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Jeremy Corbyn
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footflapsFull Member
Does the Guardian/Observer even support the Labour Party ?
I would hope not as that would go against any principle of independent political journalism.
However, as a left leaning paper, they’re more aligned with Labour than any other broadsheet.
ernie_lynchFree MemberThose publications are generally left leaning and socialist in their views…
You’re pushing it a bit to claim that the Guardian is “socialist”. They’re not even social democratic – it’s been a very long time since Guardian leader writers have argued in favour of a mixed economy. Christian Democrat is probably a more honest description.
ernie_lynchFree Member“Does the Guardian/Observer even support the Labour Party ?”
I would hope not as that would go against any principle of independent political journalism.
So the Guardian doesn’t even support the Labour Party but you think their opinion on who should lead the Labour Party is of particular significance ?
ircFree MemberThe Guardian has thrown its support behind Labour to win the general election.
Looks fairly clear to me. Who said the Guardian was independant?
ernie_lynchFree Member“There is only one party on the ballot paper that, by its record in the old parliament, its manifesto for the new one and its leader’s performance in the campaign, can claim to represent an agenda for radical, positive change in politics. That party is the Liberal Democrats. There is only one way clearly to endorse that message and that is to vote Liberal Democrat.”[/b]
– Observer Editorial. Saturday 1 May 2010
Nick Clegg is the candidate of change
Oh how they got that wrong. I wouldn’t attach too much importance to the opinions of employees of the Guardian/Observer.
It’s worth noting that despite the unequivocal endorsement of the Guardian/Observer the LibDems did no better in 2010 than they had done in 2005, when they weren’t endorsed by the Guardian/Observer, such is the gravitas of the Guardian’s “political thinking”.
binnersFull MemberI do love the Guardian as it’s still the most entertaining paper out there. I still buy it every day. But it does amuse me the labour cheerleading from Polly Toynbee and her ilk, sending us the view of what british politics looks like from Tuscany. Or from their 3 million quid Islington pads. It’s apt really, as they’re as clueless as the Labour Party for much the same reason.
It’s no wonder they’ve come out against Corbyn. He’s as terrifying and alien to them as someone northern, working class, or scottish. They like to stay in their nice, comfortable, upper middl class, bollocks-talking, London-centric metropolitan bubble, just like the Labour Party
cranberryFree MemberThe Gurdian is probaly just concerned that an uber-lefty government might crack down on businesses registered in tax havens.
MrOvershootFull Memberbinners – Member
I do love the Guardian as it’s still the most entertaining paper out there. I still buy it every day. But it does amuse me the labour cheerleading from Polly Toynbee and her ilk, sending us the view of what british politics looks like from Tuscany. Or from their 3 million quid Islington pads. It’s apt really, as they’re as clueless as the Labour Party for much the same reason.
It’s no wonder they’ve come out against Corbyn. He’s as terrifying and alien to them as someone northern, working class, or scottish. They like to stay in their nice, comfortable, upper middl class, bollocks-talking, London-centric metropolitan bubble, just like the Labour Party
Spot on as usual
deviantFree MemberI do love the Guardian as it’s still the most entertaining paper out there. I still buy it every day. But it does amuse me the labour cheerleading from Polly Toynbee and her ilk, sending us the view of what british politics looks like from Tuscany. Or from their 3 million quid Islington pads. It’s apt really, as they’re as clueless as the Labour Party for much the same reason.
It’s no wonder they’ve come out against Corbyn. He’s as terrifying and alien to them as someone northern, working class, or scottish. They like to stay in their nice, comfortable, upper middl class, bollocks-talking, London-centric metropolitan bubble, just like the Labour PartyBrilliant!
ernie_lynchFree MemberIt’s no wonder they’ve come out against Corbyn. He’s as terrifying and alien to them as someone northern, working class, or scottish. They like to stay in their nice, comfortable, upper middl class, bollocks-talking, London-centric metropolitan bubble, just like the Labour Party
Yes quite, except that Jeremy Corbyn is a London MP. From Islington no less – birthplace of New Labour.
fr0sty125Free MemberCorbyn 47% on first preference……..
http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/07/jeremy-corbyn-takes-lead-new-poll
ernie_lynchFree MemberI wouldn’t get too excited. I still don’t think he’ll win. And even if he does the right-wing will sabotage him, as they did Michael Foot – they much prefer a Tory government than a one which represents ordinary Labour voters.
Already right-wingers are plotting to organise a no confidence vote should he win, or cancel the result claiming that it was tainted by the interference of the Daily Telegraph.
Failing that some right-wingers will break away and form a rival party, and some will stay in the party queuing up to ridicule and denounce their Labour leader, as they did to Michael Foot.
And even if Corbyn did remain the elected leader of the Labour Party and then went on to win a general election he would be completely unable to govern effectively as he wouldn’t have a majority of Labour MPs supporting him, right-wingers would rebel and vote with the Tories.
Remember that David Owen publicly declared that he would prefer a Tory government led by Thatcher than a Labour government led by Foot. That’s David Owen who was Labour Foreign Secretary and famously said that the UK had to support the brutal Shah of Iran because the only effective opposition in Iran were the communists! Clearly a man who understood what he was talking about!
Besides, even if Corbyn didn’t face all that opposition from the right-wing elite within his party his programme of nationalisation of the railways and the utilities would not be tolerated by the EU, assuming that Britain had voted to remain in the EU, which it almost certainly will. Look at Greece to see how effective the will of the people is.
I have registered to be a Labour supporter (by texting SUPPORT to 78555 (cost £3) that’s how insanely easy it is) not because I am under any illusions about Corbyn being allowed to be an effective PM, but because I know that if Corbyn becomes Labour leader two things will happen.
Firstly the debate will move anyway from the Conservative/Labour/LibDem anti-people neoliberal consensus, it will have to.
And secondly because I know Corbyn will attempt to re-democratise the party and re-connect it with the people it purports to represents, the single most important thing which needs to happen to the Labour Party imo. As Corbyn himself puts it “No leader has a monopoly on wisdom”. We need to bury this grotesque stalinist rule which states that one man, and one man alone, decides what the policies of the Labour Party are.
But as I say I think it’s unlikely that he will win the leadership contest. We’ll see.
duckmanFull MemberAnd the fact that a candidate who is the nearest thing to an old labour politician i.e. socialist,is threatening to cause further division is a sign of how far Labour have moved from their supposed ideology.
stumpyjonFull MemberDuckman I think it just shows that true left wing politics are not favoured in the UK by the majority if even the leftist main stream party is split like this. I hope Corbyn wins as it’s likely to give people a proper choice at the next election so people like Ernie can clearly vote one way and everyone else the other way. Mind you Ernie’s already getting his excuses in to explain why the left won’t succeed and as usual it’s all somebody elses fault, be it the Telegraph or the Tories or the EU. Couldn’t possibly be down to the fact true left wing politics are not very workable or popular in the UK and left wing politicians are as rubbish as all the others or possible worse at working together. In fact the whole rhetoric of the left seems to boil down to it’s not fair, it’s not my fault, it’s all their fault, if only we could live in our utopian bubble where the real world doesn’t apply.
cranberryFree MemberAnd even if he does the right-wing will sabotage him, as they did Michael Foot
Oh those DASTARDLY right-wingers – I can hear them twirling their moustaches this very moment.
kimbersFull MemberI think you’ll find that the evil puppet master of Cameron and co and manipulator of the gullible masses looks more like this
Just look at today’s papers all focusing on anything but the non election manifesto 40% cuts bonanza
martinhutchFull MemberYougov poll seems to have him at an improbably massive lead.
If you work on the basis that Labour in its present form is unelectable in 2020 anyhow, then it becomes less of an issue, more of an advantage, to have the party ‘rebooted’ from scratch with a leader who perhaps isn’t a serious electoral prospect, but may turn the debate away from ‘what do we have to say to win?’ towards ‘what are we actually for?’
The recent Harman stuff on benefits has to be a nadir for the party.
Whether Corbyn would last to fight 2020 (He’d be 71) is debateable.
rudebwoyFree Memberthe guy is fit –what do you mean 71 ??
anyway, we are voting for hope not some youth contest !martinhutchFull MemberI don’t mean he’s likely to die imminently 🙂 – more like the party would ‘retire’ him.
Sadly, general elections are youth contests these days.
binnersFull MemberThe recent Harman stuff on benefits has to be a nadir for the party.
Indeed. A Labour MP (can’t remember which one, theyr’re all so instantly forgettable) was cahallenged about their failure to vote against benefit cuts. He said they hadn’t, that they’d abstained, and high-hendedly went on to waffle on about the minutae of arcane parliamentary procedures, thus missing the point entirely.
And there, in a nutshell, you have the problem with the labour party. Its just talking to itself, instead of trying to communicate with the electorate. This pompous arse ended up chastising the listeners for not being fully au fait with parliamentary voting etiquette. Yeah… that’ll win over the voters for sure. You’ve captured everyones imagination there! Stirring stuff!
George Osbourne doesn’t have problems communicating with the electorate. His budget was delivered in a series of press-ready soundbites, with tomorrows headlnes already written for him, in words of 2 syllables that any numpty could understand
Meanwhile, somebody else electorally successful also gets it! The importance of effectively communicating what you stand for.
Goodbye Labour party. RIP.
ernie_lynchFree Memberstumpyjon – Member
Mind you Ernie’s already getting his excuses in to explain why the left won’t succeed and as usual it’s all somebody elses fault, be it the Telegraph or the Tories or the EU.
Either I’m really crap at explaining myself or you’re really crap at reading. Or the third option, you prefer to deliberately misrepresent what I am saying.
I haven’t blamed the Daily Telegraph for anything as you will of course see if you reread my post. I said some right-wingers in the Labour Party want the election cancelled “claiming that it was tainted by the interference of the Daily Telegraph”. It’s right-wingers who are using the Telegraph as an early excuse to explain why their candidate is likely to lose, not me.
And nowhere in my long and rather rambling post do I even mention the Tories, let alone use them as some sort of excuse for anything. Perhaps you think I should have ?
I do indeed however point out the limitations placed on any government by EU membership, this is a widely recognised fact, not an excuse.
The rest of your post is equally nonsense with for example “the whole rhetoric of the left seems to boil down to it’s not fair”, when it’s in fact right-wingers like Tony Blair and New Labour who talk about ‘fairness’ and ‘a fairer Britain’, the left tends to talk about legitimate rights and taking control of our nation’s wealth for the common good, but quite frankly I’ve probably already given your post more attention than it actually deserves 🙂
teamhurtmoreFree MemberYou’re pushing it a bit to claim that the Guardian is “socialist”. They’re not even social democratic – it’s been a very long time since Guardian leader writers have argued in favour of a mixed economy.
As opposed to what other sort of economy?
Just look at today’s papers all focusing on anything but the non election manifesto 40% cuts bonanza
Kimbers it’s a scandal isn’t it. There’s old Austerity (sic) George announcing less than promised cuts and opting for tax increases instead (bloody Tories eh!), slower deficit reduction than promised (bloody Tories eh!) and a delay in delivering a budget surplus (bloody…..). It’s shocking how he has got away with not doing what he promised isn’t it? And after an outright majority too. Who can you trust?
Bloody politicians….
dazhFull MemberI see Bliar the Messiah has put his tuppence worth in the pot.
I think if the last labour govt had stuck to ‘tax and spend’ rather than ‘borrow and spend’ then they might still be in govt now. Also I really don’t see why left policies are seen as incompatible with modernism. A lot of uniquely modern phenomena such as the open source movement, crowdfunding, open data, and various other things associated with today’s information/knowledge economy have their roots in leftwing ideology. In a lot of respects the left is changing and adapting much more than the right. It seems to me that the people who are obsessed with the 1970s and 80s are not the left, but the right who think that’s the only leftwing option.
Edit: An interesting (if rather long) take on the future of capitalism by Paul Mason – Looks a bit leftwing to me.
stumpyjonFull MemberSorry Ernie, rereading your post it was the ranting on about right wingers and the mention of the Tories twice that made me confused. I didn’t realise you meant ineffectual, populist centre ground politicians when you were referring to right wingers. Anyway your rambling post made it quite clear someone other than your favoured candidate was to blame so i stand by the ascertion. Your general disdain for the democratic proces even within a party is quite worrying.
BillMCFull MemberI don’t accept this ‘move to the left and you’re unelectable’. Are people not simply parroting what they’ve been told by the press? I voted for Corbyn when I lived in Islington, met him once or twice, and he struck me as a very conscientious and principled bloke. I’m no great supporter of Labour, although that’s who I vote for, but with him at the helm you would have a clearer distinction between the parties. In my view, Miliband lost because he wasn’t leftwing enough.
dazhFull MemberI don’t accept this ‘move to the left and you’re unelectable’.
I accept it if it means ‘go back to the 1970s days of unbridled union power, dustbins not being emptied and mass nationalisation as a matter of ideology’, but I’m pretty sure that’s not what ‘left’ means these days and I don’t think even Corbyn is suggesting that.
ernie_lynchFree Memberstumpyjon – Member
Sorry Ernie, rereading your post it was the ranting on about right wingers and the mention of the Tories twice that made me confused.
I think we’ll settled for the third option – you prefer to deliberately misrepresent what I am saying. You know full well that I do no more than ‘refer’ to the Tories, as in “right-wingers would rebel and vote with the Tories”, nowhere do I discuss the Tories or blame them for anything at all – as you quite falsely claimed.
Your general disdain for the democratic proces even within a party is quite worrying.
And that silly disingenuous half-wit comment puts you firmly in the Z-11 camp as yet another right-winger who lacks the intellectual skills to engage in sensible debate, and has to resort instead to puerile point-scoring and taunting.
ninfanFree MemberAnd that silly disingenuous half-wit comment puts you firmly in the Z-11 camp as yet another right-winger who lacks the intellectual skills to engage in sensible debate, and has to resort instead to puerile point-scoring and taunting.
stumpyjonFull MemberAnd that silly disingenuous half-wit comment puts you firmly in the Z-11 camp as yet another right-winger who lacks the intellectual skills to engage in sensible debate, and has to resort instead to puerile point-scoring and taunting.
Now read that back to yourself and have another think about who’s degenerated to flinging personal insults around.
fr0sty125Free MemberI’m voting for Corbyn because I think he is the only candidate that can A give a clear vision and B attempt to break the neoliberal consensus. I have been rather disappointed at how some in the party have behaved in recently weeks, at the moment those not supporting Corbyn are bashing him saying he is un-electable when they instead should be putting forward their own vision. It’s not great when the best thing you can say is ‘vote for me because the other guy can’t win’.
Andy B should have shown leadership and resigned from the front bench to vote against the Welfare Bill it’s pretty much recces so it wouldn’t have even mattered that much. Instead him and Yvette bent in the wind like human palm trees. The only good thing to come from Harriet’s leadership on this issue is that it has exposed Yvette and Andy for what they really are.
ernie_lynchFree MemberNow read that back to yourself and have another think about who’s degenerated to flinging personal insults around.
You mean you got a reaction from your silly disingenuous half-wit comment : “Your general disdain for the democratic proces even within a party is quite worrying.” ?
There is no disdain for the democratic process, even within a party, from me.
Now do you fancy returning to the subject matter, ie Jeremy Corbyn, or do you want to focus solely on tit for tat posts rather than attempt to make a constructive sensible comment ?
ernie_lynchFree MemberAndy B should have shown leadership and resigned from the front bench to vote against the Welfare Bill it’s pretty much recces so it wouldn’t have even mattered that much. Instead him and Yvette bent in the wind like human palm trees. The only good thing to come from Harriet’s leadership on this issue is that it has exposed Yvette and Andy for what they really are.
Yep, spot on imo.
teamhurtmoreFree Memberyou prefer to deliberately misrepresent what I am saying.
Quite annoying that isn’t it? As is…
puerile point-scoring and taunting.
stumpyjonFull MemberErnie I’m quite happy to return the debate, again you’re one degenerating to flinging the insults.
From what little I know of Corbyn he seems to be quite a principled politician and we need more of those. I don’t agree with his principles and I don’t think most of the population will either so he’s a dead end for Labour and will give the Tories free reign to romp around with impunity and whilst I agree with their stance on welfare and the ongoing need for austerity (populist anti austerity is working out well Greece isn’t it), there are other key areas I would like to see some effective opposition to, the wholesale rolling back of support for renewables and the unpalatable zeal they seem have for animal cruelty (Fox Hunting). So to sum up I think superficially Corbyn for leader will be a good thing but on deeper reflection a person with such utopian ideals isn’t whats needed to reinvigorate British politics.
Happy now?
cranberryFree MemberA “Left-wing platform”, he said, would “take the country backwards”, in the “unlikely” event Mr Corbyn won a general election. Labour was “going back in time” to the early 1980s, when it “persuaded itself that the reason the country voted for Margaret Thatcher was because it wanted a really Left-wing Labour party. This is what I call the theory that the electorate is stupid.”
Left-wingers like Mr Corbyn were “in fact quite reactionary”, and blind to the chasm between their own beliefs and the public’s. On the rare occasions they did notice the chasm, they always assumed it was the public that was on the wrong side of it, never themselves. “When I became leader, we had a meeting where a guy got up and said: ‘Tony, the British people have now voted against us four times in a row. What on earth is wrong with them?’”When Tony Blair is the more in tune with the voters than a majority of the party then you know something has gone horribly wrong.
whatnobeerFree MemberSo we’re doomed to have a Tory government forever, even if Labour win, because the English public are all right wing? And people wonder why the SNP/Independence movement is growing stronger by the day.
ninfanFree MemberBlair, 2010:
The danger for Labour now is that we drift off or even move decisively off, to the left. If we do, we will lose even bigger next time. We have to buck the historical trend and face up to the reasons for defeat squarely and honestly.
…
If Labour wants to come back, it has to realise just how quickly defeat has altered the political landscape. It means the Tories get to clear up the economic deficit and define its nature, and can do so while pointing the finger of blame at the previous government.If Labour simply defaults to a ‘Tory cutters, Lib Dem collaborators’ mantra, it may well benefit in the short term; however, it will lose any possibility of being chosen as an alternative government. Instead, it has to stand up for its record in the many areas it can do so, but also explain where the criticism of the thirteen years is valid. It should criticise the composition but not the thrust of the Tory deficit reductions.
This is incredibly difficult Of course, the key factor in our economy as elsewhere, is the global economic crisis and all nations are having to cut back and adjust. However, we should also accept that from 2005 onwards Labour was insufficiently vigorous in limiting or eliminating the potential structural deficit. The failure to embrace the Fundamental Savings review of 2005-6 was, in retrospect, a much bigger error than I ever thought at the time. An analysis of the pros and cons of putting so much into tax credits is essential. All of this only has to be stated to seem unconscionably hard. Yet unless we do this, we cannot get the correct analysis of what we did right, what we did wrong, and where we go now.
Attacking the nature of the Tory-Lib Dem changes to public spending requires greater Intellectual depth and determination, and each detail has to be carefully considered. So, for example, if we attack as we should the cuts to school investment, we have to be prepared to say where we would also make more radical savings than the new government. But it is better than mounting a general attack on macro policy – ‘putting the recovery at risk’ – and ending up betting the shop that the recovery fails to materialise. It is correct that the withdrawal of the stimulus in each country’s case is a delicate question of judgement, but if you study the figures for government projections in the UK, by the end of 2014 public spending will still be 42 per cent of GDP.
Such an approach is the reverse of what is easy for Oppositions, who get dragged almost unconsciously, almost unwillingly, into wholesale opposition. It’s where the short-term market in votes is. It is where the party feels most comfortable. It’s what gets the biggest cheer. The trouble is, it also chains the Opposition to positions that in the longer term look irresponsible, short-sighted or just plain wrong.
ernie_lynchFree MemberSo to sum up I think superficially Corbyn for leader will be a good thing but on deeper reflection a person with such utopian ideals isn’t whats needed to reinvigorate British politics.
What are Corbyn’s “utopian ideals” which you claim he has ? Let’s not misrepresent him.
There are not that many issues which separates Corbyn from the other leadership candidates, although they might be quite fundamental.
Firstly unlike the other candidates Corbyn very strongly opposes tuition fees which is hardly a utopian ideal as tuition fees are a relatively new idea. Nor is it particularity left-wing, or an election loser for that matter.
In fact Nick Clegg who no one would call left-wing was so convinced that it was an election winner that he created a big media backed song and dance highlighting his opposition to tuition fees. Remember this ?
And scraping tuition fees has not proved to have been an election loser for the SNP. There is no evidence that Corbyn’s opposition to tuition fees is a vote loser or perceived by the public as being particularly left-wing.
Then there is Corbyn’s commitment to the nationalisation of the utilities and in particular the railways. Now that is an indisputably a left-wing policy, but there isn’t a shred of evidence to suggest that it’s a vote loser.
In fact polls show overwhelming public support for the nationalisation of the utilities and the railways, even among Tory voters, as people see the absurdity of applying the “free-market” to utilities and the state subsidised railways, and handing them over to foreign state owned companies.
I can’t imagine many people refusing to vote Labour because they like the idea of French, German, or Chinese state owned companies, owning our infrastructure.
Then there is Corbyn’s opposition to austerity as a means of reducing the excessive deficit caused by bailing out the banks and the recession it caused. Well yes that is a left-wing Keynesian analysis, but hardly an extreme left-wing view – even the IMF, not noted for its left-wing utopian ideals, now recognises how futile austerity can be when attempting to get an economy healthy.
The SNP claimed opposition to austerity did not seem to cost them any votes 6 months ago in the general election, in fact they did rather well. The evidence that Corbyn would lose a general election due to his opposition to austerity is very sparse, in fact there is some evidence that aping Tory economic policies is what cost Miliband and Balls the general election.
Next the issue of foreign policy separates Corbyn from the other 3 candidates. Is Corbyn’s commitment to justice for the Palestinian people for example really a vote loser? I very much doubt it, and it might even result in greater support for Labour.
Nor is there much evidence that voters particularly like Labour’s recent past record on war and would be put off by Corbyn’s commitment to peace.
Finally what differentiates Corbyn from the other 3 candidates is his commitment to reintroducing democracy into the Labour Party, I doubt very much that electoral support of Labour hinges on the fact that one man, and one man alone, decides party policy.
You might view those policy differences as unattainable ‘utopian ideals’ but they are every bit as attainable as the creation of the National Health Service, which presumably was another utopian ideal ?
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