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Under Labour, I can't wait to go to prison for using the wrong pro nouns, or using hurty words 🤣
I hear / read stuff like this a lot almost always from those who’ve previously voted for stupid people and stupid things. The only measure by which you calibrate the ‘usefulness’ of an opposition leader is how they’re doing in opinion polls and real life elections and in those Starmer is doing very well.
I’ve really no idea how he’ll get on in government, but given the abysmal actual performance of the alternative, I think most people are willing to give him a go.
OP67, What a meaningless generalisation your post is here. Have you researched your statements? Which councils have you looked at in depth? Have you done a comparison with Tory-led councils? So do you really think that Labour will hit the working classes (whoever they are) more than the Tories will? On what do you base this unfounded idea? Thought not.
El Sid (an undecided voter at this stage)
I'm not sure comparisons between the performance of local councils can tell us very much about the national level competence. Labour controlled councils tend to be urban, Tory councils rural. Councils with high levels of depravation and poverty and unemployment are far more likely to be Labour run. Add to this, you've got the fact that the Tories have disproportionally cut funding for the kinds of councils that tend to be Labour - Sunak openly boasted about this during his leadership campaign.
Think also that local authorities don't actually have a great deal of freedom. We're an extremely centralised country, with relatively few local powers. Councils are forever having to bid for central government for various pots of money for various purposes - bus route improvement, road improvement, levelling-up... and fingers have been pointed about the fairness of how that money is allocated, especially around levelling up. Things might be starting to change with more regional authorities and mayors, but let's see.
And... there's nothing inherently left wing or right wing about basic administrative competence.
My worry about local authorities is when they essentially become one party states, when one party basically runs the place with little democratic opposition. Of course, it's the voter's decision, but I don't think it's good for any party of any colour to get too comfortable or complacent. I guess the other link between local councils and parliament is the role for local councils as a training ground for future MPs, both in terms of the politics of it, but also being given portfolios to run or committees to chair. Parties without much track record in local authorities will struggle to produce experienced candidates. That's not to say that it's the only way that someone can gain useful experience, but it's certainly one.