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Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 12, 2020, 11:12:46 pmTyke.If you're going to make those sorts of arguments, you need to get the facts right.Milliband and Balls hammered relentlessly against Austerity. There were massive and I mean MASSIVE differences between Labour and Tory spending plans in the 2015 election.https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7525And Labour's vote went up greatly in the Red Wall seats in 2015. 5% in Doncaster North. 8% in Don Valley. 9% in Doncaster Central.Labour were hammered in 2015 because they lost Scotland to the Nationalist surge. And that hit them in the Midlands and South England because Cameron played the card Vote Milliband - Get Sturgeon in a Coalition. In 2017, for all their rhetoric, Corbyn and McDonnell' anti Austerity spending plans were barely a penny different from Milliband and Balls's. It is simply wrong to say that Labour had embraced Austerity before Corbyn and he put them on a different track.Meanwhile, as I keep asking, what is the route to power if Labour goes socially conservative as you and AL wish? What is the point of securing 70 Red Wall seats and losing 150 in University cities? Which is what they were looking at in mid 2019. Tell me how the numbers stack up by Labour taking the direction you want.The way I am reading what you are saying is coming across to me as labour no longer want/need the traditional working class vote? If that's the case maybe it's the reason they haven't been in power for ages? I would imagine many of the abandoned working class voters do not jump at the chance of voting tory but at the last election felt they had nowhere else to go. Labour seems to be obsessed with identity politics which only divides the nation, I would imagine most people aren't really bothered about if their neighbours are gay, black or whatever, they just want their families and communities to do well, have decent jobs and a better life. It may not be trendy and at the forefront of dinner party talk in Islington and the student common room but that's how most people are I reckon. If labour feels these people are not worth bothering with then they will never win.
Tyke.If you're going to make those sorts of arguments, you need to get the facts right.Milliband and Balls hammered relentlessly against Austerity. There were massive and I mean MASSIVE differences between Labour and Tory spending plans in the 2015 election.https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7525And Labour's vote went up greatly in the Red Wall seats in 2015. 5% in Doncaster North. 8% in Don Valley. 9% in Doncaster Central.Labour were hammered in 2015 because they lost Scotland to the Nationalist surge. And that hit them in the Midlands and South England because Cameron played the card Vote Milliband - Get Sturgeon in a Coalition. In 2017, for all their rhetoric, Corbyn and McDonnell' anti Austerity spending plans were barely a penny different from Milliband and Balls's. It is simply wrong to say that Labour had embraced Austerity before Corbyn and he put them on a different track.Meanwhile, as I keep asking, what is the route to power if Labour goes socially conservative as you and AL wish? What is the point of securing 70 Red Wall seats and losing 150 in University cities? Which is what they were looking at in mid 2019. Tell me how the numbers stack up by Labour taking the direction you want.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on November 13, 2020, 09:27:10 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 12, 2020, 11:12:46 pmTyke.If you're going to make those sorts of arguments, you need to get the facts right.Milliband and Balls hammered relentlessly against Austerity. There were massive and I mean MASSIVE differences between Labour and Tory spending plans in the 2015 election.https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7525And Labour's vote went up greatly in the Red Wall seats in 2015. 5% in Doncaster North. 8% in Don Valley. 9% in Doncaster Central.Labour were hammered in 2015 because they lost Scotland to the Nationalist surge. And that hit them in the Midlands and South England because Cameron played the card Vote Milliband - Get Sturgeon in a Coalition. In 2017, for all their rhetoric, Corbyn and McDonnell' anti Austerity spending plans were barely a penny different from Milliband and Balls's. It is simply wrong to say that Labour had embraced Austerity before Corbyn and he put them on a different track.Meanwhile, as I keep asking, what is the route to power if Labour goes socially conservative as you and AL wish? What is the point of securing 70 Red Wall seats and losing 150 in University cities? Which is what they were looking at in mid 2019. Tell me how the numbers stack up by Labour taking the direction you want.The way I am reading what you are saying is coming across to me as labour no longer want/need the traditional working class vote? If that's the case maybe it's the reason they haven't been in power for ages? I would imagine many of the abandoned working class voters do not jump at the chance of voting tory but at the last election felt they had nowhere else to go. Labour seems to be obsessed with identity politics which only divides the nation, I would imagine most people aren't really bothered about if their neighbours are gay, black or whatever, they just want their families and communities to do well, have decent jobs and a better life. It may not be trendy and at the forefront of dinner party talk in Islington and the student common room but that's how most people are I reckon. If labour feels these people are not worth bothering with then they will never win.I don't think it was a case of having nowhere else to go AL within the former red wall , I believe they had nowhere else to go before 2019 and had enough of it .They saw that the Tories shared the same cultural values , tough on immigration , anti EU , tough on law and order and throw Corbyn in to the equation and his links to the IRA plus the renegade on respecting the result of the referendum and the red wall was toppled .It was the likes of myself that had nowhere to go and voted for Labour in 2019 , I couldn't vote Tory if you put a gun to my head but it's each to their own .Interestingly a guy called Matthew Goodwin and his team did some extensive research in 2015 inside the red wall and presented his findings to a team of Labour advisors , he virtually predicted what was coming if Labour didn't address it , they thanked him and that's the last he heard from them .The very next day he presented to Lynton Crosby and his team inside the Tory Party and their ears pricked up and were all over his findings .The rest as they say is history but they had many many warnings even prior to Goodwin's research .They did abandon the core vote and the red wall , the evidence is clear and they paid a high price .Whether things will change is possibly the real issue post brexit .
Quote from: tyke1962 on November 13, 2020, 10:57:32 amQuote from: Axholme Lion on November 13, 2020, 09:27:10 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 12, 2020, 11:12:46 pmTyke.If you're going to make those sorts of arguments, you need to get the facts right.Milliband and Balls hammered relentlessly against Austerity. There were massive and I mean MASSIVE differences between Labour and Tory spending plans in the 2015 election.https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7525And Labour's vote went up greatly in the Red Wall seats in 2015. 5% in Doncaster North. 8% in Don Valley. 9% in Doncaster Central.Labour were hammered in 2015 because they lost Scotland to the Nationalist surge. And that hit them in the Midlands and South England because Cameron played the card Vote Milliband - Get Sturgeon in a Coalition. In 2017, for all their rhetoric, Corbyn and McDonnell' anti Austerity spending plans were barely a penny different from Milliband and Balls's. It is simply wrong to say that Labour had embraced Austerity before Corbyn and he put them on a different track.Meanwhile, as I keep asking, what is the route to power if Labour goes socially conservative as you and AL wish? What is the point of securing 70 Red Wall seats and losing 150 in University cities? Which is what they were looking at in mid 2019. Tell me how the numbers stack up by Labour taking the direction you want.The way I am reading what you are saying is coming across to me as labour no longer want/need the traditional working class vote? If that's the case maybe it's the reason they haven't been in power for ages? I would imagine many of the abandoned working class voters do not jump at the chance of voting tory but at the last election felt they had nowhere else to go. Labour seems to be obsessed with identity politics which only divides the nation, I would imagine most people aren't really bothered about if their neighbours are gay, black or whatever, they just want their families and communities to do well, have decent jobs and a better life. It may not be trendy and at the forefront of dinner party talk in Islington and the student common room but that's how most people are I reckon. If labour feels these people are not worth bothering with then they will never win.I don't think it was a case of having nowhere else to go AL within the former red wall , I believe they had nowhere else to go before 2019 and had enough of it .They saw that the Tories shared the same cultural values , tough on immigration , anti EU , tough on law and order and throw Corbyn in to the equation and his links to the IRA plus the renegade on respecting the result of the referendum and the red wall was toppled .It was the likes of myself that had nowhere to go and voted for Labour in 2019 , I couldn't vote Tory if you put a gun to my head but it's each to their own .Interestingly a guy called Matthew Goodwin and his team did some extensive research in 2015 inside the red wall and presented his findings to a team of Labour advisors , he virtually predicted what was coming if Labour didn't address it , they thanked him and that's the last he heard from them .The very next day he presented to Lynton Crosby and his team inside the Tory Party and their ears pricked up and were all over his findings .The rest as they say is history but they had many many warnings even prior to Goodwin's research .They did abandon the core vote and the red wall , the evidence is clear and they paid a high price .Whether things will change is possibly the real issue post brexit .I can't believe that there is a massive pool of potential votes out there for them and for the sake of pandering to the trendy, pc left have cast them aside. If only they could get some real labour people on board such as in the sixties and seventies.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on November 13, 2020, 11:21:51 amQuote from: tyke1962 on November 13, 2020, 10:57:32 amQuote from: Axholme Lion on November 13, 2020, 09:27:10 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 12, 2020, 11:12:46 pmTyke.If you're going to make those sorts of arguments, you need to get the facts right.Milliband and Balls hammered relentlessly against Austerity. There were massive and I mean MASSIVE differences between Labour and Tory spending plans in the 2015 election.https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7525And Labour's vote went up greatly in the Red Wall seats in 2015. 5% in Doncaster North. 8% in Don Valley. 9% in Doncaster Central.Labour were hammered in 2015 because they lost Scotland to the Nationalist surge. And that hit them in the Midlands and South England because Cameron played the card Vote Milliband - Get Sturgeon in a Coalition. In 2017, for all their rhetoric, Corbyn and McDonnell' anti Austerity spending plans were barely a penny different from Milliband and Balls's. It is simply wrong to say that Labour had embraced Austerity before Corbyn and he put them on a different track.Meanwhile, as I keep asking, what is the route to power if Labour goes socially conservative as you and AL wish? What is the point of securing 70 Red Wall seats and losing 150 in University cities? Which is what they were looking at in mid 2019. Tell me how the numbers stack up by Labour taking the direction you want.The way I am reading what you are saying is coming across to me as labour no longer want/need the traditional working class vote? If that's the case maybe it's the reason they haven't been in power for ages? I would imagine many of the abandoned working class voters do not jump at the chance of voting tory but at the last election felt they had nowhere else to go. Labour seems to be obsessed with identity politics which only divides the nation, I would imagine most people aren't really bothered about if their neighbours are gay, black or whatever, they just want their families and communities to do well, have decent jobs and a better life. It may not be trendy and at the forefront of dinner party talk in Islington and the student common room but that's how most people are I reckon. If labour feels these people are not worth bothering with then they will never win.I don't think it was a case of having nowhere else to go AL within the former red wall , I believe they had nowhere else to go before 2019 and had enough of it .They saw that the Tories shared the same cultural values , tough on immigration , anti EU , tough on law and order and throw Corbyn in to the equation and his links to the IRA plus the renegade on respecting the result of the referendum and the red wall was toppled .It was the likes of myself that had nowhere to go and voted for Labour in 2019 , I couldn't vote Tory if you put a gun to my head but it's each to their own .Interestingly a guy called Matthew Goodwin and his team did some extensive research in 2015 inside the red wall and presented his findings to a team of Labour advisors , he virtually predicted what was coming if Labour didn't address it , they thanked him and that's the last he heard from them .The very next day he presented to Lynton Crosby and his team inside the Tory Party and their ears pricked up and were all over his findings .The rest as they say is history but they had many many warnings even prior to Goodwin's research .They did abandon the core vote and the red wall , the evidence is clear and they paid a high price .Whether things will change is possibly the real issue post brexit .I can't believe that there is a massive pool of potential votes out there for them and for the sake of pandering to the trendy, pc left have cast them aside. If only they could get some real labour people on board such as in the sixties and seventies.This is part of the problem AL , Labour MP's no longer come from the trade union movement and have done the jobs or even lived in areas where their core support is .University graduates and in to Westminster as researchers or advisors before stepping up to MP's .They have very little in common with the core vote and so there's little wonder they don't understand the very people they are meant to represent .Not all of them , it would be unfair to say that but enough of them to have changed the party in the direction they did .I think Burnham and Nanby get it but they are few and far between in my opinion .The likes of fat ass Thornberry are still around more is the pity .
AL.So let's get down to specifics. What, precisely, do you not like about the "trendy, PC left?"Give us some specific policies that you don't like and think we should change.
Go on then AL.Which policies of Labour's prioritise immigrants over pensioners?
And Labour's policy? Last time I looked, they had been out of power for 10.5 years.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 13, 2020, 03:00:51 pmAnd Labour's policy? Last time I looked, they had been out of power for 10.5 years.Which just goes to show how mud sticks .
Quote from: tyke1962 on November 13, 2020, 03:27:07 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 13, 2020, 03:00:51 pmAnd Labour's policy? Last time I looked, they had been out of power for 10.5 years.Which just goes to show how mud sticks .Yes, it's like following Millwall, we still get stick for stuff that happened thirty five years ago! The Germans were forgiven for the war quicker than we have with Luton!
Yes but the Germans turned over a new leaf.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on November 13, 2020, 11:21:51 amQuote from: tyke1962 on November 13, 2020, 10:57:32 amQuote from: Axholme Lion on November 13, 2020, 09:27:10 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 12, 2020, 11:12:46 pmTyke.If you're going to make those sorts of arguments, you need to get the facts right.Milliband and Balls hammered relentlessly against Austerity. There were massive and I mean MASSIVE differences between Labour and Tory spending plans in the 2015 election.https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7525And Labour's vote went up greatly in the Red Wall seats in 2015. 5% in Doncaster North. 8% in Don Valley. 9% in Doncaster Central.Labour were hammered in 2015 because they lost Scotland to the Nationalist surge. And that hit them in the Midlands and South England because Cameron played the card Vote Milliband - Get Sturgeon in a Coalition. In 2017, for all their rhetoric, Corbyn and McDonnell' anti Austerity spending plans were barely a penny different from Milliband and Balls's. It is simply wrong to say that Labour had embraced Austerity before Corbyn and he put them on a different track.Meanwhile, as I keep asking, what is the route to power if Labour goes socially conservative as you and AL wish? What is the point of securing 70 Red Wall seats and losing 150 in University cities? Which is what they were looking at in mid 2019. Tell me how the numbers stack up by Labour taking the direction you want.The way I am reading what you are saying is coming across to me as labour no longer want/need the traditional working class vote? If that's the case maybe it's the reason they haven't been in power for ages? I would imagine many of the abandoned working class voters do not jump at the chance of voting tory but at the last election felt they had nowhere else to go. Labour seems to be obsessed with identity politics which only divides the nation, I would imagine most people aren't really bothered about if their neighbours are gay, black or whatever, they just want their families and communities to do well, have decent jobs and a better life. It may not be trendy and at the forefront of dinner party talk in Islington and the student common room but that's how most people are I reckon. If labour feels these people are not worth bothering with then they will never win.I don't think it was a case of having nowhere else to go AL within the former red wall , I believe they had nowhere else to go before 2019 and had enough of it .They saw that the Tories shared the same cultural values , tough on immigration , anti EU , tough on law and order and throw Corbyn in to the equation and his links to the IRA plus the renegade on respecting the result of the referendum and the red wall was toppled .It was the likes of myself that had nowhere to go and voted for Labour in 2019 , I couldn't vote Tory if you put a gun to my head but it's each to their own .Interestingly a guy called Matthew Goodwin and his team did some extensive research in 2015 inside the red wall and presented his findings to a team of Labour advisors , he virtually predicted what was coming if Labour didn't address it , they thanked him and that's the last he heard from them .The very next day he presented to Lynton Crosby and his team inside the Tory Party and their ears pricked up and were all over his findings .The rest as they say is history but they had many many warnings even prior to Goodwin's research .They did abandon the core vote and the red wall , the evidence is clear and they paid a high price .Whether things will change is possibly the real issue post brexit .I can't believe that there is a massive pool of potential votes out there for them and for the sake of pandering to the trendy, pc left have cast them aside. If only they could get some real labour people on board such as in the sixties and seventies.But we have moved on. We are no longer in the sixties and seventies.
That’s the problem, half the Labour Party are still living in the past. Starmer now has a serious opportunity to hit the centre ground ( centre left maybe ) and win the next election. He has to modernise & to unite his party. If he can do that he could just possibly pull off a massive turn round from this last General Election.