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Here's a cynical take.Oppositions never win Elections. Governments lose them.The only time there is a change of Govt is when a Govt is seen to have lost its way AND the Opposition looks credible and potentially Govt material.It's not about Oppositions setting out an agenda that gets millions marching behind them. It's about Oppositions looking like potential Governments, and waiting for the Govt's popularity to fall.Over the next year, the consequences of how badly we have handled the epidemic will come into sharp focus. The predictions are that there will be 2 million unemployed by the end of the year and that will stay high for a good while. That is going to hit living standards for all of us. No Govt ever presides over that sort of level of economic hit without taking a big hit to its popularity.The cynic in me says Starmer knows this and he's playing a long game. Waiting for the Govt to sink on its own without him being the one to rain down torpedoes on them. That is why he is carefully picking his points to criticise the Govt on, and not going all in with a mass attack.Might be wrong, but from people I speak with who haven't voted Labour for 20 years and who Labour need to win to have a chance in 2024, it appears to be working. I'd expect Labour to slowly rise above the Tories over the next two years as the scale of the economic mess comes into focus.
Maybe he should start with a programme that appeals to the Labour party.
As I keep saying Tyke, it's about compromise. If you want Labour to give you just precisely what you personally want, there will never be another Labour Govrnment.That's the simple truth. There isn't anything remotely close to a majority in the country who want the nationalist, statist approach that you personally want.So yeah, you have to hold your nose and vote for something that you don't fully agree with but that is a significant improvement on the alternative. That is what politics in this country will always be like, until we get rid of the ridiculous electoral system and allow our major parties to fragment into the sub-parties that they really are without destroying their electoral chances.
Some of us did compromise and held our noses for a lot of years, it gets a bit boring after so long. and you get fed up of youngsters saying that what you used to believe in is old hat and no longer viable while watching the spivs, shysters, and college kids who see politics as a good number as a life style take over.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on February 02, 2021, 12:51:15 pmAs I keep saying Tyke, it's about compromise. If you want Labour to give you just precisely what you personally want, there will never be another Labour Govrnment.That's the simple truth. There isn't anything remotely close to a majority in the country who want the nationalist, statist approach that you personally want.So yeah, you have to hold your nose and vote for something that you don't fully agree with but that is a significant improvement on the alternative. That is what politics in this country will always be like, until we get rid of the ridiculous electoral system and allow our major parties to fragment into the sub-parties that they really are without destroying their electoral chances.There is a lot of talk about electoral reform and whether or not Labour should push for it and form a coalition.I reckon that what happens in Scotland in the next four years might have a big bearing on that.
Quote from: wilts rover on February 02, 2021, 06:24:59 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on February 02, 2021, 12:51:15 pmAs I keep saying Tyke, it's about compromise. If you want Labour to give you just precisely what you personally want, there will never be another Labour Govrnment.That's the simple truth. There isn't anything remotely close to a majority in the country who want the nationalist, statist approach that you personally want.So yeah, you have to hold your nose and vote for something that you don't fully agree with but that is a significant improvement on the alternative. That is what politics in this country will always be like, until we get rid of the ridiculous electoral system and allow our major parties to fragment into the sub-parties that they really are without destroying their electoral chances.There is a lot of talk about electoral reform and whether or not Labour should push for it and form a coalition.I reckon that what happens in Scotland in the next four years might have a big bearing on that.I sincerely hope you aren't suggesting a coalition with Jimmy Krankies mob Wilts .I've no problem with Scotland wanting independence at all but that women is utterly barking mad , absolute train crash of a politician .
I really struggle to get this "radical thinking" that Corbyn was supposed to have brought.The economics of Labour's 2017 manifesto which went down very well on the doorstep were nigh on identical to that of Milliband and Balls in 2015. But apparently, they were Blairite centrists.Yes, Labour had a more radical manifesto in 2019. With many spending promises apparently thought up on the hoof, like the WASPI women one. That went down like a lead balloon.Regarding Starmer, Tyke, I assume you didn't see Anneliese Dodds set out Labour's economic vision last month? Basically, it is back to the very sensible approach of 2015-17.