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I am now coming to terms with the fact that the second world war finished more than 50 years ago. It seems like yesterday, the way people talk.
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Thread: The future of the Labour Party
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19-02-2020 12:06 PM #3601
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20-02-2020 08:50 AM #3602This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Do you think your security can keep you in purity, you will not shake us off above or below. Scottish friction, Scottish fiction
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20-02-2020 12:23 PM #3603This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Also hate to say it but her accent will go down like a bucket of vomit with many of the people Labour need to vote for them as they'll think she sounds like a barmaid from the Rovers Return.
Starmer is racing ahead however and it looks like he'll be leader by April. Hopefully the first thing he'll do is show the door to Corbyn, McDonnell, Abbot and Burgon who have all been an absolute liability.
Starmer might well win the votes needed to drag Labour back (at least in England and Wales) and he's getting support from the left of the party (who appear to have finally realised it's not much fun getting gubbed in elections) as well as the centrists and looks like a leader and someone who could actually call out BoJo's nonsense and lies.
Although even though she has shown her ignorance of Scottish politics, Nandy's an interesting character and her time may well come.
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21-02-2020 02:37 AM #3604This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Nandy looked good but she has been a bit niave to walk into the trans elephant trap that the press set her up for. RLB would be a disaster.
Deputy leader list is a bit ****, though.
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25-02-2020 06:51 PM #3605
Ballots are out.
Don’t understand why this is taking so long and why Corbyn hasn’t stepped down in favour of an interim like Hariett Harman as in the last two emptying of the duds.
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26-02-2020 08:06 AM #3606This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-02-2020 10:56 AM #3607
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My impression of Corbyn is that he's actually a bit dim. Either that or he has a huge ego and sees no reason why leading Labour to their worst General Election result in nearly a century would in any way oblige him to to step down with immediate effect. I note, in fact, that he's lobbying for a spot in the new shadow cabinet - not something you can imagine many other party leaders past their sell-by date having the brass neck to do. The sad thing is that were RLB to become leader she'd probably agree to keep him on board, bearing in mind that she gave him 'ten out of ten' when asked about his leadership skills in the wake of their election trouncing.
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27-02-2020 11:12 AM #3608This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-02-2020 11:43 AM #3609This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-02-2020 11:48 AM #3610
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27-02-2020 01:13 PM #3611This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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27-02-2020 01:58 PM #3612
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27-02-2020 07:15 PM #3613
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07-03-2020 07:30 AM #3614
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Nandy the only candidate to put her head above the parapet when it comes to criticising the Corbyn regime:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-51752969
I'd vote for her if I had a choice although the whole contest seems almost to have fizzled into irrelevance it's been dragging on so long. Still the best part of a month to go. What more is there to be said?!
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08-03-2020 08:44 AM #3615
At least the labour party are actually working towards a new leader, where are the libdems in their replacement for Jo swinson?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-englan...shire-51782054There is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-03-2020 10:09 AM #3616
Every single time that Corbyn gets up to speak at PMQ, he is embodying the beaten past for the Labour Party. Effective opposition is currently effectively no opposition and once again JC gets the big things wrong because of focusing on the small things. Believing that he is taking a principled stance in not standing down right now is naive and a dereliction of leadership.
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08-03-2020 02:36 PM #3617
Apparently, the ballot is not going smoothly.
Lots of people not receiving their paper/email.
I got mine right at the start but my partner still hasn’t got a ballot yet.
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08-03-2020 04:47 PM #3618
How can it possibly have taken so long to elect a leader of a party. The longer it goes on the more inept they look as a party. Corbyn still in charge, still doing PMQs. And this is someone who took a complete pumping in the election and had a dreadful credibility rating. It will take the Labour party years to recover from the Corbyn leadership and they are not getting off to a good start
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08-03-2020 04:58 PM #3619This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-03-2020 05:29 PM #3620This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-03-2020 06:53 PM #3621This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
The other option would have been to go down the ‘senior statesman’ route - Harriet Harman again or Ed Miliband. I think it would actually have been refreshing to see Miliband challenging Johnson at the despatch box and I think Harman would have skewered him. But the party has its apparatuses and processes, and many of those are locked down by Corbynites and Momentum activists, so there was never a chance of that.There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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08-03-2020 07:47 PM #3622This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-03-2020 08:12 PM #3623This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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08-03-2020 08:18 PM #3624This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-03-2020 08:54 PM #3625This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-03-2020 08:59 PM #3626This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-03-2020 09:47 PM #3627This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Now that you've given me cause to read them again, I've realised you're right. Someone in the Labour Party could easily have said that in all seriousness so anyone not knowing my general political stance could have thought I was serious. You have my apologies.
Regarding Tony Blair, in the last 40 years, he's been my favourite PM and by a long, long way.
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08-03-2020 10:56 PM #3628This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
If any of us are or have been a member of the Labour movement, not necessarily a Constituency Labour Party member i.e. the area of the parliamentary seat, then one recognises that it is a broad spectrum. It is a wide and varied bunch of views, rather more so in recent years with Momentum, but always prone to periods of entryism in its history. Cite Militant at this point
Generally though, the movement is people united by common goals - social justice, tackling poverty, improving attainment in health and education, addressing inequality - and these common goals can be achieved ina great deal of regard by the power that the state has, through legislation, taxation, benefits and social policy.
Within that, there are very disparate viewpoints. What isn’t in doubt is that from the mid-eighties, Labour has to move massively and with much internal resistance, to make itself electable. It took years and years and also relied on voter fatigue with an eighteen-year Tory administration to get to that point. It seems like Labour has always needed that factor in an innately small-c conservative nation - post-war fatigue for Attlee, long Tory dominance and the lingering shame of Suez for Wilson, and then a Tory party self-inflagrating for Blair.
When Labour has been electable it has done marvellous things.
The achievements under Attlee, the acivevements under Wilson, even the achievements under Callaghan in his limited and constrained time were progressive and ultimately irreversible. The achievements under Blair and Brown in terms of social policy were massive.
Like you say HR, the revisionist cause for the far-leftists will never die away. They won’t stop being furious that Blair won and enacted good policies while their candidates failed at GEs or hustings.There's only one thing better than a Hibs calendar and that's two Hibs calendars
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11-03-2020 12:27 PM #3629
Just realised today budget response is likely to be delivered by Corbyn. Absolutely useless from Labour.
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11-03-2020 12:58 PM #3630This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
On the contrary a great response from Jezza.
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