I wish Dennis Skinner was 30 years younger and was able to throw his hat into the ring...
I wish Dennis Skinner was 30 years younger and was able to throw his hat into the ring...
Brin looking at this humiliation pragmatically if that's possible while things are raw and emotions still running high .
Labour didn't lose seats to the centre ground they lost them to the right wing of politics , I think that's something worth noting in the after analysis discussion .
Corbyn fought a poor campaign with a fairytale manifesto and he has to take his fair share of responsibility for that , I aint defending the above it was a shocker .
It's far more complex though just to blame Corbyn entirely , the centre of the Labour Party may want to look at themselves and have a discussion on why Corbyn ever came in to play if they had all the answers , they lost twice too let's not forget that .
Clearly there was a massive hole there they didn't see or possibly didn't wish to see whilst they held power .
To pin everything on Corbyn doesn't do it for me , the told you so's lost twice as I've stated .
Everyone within the movement needs to take a hard look at themselves , left and centre because if nobody can work it out why we lost then you ain't ever going to win in my opinion .
The centre is still very much in play as I've identified , it's not my cup of char but thats the play Labour need to head towards to win in five years time .
I agree he should have stepped down long ago but the runner up for labour was Tom Watson I think and I’m pretty sure he would have lost his seat.
In the end of the day Tory’s are winning because they know the British people’s mood better (welsh Scots English and N Irish squabble a lot but we turn on outside attackers like terrorists like a pack of wolves. We are incredibly stubborn and don’t like people telling us what to do and we are highly suspicious of politicians in general) when labour gets a leader who can figure that out and give real hope to people you will see a labour government.
My prediction at the moment judging from reactions in the labour party they will move more to the middle and in 5 years youl have a labour minority government. Providing of course they can get a leader who’s Currently not on the front bench. Because they have done that much damage in the north i don’t think People on the whole will forgive them for the insult
Margaret Beckett spoke a lot of sense on the radio yesterday. She said JC and many around him had never had the responsibility of holding high office but that "...their complete lack of experience never dented their confidence that they had the answers..." This defeat won't dent that confidence either and they'll continue on the road to perdition. This morning a Labour member (ex-MP? - I missed the intro so not sure) gave an impassioned plea for the Labour activists to b*gger off back to their Student Unions and pub meetings. It would also help if they took their Sociology degrees with them imo.
Good morning, raging. I'm not sure which bits of animal's post you particularly like. I have listened now to several Labour MPs and ex-MPs and they all stated that on the doorstep the main issue for former Labour voters was Corbyn with in one case four times as many and in another five times as many people bringing that up compared to Brexit.
There won't be a space in the centre for Labour to move to and McCluskey and Momentum won't let them move there.
A few weeks back on here I posted that as a lifelong Labour voter I thought we were heading for disaster because Johnson was outmaneuvering Corbyn across the board. Mike and Roly went ballistic as usual shooting the messenger. Instead of reflecting on why they got things so wrong they seem (roly at least) to want to pursue a witchhunt of "offensive views". They really will never learn.
Those in charge of the Labour Party want a ‘period of reflection’ within which to persuade themselves and the larger membership that the electorate actually loved Corbyn and his hard left manifesto, but somehow forgot to vote for it on Thursday. They are already at work on the task; it was all about Brexit, apparently.
The ‘period of reflection’ will also allow time for the Momentum dominated NEC to work out how to game the leadership competition to ensure that their candidate wins and that the Party is selling the same politics in 2024.