0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
That's why people on here think you're such a clueless dick because if you did have any clue you would conclude Labour will never get elected again once the boundary changes cynically designed to favour the Tories are implemented and 50 constituencies are lost. So go and enjoy your imaginary £18k you didn't win in the election result. Knob jockey.
TRBI fully agree that Labour can return if they can widen their appeal. Although in practice, I think Labour's chances in 2020 are more connected with how well/badly the Tories govern, there is enough space on the centre-left for Labour to be able to carve out a far better position than they did this time. And, crucially, I think there's a desire to do that too. I'd expect a polished centrist like Umunna or Jarvis to be the next leader. But as I've been saying for 5 years, this IS an existential challenge for the LDs. They spent a generation building up this image that they were leftist to left-leaning people, rightist to right-leaning people and different to the people who simply hate the other parties. It was obvious that once they had to make a choice, that illusion would evaporate. The evidence from Thursday is that right-of-centre previous LD supporters voted Tory, left-of-centre ones voted Labour or Green and the "bugger them all" supporters voted UKIP. What is left is the tiny, original core of people who genuinely believe in centrist Liberalism. That will always be there, but I genuinely don't see a credible way back as a major party. At least not one that reaches out to the disaffected with a vaguely reassuring myth, like they've done for the last generation. I will be amazed if we see the LDs get 20% in a general election this side of 2040.
I think Labour's chances in 2020 are more connected with how well/badly the Tories govern
IC. You forget that Labour won three elections in a row by moving away from old -style left wing rhetoric and appealing to aspirational voters. They failed to do that this time, believing that their core vote would win them the election. They paid the price. Who is to say that they won't broaden their appeal next time round?
Although the Lib Dems will take some time to re-establish themselves as a significant third party I reckon the light is well and clearly showing at the end of the tunnel.Last week was the first time I didn't give them my vote but I joined the party on Friday morning along with 7000 others over the course of the weekend.The party needed to have its nose bloodied in the wake of the last five years' cosying up to the Tories but there are plenty of liberal-thinking people who subscribe to the values of fairness and equality that they always stood for. It's taken a painful election and a factory reset but I think the resurrection will take place over the next ten years rather than the "several decades" mooted by David Steele.Similarly to Billy's point about Labour failing to shout about the economy, I reckon the LD's and in particular Nick Clegg could've done themselves a lot more favours over the last five years had they made a point of publicising everysmall battle they won in curtailing Tory policies but they were shit scared of upsetting the apple cart.The raising of the PAYE entry level is one of the best things to happen for low-paid workers since the introduction of the minimum wage but it's disappeared in the noise around zero hours contracts.The final nail in the coffin was Clegg proclaiming that despite the catastrophe on tuition fees, the nation had got "the next best thing". Any credibility he still had was washed away in those four words.A far better response to that challenge would've been to state some of the successes the party had achieved whilst acknowledging that as a junior partner in the coalition they didn't have the critical mass to veto the tuition fees piece hence the need to maker them a bigger, stronger part of future governments.
Ralph millibands books were recommended reading for me in the eighties so his kids were really were the spawn of the devil. I can see basic human rights like redundancy payments becoming things of the past now with unlimited third world labour imported to fill the gaps for anyone who doesnt like it. Its up to labour whether its them or ukip who gets the votes from folk kicked in the nuts.
You are too stupid to understand what i am saying hoolahoop. I just hope you have a job that gives you enough cash to insulate you from the future or perhaps you are on the political payroll in which case you should declare it. Either way you are a very stupid human being.
Looking again at my post and forgetting how stupid you are hoolahoop. I had a lot of time for ralph milliband. Its not a dfficult question . Are you a member of a political party?
I was a student of Raphael Samuel, a close friend & colleague of Miliband Snr, and I can imagine his response to last week's result. He would have been saddened for a few minutes, looked up, rubbed his hands and said 'Well comrades, we have just become relevant again....'I wonder who tomorrow's visionaries might be?