|
| + Visit Notts. County FC Mad for Latest News, Transfer Gossip, Fixtures and Match Results |
Sorry GP but he (Corbyn) was hated by the ordinary man because of his links to the IRA , they believe he was part of them as opposed to the one discussing peace with them! i know many people that detested him for this and no matter what you say wouldn't get past those links. Pair this with him wanting rid of our nuclear arms leaving us wide open to an invasion from Russia then he has a full house of detractors and voters see him as unelectable !
Yes, it was my word to describe the electoral scenario you seem to be imagining. What word would you use? To dismiss the 1997-2010 Labour government as ‘red Tories’ is nonsense. Are you trying to pretend there’s no difference between that and what we’ve had for the last 12 years? Because if you are you’ve been damn lucky. And I fully acknowledge that Blair could have done much more with the majority he had.
Last edited by BigFatPie; 11-07-2022 at 09:12 AM.
So 'nirvana' is an election outcome that delivers no workable Govt?
I think it's a likely scenario and could bring positive change in the long run. We would be protected from having a Govt like the Pfeffel one...unlimited power on just 30% of the electorate.
Yes, I'll always regard the Blair Govt as Red Tories - no lasting change was enacted. But 'no difference' is you jumping to an extreme again to misrepresent what I'm saying. Demand more and working class people will get more.
The nature of the Labour leadership, the way Westminster and the media works, the mechanics of Whitehall - all of that points to piecemeal changes only and the exclusion of any voices/ideas calling for more radical change. What's wrong with wanting more than that?
As I said I'll vote Green. Labour has lost my vote and millions like me I'd guess.
Well currently 15 points ahead in the polls so hopefully not too many lost votes so far. A few gained probably.
If Labour do end up losing the votes of people like you, then the only thing you’ll end up with is another Tory government. And if the current troglodyte contest going on is anything to go by, it’ll be worse than what we’ve already had. Imagining any government led by Starmer wouldn’t be a million times better than anything they have to offer is mistaken imo.
Socialists cannot be locked into this trap forever - the strait-jacket of the two party FPTP system. If you don't want a Thatcherite, you can have a Blairite for a few years and the country stays basically the same. The sooner the cycle is broken, and the whole system replaced, the better.
I completely agree and the sooner the FPTP system is removed the better (the Tories love it but don't even use it for their poxy leadership election). It's *******ised the system for some time leading to many folks not really voting for who they really want to win but instead voting for the least worse option or worse completely wasting their vote.
I do think the only way FPTP is removed soon is by tactical voting at the next election potentially leading to a Lab/Lib Dem coalition.
If you think Labour have lurched too far to the centre for you anticlough I would recommend holding your nose at the ballot box. Sadly a vote for the Greens in nearly every seat in the UK (apart from Brighton & Hove) is a wasted vote under FPTP and assists the Tories.
Really interesting conversation this.
I'm pro PR but I think some people are missing a trick if they think moving to PR would turn Britain into a socialist paradise.
You would end up with Labour fracturing into Corbynite and Blairite parties, and before/during/after an election campaign they would have to compromise on policy, and the end result might not be very different to what we have now.
In addition we would probably have a centrist party (which might be the Blairite party plus a few moderate Conservatives).
On the other end of the spectrum the same thing would happen to the Conservative party and as well as helping parties further to the left it would also help those further to the right.
The big problem in my view remains that the number of people willing to vote for an old fashioned 'economic left' is quite high, but the economic left is so wedded to the current 'cultural left' or 'intellectual left' (mass immigration, extreme political correctness, perceived or real anti patriotism) that people would probably prefer to vote for the far right, which offers the working class something similar to the economic left but without the compromise on cultural issues.