Viewing 40 posts - 881 through 920 (of 1,579 total)
  • New Labour leader/ direction
  • kelvin
    Full Member

    I don’t see anything wrong with that interview… can someone explain? The interviewer was on the same old “why did you stay in the party if you think the leader is a dud” line… and her answers seemed straight forward enough to me. Still don’t think she’s the right candidate… but it’s interesting seeing the responses to her.

    nickc
    Full Member

    I listened to RLB on Today and the reasons she gave on there (brexit and anti semitism) for the loss at the election are entirely different from the article in the Tribune

    Good start

    rone
    Full Member

    I don’t see anything wrong with that interview… can someone explain? The interviewer was on the same old “why did you stay in the party if you think the leader is a dud” line… and her answers seemed straight forward enough to me. Still don’t think she’s the right candidate… but it’s interesting seeing the responses to her.

    Wrong with it ? – she didn’t string anything together that was comprehensible or consistent. And this is just the start. She also didn’t deflect her position appropriately.

    They are lightweight interviewers!

    She’s supposed to be good we keep getting told!

    dazh
    Full Member

    can someone explain?

    Well a couple of things, one it would appear that she went back on her proclamations about leaving the party on principle after she realised it wouldn’t be in her career interests, and secondly she’s being put on the defensive by Susannah Reid, which doesn’t exactly inspire confidence does it?

    The problem for people like Phillips who were such vocal opponents of Corbyn is not that they didn’t like him, but that they were so active in undermining him and the party, and then could barely contain their glee when he lost and they thought they’d won.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    and then could barely contain their glee when he lost and they thought they’d won

    Glee?!? FFS.

    She seemed as downhearted and pissed off as I was when that exit poll came in, to be honest. And just as unsurprised. The only people claiming any kind of victory were those saying “we won the argument”, as the country is given over to at least five years of Johnson and his crew.

    binners
    Full Member

    Kelvin – the fact that all the Corbynites absolutely loath her with such venom means she’s probably doing something right.

    I suspect I’m not alone in that opinion

    I don’t understand the hatred towards Jess Phillips. I mean, I know they hate pretty much everybody who isn’t deemed a true believer, but even so.

    Mrs Binners – who pays attention to the news, but certainly isn’t political, is left leaning (in a centrist not a mental/Corbynite way) announced last night that she’s just joined the Labour Party, specifically to vote for Jess Phillips.

    This would suggest that she possesses a broader crossover appeal outside the lefty hardcore. But then why on earth would the Labour Party want something like that? Maybe that’s why the sixth formers hate her so much? Much better to stick with the RLB style purity/continuity and permanent self-righteous, placard-waving opposition eh?

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I don’t understand the hatred towards Jess Phillips.

    Nor me. But I’m still far from convinced that she’s the right candidate. Just because the usual suspects are against her, doesn’t automatically make her the ideal candidate to take the Labour Party up past 40% support with the public (which, let us remember, should be the aim for any new leader).

    dazh
    Full Member

    Glee?!? FFS.

    Future PM? She talks about trust, and how people hate politicians, and yet here she is displaying all the worst traits of the very thing she claims to be against. Laughing one minute when she’s off camera, then putting on an act and turning on the faux emotion and outrage. And she claims to be the authentic option?

    https://youtu.be/KEcu4Hha5Us

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Well, if she was watching the C4 show while waiting to come on air, she was probably alternating between crying and laughing at that point. I was. And pretty soon switched over to the drier BBC coverage.

    I still can’t disagree with anything she says in the clip. I’m far from convinced that she is the right person to broaden the appeal of the party though, I feel she could alienate as many people as she can win over. Maybe that’ll change during the leadership campaign proper, but I doubt it.

    binners
    Full Member

    But I’m still far from convinced that she’s the right candidate.

    Same here. I really like her, but I think Kier Starmer would still be best overall as he’s got the gravitas that would terrify Dom and Dommer.Johnson is so lightweight and performs very badly when actually being challenged and held to account, which I think Starmer would do very effectively

    I am most definitely convinced that RLB would finish off the party for good though. The delusion and denial is absolutely staggering. Those at the top of the labour party (who lest we forget, are the still the same people who delivered the worst election result since the 1930’s) still seem to believe that if they paint a smiley face on Corbynism that it can win an election.

    It can’t.

    dazh
    Full Member

    I’m far from convinced that she is the right person to broaden the appeal of the party though

    She’s the most divisive of all the candidates. Where the rest are encouraging unity and rejecting infighting (see RLBs admonishment of a left-activist on twitter today), she’s still trumpeting how she stood against Corbyn. She also has no policies or vision, absolutely nothing other than weak platitudes about trust and authenticity which she can’t even demonstrate herself. The only reason some like her is because she’s the numero uno ‘I hate Corbyn’ candidate.

    dazh
    Full Member

    but I think Kier Starmer would still be best overall as he’s got the gravitas that would terrify Dom and Dommer

    Christ we’re not actually going to be on the same side are we?

    binners
    Full Member

    In a truly terrifying development, I think we might

    kelvin
    Full Member

    The Starmer/Raynor combination looks to be the “best” outcome, looking at the current options. I still feel that Starmer would make a good PM, but doesn’t have what it takes to win a general election… let’s see how he comes across during the campaign proper. Lewis still has an outside chance… when RLB has to engage during the campaign, he will pick up a lot of votes from those who currently might reluctantly back her. When do we hear who the unions have blocked from running?

    dazh
    Full Member

    Yes Starmer/Rayner, with RLB shadow chancellor, Thornberry shadow foreign sec and maybe even Cooper as shadow Home sec. Actually to be truly radical they could create a new post of joint shadow chancellor and climate change, sending a signal that combating climate change is top priority, and is completely integrated with economic policy. This would also keep the left happy in the knowledge that their candidate is at the head of policy on the two most important subjects.

    I’d be surprised if Lewis gets enough nominations to make the ballot.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    with RLB shadow chancellor

    I’m still not sure if you keep saying this as a joke/wind-up or not. Making RLB shadow chancellor wouldn’t be any better than making her leader… it is the policy brief that voters are most sceptical of as regards Labour currently… handing it to her would be the worst signal the party could make to those that need to be won over to voting Labour.

    dazh
    Full Member

    it is the policy brief that voters are most sceptical of as regards Labour currently

    You disagree with prioritising climate change? That’s basically her major policy. The climate emergency will be even more of an issue come the next election. Not only is it abolutely necessary, it’s a vote winner. I really don’t know what policies you think would be unpopular, so please enlighten us. The main policy voters were against was their brexit policy, not the green new deal (or industrial revolution as labour put it, but it’s essentially the same thing).

    kelvin
    Full Member

    I voted Labour.

    I’ve accepted that not enough others did, and that the party needs to change, especially as regards nationalisation and how it prioritises spending commitments. I’m sure it can do so without dropping climate commitments. Making RLB shadow chancellor would keep away those that think Labour is too concerned with an ideological return to public ownership… that isn’t me… it’s people who didn’t vote Labour last year.

    dazh
    Full Member

    I know you did. I don’t however know which of RLB’s policies which she’s declared will be her priority you are against.

    Making RLB shadow chancellor would keep away those that think Labour is too concerned with an ideological return to public ownership…

    Have you read her Tribune piece? She doesn’t mention nationalisation or public ownership once. She mainly talks about green new deal, devolution of power and investment in the regions, and no return to dog-whistle anti-immigrant politics. Have I missed something?

    kelvin
    Full Member

    What are voters wary of?

    – Using nationalisation in too many areas.

    – Multiple large unfocused spending commitments.

    The brief where Labour needs to demonstrate a clean break is, at least symbolically, covered by the shadow chancellor. Giving RLB that role would fit into the “we won the argument, onwards with the project” signalling, and is doomed to failure when it comes to winning over people who Labour need voting for them.

    dazh
    Full Member

    – Using nationalisation in too many areas.

    – Multiple large unfocused spending commitments.

    And where does she talk about those in either her tribune piece or the interviews she’s done? You’re assuming she’ll just rehash the labour manifesto, when in actual fact the only thing she says is that the green new deal policy was tragically undersold, and that it needs to the be the single focus of future labour policy.

    The green new deal on it’s own is reason to vote for her from a policy point of view. She’s not the right person to sell it, but Starmer is going to have to keep that policy because if he doesn’t he’ll lose a lot of votes, including mine.

    (you missed out the brexit policy in your list BTW. I think general consensus is that is what the major policy failing was, but as usual you ignore it because it doesn’t fit with your opinion)

    v8ninety
    Full Member

    I like Phillips’ energy and bolshy, no nonsense character; with some course edges smoothed off and some content added she could be a real asset to the Labour movement given a position of power.

    I like Starmers pedigree, background and respectability; he’s got a competent and professional image that will appeal to many that would be put off by Phillip’s Kevin the teenager vibe.

    Is there any possibility we could get these two in the top two jobs? I reckon they would compliment each other well.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    you missed out the brexit policy in your list BTW

    You can take it as read that most people hated their Brexit policy.

    Labour could have kept its ‘17 nationalisation programme, stuck close to its ‘17 NHS/education/housing/police spending plans, and focused on the green deal and NES as the big new ideas… but no… it had to double down on nationalisation… including 10% of large companies that have nothing to do with public services… and made big extra uncosted spending commitments, even after its manifesto launch. Time to start again, and put distance between Labour and the ‘19 list of nationalisations and spending plans… and I say that as one of the tiny minority of voters who thought the public broadband infrastructure plan made sense. It’s not me Labour need to win over.

    chewkw
    Free Member

    I hope Corby’s continuity candidate(s) win 🤞
    At least the continuity candidate(s) got the fire in their stomach to fight to bring more entertainment.
    Starmer will be lap dog for the government as he is not going to rock the boat but play the long waiting game in the hope that the government makes a mistake.

    fadda
    Full Member

    I’m wondering the same thing as v8.

    Whilst I agree with some of the concerns about Jess Phillips as expressed above, but I think she’d terrify BoJo at PMQ, if she sometimes got to stand in for Keir Starmer as his deputy.
    Starmer is my choice as leader, especially if he can show a bit more character and be a bit less “grey” as the campaign picks up.

    dazh
    Full Member

    but I think she’d terrify BoJo at PMQ

    Of course she would, just like she terrified Susannah Reid. 🙂

    chewkw
    Free Member

    Starmer is my choice as leader, especially if he can show a bit more character and be a bit less “grey” as the campaign picks up.

    He is so dull nobody will notice him. Anyone but him for entertainment.

    fadda
    Full Member

    Not sure what Susannah Reid has to do with it.
    It’s difficult to explain why you stayed in an uncomfortable position because it may have slightly better served the purpose of trying to reduce a Conservative majority in words that the average Good Morning Britain viewer has the patience to listen to, whilst the interviewer bangs on and on with their own agenda.

    Chewy, as long as you’re entertained, eh…?

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    Whilst I agree with some of the concerns about Jess Phillips as expressed above, but I think she’d terrify BoJo at PMQ, if she sometimes got to stand in for Keir Starmer as his deputy.

    Except Bojo doesn’t have to take questions from the deputy, he has the week off too and some other Tory gonk turns up instead.

    olddog
    Full Member

    I can’t see it being anything other than a run off between RLB and Starmer.

    Jess Phillips may get third but not close to the two frontrunners. I assume her votes would transfer mainly to KS if it gets to that round of preference

    kelvin
    Full Member

    10/10

    If she’s not offering to improve on his performance, why doesn’t she go and find something better to do with her time…? Or does she think she can do well enough to be able to rate herself 11/10?!?

    ransos
    Free Member

    I don’t understand the hatred towards Jess Phillips

    Hatred? Nah, I just think she’s a bit rubbish.

    binners
    Full Member

    Don’t knock RLB. If she can deliver a 12/10 as leader then that may mean only a 50 seat Tory majority.

    Possibly.

    Maybe a bit more

    But her socialist, Corbynite credentials would remain intact. And that’s what’s important here.

    binners
    Full Member

    Just watching grandad going through the motions in parliament

    It’s like watching a team that’s at the bottom of the league at Christmas and know they’re absolutely nailed on for relegation, and everyone knows it.

    The sad thing being that’s what he’s always looked like. Nailed on for relegation. Just not up to the job. A whipping boy. Like Derby County*

    Has anybody ever seen another human being with less self-awareness?

    It’s tragic. Someone should really put him out of his misery. And spare the rest of us having to witness it

    * for non-footballerists, Derby County got the lowest premiership points tally ever and opposition fans used to spend the entire match singing ‘can we play you every week?’. If RLB is elected leader, the Tory’s will have that wish granted

    kelvin
    Full Member

    With no deputy, Corbyn has to hang around ‘till a new leader is in place.

    ransos
    Free Member

    Has anybody ever seen another human being with less self-awareness?

    Well, there’s all the times you’ve accused his supporters of being juvenile.

    kelvin
    Full Member

    Hustings for MPs… sounds like Lisa Nandy impressed. And I still think many assumed to be RLB bailey supporters, in the parliamentary party and the wider movement, will switch to other candidates, like Lewis, the more RLB has to engage with them. It’s not time to assume a Starmer vs RLB 2 horse race yet.

    binners
    Full Member

    Nice to listen to Jezza at PMQ’s using all his questions condemning the Americans and supporting the peace-loving administration of Iran.

    Clearly he thinks that the labour party in the present shambolic state to which he’s delivered it isn’t quite unelectable enough and that whoever succeeds him must start from a much lower base

    Boris has of course taken the open goal presented to him by pointing out Jezzas regular appearences on Iranian state TV and his various alliegences with Iranian proxy terrorist organisations in the region

    The sooner this ****ing idiot is gone the better. And its pretty clear, as if it wasn’t already, that anyone dubbed the ‘continuity’ candidate can’t possibly be elected leader. To do so will just hand the Tories the next election and probably finish the labour party off for good

    kerley
    Free Member

    Nice to listen to Jezza at PMQ’s using all his questions condemning the Americans and supporting the peace-loving administration of Iran.

    That’s not what I heard. I just heard someone asking a very reasonable question over an illegal killing and whether the prime minister would confirm that it was illegal and also getting in a dig about being so reliant on the trade deal with US that they can’t be honest, have integrity etc,.

    binners
    Full Member

    Yeah, on reflection I’m sure that everyone came away with the same impression as yourself, thats how it’ll be reported in the press, and that nobody at all will form the impression that he’s a knee-jerk anti-american, terrorist-sympathiser?

    The reputation of the labour party will no doubt be greatly enhanced by his latest contribution to the debate, his finger on the pulse of the national mood, as ever

Viewing 40 posts - 881 through 920 (of 1,579 total)

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