just shut up, and ignored the members, he’d be rightly pushed out of his role by them. The deputy leader is not appointed by the leader, but by the party, and has their own mandate. They serve the party, not the leader. On some of the biggest issues facing the party, his voice has been louder and far clearer than the leader’s. It’s up to people to decide if Watson has been too outspoken, or Corybn too quiet, on these issues. It’s clear which you’ve chosen @Rone, others will see it differently.

    rone
    Full Member

    Watson is in step with the party members, and his job as deputy leader is literally to be the voice of the members at the “high table”. If he just shut up, and ignored the members, he’d be rightly pushed out if his role by them.

    You think he’s used the appropriate forum for that?

    You don’t mean his own poll he ran from his website?

    https://fullfact.org/europe/labour-mps-brexit-poll-meaningless/

    The one where he doesn’t have a clue whether anyone was actually a member.

    He’s a liability.

    And the icing on the cake… A twitter poll of around 9000 v membership of approx 500,000.

    That’s disingenous.

    binners
    Full Member

    It just looks like anyone who isn’t an enthusiastic Brexiteer, like Jeremy and the (non-elected) cabal around him is about to get the chop

    … in a consensual and collegiate way, obviously comrade 😂

    rone
    Full Member

    enthusiastic Brexiteer, like Jeremy

    Well they’re all still there currently comrade.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    And the icing on the cake… A twitter poll of around 9000 v membership of approx 500,000.

    Well, he’s calling for an official vote by the Membership on that… which would mean no more rubbish polls required. Would be a good step. And before we hit the “one month to go” count down of desperation again in September. But you’ve made this specifically about Brexit now… so would be better to make that point in the other thread instead. Will reply further there if you do. Over and out.

    rone
    Full Member

    Fair point but it’s hard to avoid that based on the context Binners supplied.

    (Do you know I’m embarrassed to admit I mix you and Kimbers up when scanning posts!)

    binners
    Full Member

    Another benchmark ticked off on the journey to our socialist utopia…

    Jeremy Corbyn lambasted by Labour MPs in ‘worst meeting as leader’

    Given the standard so far, it does make you wonder just how bad that was.

    Still… better than spending your time saying anything publicly about the most likely future PM proposing taxing us all more to give tax cuts to the rich eh? Priorities and all that….

    kerley
    Free Member

    Still… better than spending your time saying anything publicly about the most likely future PM proposing taxing us all more to give tax cuts to the rich eh?

    Why would you say anything about that, as opposition I would want an idiot like Boris to be leader to give me best chance of winning next election.

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    I would want an idiot like Boris to be leader to give me best chance of winning next election.

    Underestimating populist sentiment is what got us into the present mess. Boris is undoubtedly a complete bellend, but his brand of bellicose buffoonery will go down extremely well with the electorate, sadly.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    binners: Jeremy Corbyn lambasted by Labour MPs in ‘worst meeting as leader’

    In JC’s defence on Europe the leadership of both big parties cannot win on the Brexit. There is nothing they can do that isn’t electoral suicide. So it’s easy for the MPs to say ‘Take a stand and do X’ (often because their constituencies have given them a clear lead) but the leaders aren’t free to do that. A vague policy is probably the best Corbyn can do. To be fair until he became leader he *did* have a clear view on the EU for about 40 years. So that’s one issue he can’t reasonably be beaten up on.

    But yeah, he’s generally dreadful and under *any* other leadership Labour would have walked the last election.

    Boris is undoubtedly a complete bellend, but his brand of bellicose buffoonery will go down extremely well with the electorate, sadly.

    I don’t rate Boris at all (and I don’t think he’s gonna win the leadership) but if I am forced to choose between Boris or Corbyn it’s going to be Boris every time. (Especially since I read a Bio of him which reckoned he’s secretly a Europhile, which given his family background wouldn’t be a surprise, wheras Corbyn is famously eurosceptic.)

    So Boris isn’t just relying on his stage persona being popular, he’s got Corbyn to help him.

    dazh
    Full Member

    *any* other leadership Labour would have walked the last election.

    I suppose it would be pointless to remind you that Corbyn achieved the largest increase in vote share of any labour leader since Atlee in the 2017 election, not to mention overturning a 20 point poll deficit? It’s an exercise in extreme whataboutery whether anyone else would have achieved more then or now, but at least admit what he did in the 2017 election was without precendent.

    kerley
    Free Member

    Boris is undoubtedly a complete bellend, but his brand of bellicose buffoonery will go down extremely well with the electorate, sadly.

    I think the opposite is true and most voters think he is an idiot. He will only go down well with the tory membership who will vote him in as leader.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    I suppose it would be pointless to remind you that Corbyn achieved the largest increase in vote share of any labour leader since Atlee in the 2017 election, not to mention overturning a 20 point poll deficit? It’s an exercise in extreme whataboutery whether anyone else would have achieved more then or now, but at least admit what he did in the 2017 election was without precendent.

    May turned out to a be a large can of anti vote spray. [1]
    Corbyn knew he wasn’t going to win so could have a giveaway manifesto safe in the knowledge he’d never have to deliver.

    With those electoral advantages Labour should have walked it. In fact they lost. It’s really hard to see any other explanation for that loss than the Labour leadership.

    And votes only count so far. Seats are what matters. If Corbyn could take personal credit for increasing Labour votes he’s clearly increasing them in seats that already vote labour which isn’t how you win Elections.

    [1] In spite of that the Conservatives *also* increased their vote share in 2017, and I don’t think anyone’s given her credit for that any more than I’d give Corbyn credit for Labours result.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    I think the opposite is true and most voters think he is an idiot. He will only go down well with the tory membership who will vote him in as leader.

    Hated, by Tory MPs.
    Loved by Tory Party Members.
    The electorate? Who knows? Clearly the MPs think he’ll be popular with Voters because the sole case for making him leader is that they think he could win – they certainly don’t rate him as a candidate.

    kerley
    Free Member

    Loved by Tory Party Members.
    With an average age of 80. Add in bringing back hanging and compulsory national service and they couldn’t lose.

    The electorate? Who knows?
    Not with an average age of 80 and polling suggests as many people hate him as like him (including tory voters)

    oldnpastit
    Full Member

    He will only go down well with the tory membership who will vote him in as leader.

    I know a few Tory members, only one of them actually thinks Johnson is any good should be leader.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    I know a few Tory members, only one of them actually thinks Johnson is any good should be leader.

    Funny you should say that, I know one Tory party member and I haven’t discussed this with them but I can’t imagine they’d rate Boris. Maybe the whole ‘popular with grass roots’ thing is a myth.

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    Kerley,

    In 2017, the average ages for party members of Conservative, Labour, SNP and Liberal Democrats ranged between 52 and 57

    Sauce;
    https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN05125/SN05125.pdf

    johnx2
    Free Member

    but at least admit what he did in the 2017 election was without precendent.

    …lost it as lib dems collapsed?

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    It’s going very well, this long game.

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Here’s the worst rating for every Leader of the Opposition since 1978 – new record broken this week

    In JC’s defence it’s *very* difficult to make inroads into a popular & united governing party with a capable & popular leader.

    Errr, hang on…

    cranberry
    Free Member

    So:

    A barrister told to get the hell away from Labour for the sake of his professional integrity

    NDAs

    Carter-Ruck ( legal experts of the few )

    Bullying allegations

    Attempts to bully current staff into saying there is no bullying from Corbyn’s office

    Threats against whistleblowers

    .. anyone else got their popcorn ready for Wednesday evening ?

    binners
    Full Member

    This ‘kinder, gentler politics’ lark is going well, isn’t it?

Viewing 40 posts - 18,281 through 18,320 (of 21,377 total)

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