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My take Tyke.I DO think the country would vote for the Labour party's left wing economic and social policies. They are highly popular in polls. What they will never vote for is a party that has foreign policies which, rightly or wrongly, give the impression that the party doesn't support Britain first and foremost. The Skripal incident was the perfect example. We had an attack on our soil by a hostile state. Our own security services were telling us that's what had happened. Corbyn blanked that for days and suggested that we should send samples of the nerve agent off to Russia for them to analyse. Meanwhile, the Left on social media went into overdrive, darkly hinting it was a false flag job. There were a couple pushing the same line in here.It's THAT approach that turns people off to the left. No Labour party will EVER win a majority peddling that line. I'm coming round to thinking that Starmer is probably the best placed one to combine that domestic radial approach with a harder nosed approach to foreign policy.
Lisa Nandy would be my choice, she is a clever debater,has been a quick witted and clear speaker on programmes such as question time, and stood her corner and argued her points very well, also should appeal to the younger membership, and has the looks to front publicity. More importantly she seams to have a clear pathway and vision of the direction the party should take. Her problems are not being part of the London bubble, has a northern accent, and even before the election clashed with the far left on policy, the policy that has just failed spectacularly, and whether like minded MP's in the party have the balls to back her to take on Labours current leadership, and momentum within the party that are too extreme for popular British politics.
A good post tyke.I'd agree that Starmer is probably the best option but unfortunately Momentum will continue to call the shots and they and McCluskey are getting behind Rebecca Long-Bailey, who is basically Corbyn with a northern accent and a skirt
Can't do that Tyke. They ARE the party now.It's down to debate and convincing people. Which is difficult because the Left is always correct.
All very well and good Tyke - but as I pointed out in a previous post Labour's policies (other than Brexit) were popular with the public.And as other people have pointed out - it was the middle class who provided a lot of the vote for Labour in the GE, the working class voted Brexit & Tory.Labour increased their vote share in Canterbury and won Putney - and lost Bassetlaw, Don Valley and Scunthorpe. That wasn't due to middle class voters.In your world who did Middle England vote for then? Lib Dem?The Labour Party needs policies and people for the challenges of the 2020's not 1983 or 1997. What it doesn't need are arrogant pillocks like you saying who can or can't be in it.
If you don't believe the stats on the popularity of Labour's policies tyke - that's your problem not mine.https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/21/labour-leftwing-brexit-policies-electionIf you come on here calling for a Stalinist purge of Labour members you don't like - and you don't like the response you get - that's your problem not mine.The centre is where it's at! Which is why the Lib Dem's and Change UK did so well is it. Well done Tony Blair in 1997. Lets see how someone proposing; joining the Euro, unlimited immigration, a public sector funded by PFI, invading countries that are no threat to us with no plan for the aftermath - thus leaving them as centres for international terrorism - gets on in 2020.
Tyke, you could have skipped the vast majority of that post which is basically just you having a moan, as only the last paragraph is relevant.I disagree there was any 'fantasy free stuff', other than broadband which is infrastructure investment and would have paid for itself anyway, but wholeheartedly agree with the rest of it.The next leader should be the best person for the job. The person whose ideas and personality best connect with the public. I hope it is a woman, as it is embarrassing Labour have never had a female leader, but if it is Keir Starmer or another man, I don't care so long as they are the best person.What Labour will never do is win power by being factionalised. I advise you to forget about hard-left or centrist and think about what policies should a progressive, left of centre party coalesce around.
Wilts.That last paragraph. Does that mean you're going to stop throwing out "Blairite" and "Centrist" as a blunderbuss insult to anyone who criticises any aspect of party policy?
According to this it was people deserting Labour in the EU elections and the decisions taken after that led directly to the GE defeat:https://twitter.com/FromSteveHowell/status/1212344485918728192but you keep telling us how great you are and how much you did to support Labour and its leader Billy.The LD's lost 9 MP's btw - some resurrection
Meanwhile, by the way, in doing the usual thing that the Left does (spinning a legend that it would all have been alright but for the traitors to the right if them in the party) Howell does what the whole of Team Corbyn is doing. He insists that the whole problem was Brexit.And in doing so, he ignores all the polling evidence that the number 1 reason people deserted Labour wasn't Brexit. It was Corbyn.