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UK Labour Leadership Crisis: Corbyn retained as leader by strong margin

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Oh God, Steven Kinnock on Daily Politics right now; they really believe Eagle can beat Corbyn in a membership vote.

They really believe it.

Labour are pure fucked.
 

PJV3

Member
Oh God, Steven Kinnock on Daily Politics right now; they really believe Eagle can beat Corbyn in a membership vote.

They really believe it.

Labour are pure fucked.

They have to talk it up, they need to make people believe Corbyn is beatable.
 
He didn't lose any elections for Labour so far...

Would it change anything if he lost elections though? He's not likely to voluntarily step down, no matter what the result. And even with a heavy defeat, will enough of the party members and supporters turn against him in any leadership challenge?

I think this upcoming leadership election will be hugely interesting - if he's still got enough support to win another clear first round victory (assuming there are even multiple opponents), even with the £25 fee for supporters to vote, he's effectively in the job for life, and I think we'll see the party split happen almost immediately.
 
Maybe could have encouraged a larger turnout from young voters, who would have been heavily remain?

Youth turnout was revised. Overall 60% and a bit. Same as all other age brackets except mummies, which was sky-high.

Old people simply didnt die fast enough.

I mean, they didn't "drift towards UKIP" like a tectonic plate. If two-thirds of the Labour electorate is being drawn to another party, that's a pretty severe indictment of the party leader, right?

Two-thirds isn't. One third is. His phrasing was sorta wonky.
 

twobear

sputum-flecked apoplexy
While it's not difficult to imagine that Corbyn's position will get needled by Cameron today, I don't think we should lose sight of the fact that the entire reason Cameron is resigning is that he gambled the fate of the country on an ill-conceived bid to boost his popularity and lost. Hardly the firmest of ground to be standing on when attacking someone else's fitness for their role.
 
Is there any hard evidence related to working-class support for Corbyn? It might seem obvious to some that he lacks their support but is there any data to back up/ contradict such a claim?
 

Morat

Banned
While it's not difficult to imagine that Corbyn's position will get needled by Cameron today, I don't think we should lose sight of the fact that the entire reason Cameron is resigning is that he gambled the fate of the country on an ill-conceived bid to boost his popularity and lost. Hardly the firmest of ground to be standing on.

The thing with Cameron is that he is coated in teflon to an extent that not even Reagan could dream of.
 

Zaph

Member
Cameron is going to go down in history as one of the worst and most damaging PM's of all time, and even with all that ammo, he's still managing to mug off Corbyn.

The state of the opposition...

edit: can't believe that 60% zero-hour stat

edit2: Cameron stealing jokes from twitter
 

twobear

sputum-flecked apoplexy
I think an effective strategy for Corbyn today would be the Paxman approach. No matter what Cameron says just repeat 'You gambled the country's future on a stupid bid for popularity and lost. What do you have to say for yourself?'
 
I think an effective strategy for Corbyn today would be the Paxman approach. No matter what Cameron says just repeat 'You gambled the country's future on a stupid bid for popularity and lost. What do you have to say for yourself?'

Not really Corbyn's style though is it? 'Kinder politics' and all that.
 

Hazzuh

Member
I think an effective strategy for Corbyn today would be the Paxman approach. No matter what Cameron says just repeat 'You gambled the country's future on a stupid bid for popularity and lost. What do you have to say for yourself?'

That is basically Cameron's approach lol. Someone should do a study in to how many of his answers since becoming PM were "Labour wrecked the economy".
 

PJV3

Member
I think an effective strategy for Corbyn today would be the Paxman approach. No matter what Cameron says just repeat 'You gambled the country's future on a stupid bid for popularity and lost. What do you have to say for yourself?'


Effective opposition, the soundbite years.

It sucks but it works, like Cameron never admitting anything ever.
 

RangerX

Banned
I have to say Corbyn is doing quite well in PMQs. I'd have him any day over Eagle and most of the other centrists. I'm Irish though so its all academic for me.
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
Effective opposition, the soundbite years.

It sucks but it works, like Cameron never admitting anything ever.

The sad thing is that it isn't just Corbyn that doesn't seem to understand this, it's the whole Labour Party. What's Eagle's message? What does she stand for? Even Ed Miliband managed to get One Nation Labour up and running pretty quickly, and he was not exactly endowed with political good messaging.
 

PJV3

Member
The sad thing is that it isn't just Corbyn that doesn't seem to understand this, it's the whole Labour Party. What's Eagle's message? What does she stand for? Even Ed Miliband managed to get One Nation Labour up and running pretty quickly, and he was not exactly endowed with political good messaging.


Kinder politics :(

Really useful for people not members of political parties.
 

Hazzuh

Member
Some good news for Corbyn:

Some bad news:

Ipsos-Mori: satisfaction with Corbyn among *Labour voters* goes negative for first time.

CnPbRgcWcAABBQj.jpg

 
Thing is, please talk alot about how school-boy'ish PMQs is and how it's all soundbites, but that's basically how it's meant to be. All the other governmental question times, legislative debates, committees and all that shite, that's where all that boring shit happens. PMQs is the only time when politicians know it'll end up on TV and so part of holding the government to account is in how you can bend and manipulate the media narrative accordingly. This is, basically, how it's meant to be.

IMO.
 
PMQs was Blair's idea. It does serve a good function, though.

I generally trust Ipsos Mori on reporting LD voting intentions the best. If the LDs are on 11%, that's very cheering.

UKIP's vote slowly collapsing is also nice to see.

LDs standing up to applaud. Pretty much the only ones on the opp bench to do so.

Class.

It'd be rude not to. We were in coalition with the man for five years. Whatever Farron et all think about the coalition, it would be infantile for us to not recognise that.

This represents the final end of the coalition in a lot of ways. The Tory side dragged on for a year and two months before Cameron committed sudoku.

The government May leads will not be the liberal wing of the Tories, chirping on about prison reforms and gay marriage.
 

hodgy100

Member
No, there's many, many reasons for the malaise. However, it should be the job of the leader to reverse that malaise, not let it stagnate.

I agree. it would have been nice to have a party that didn't immediately try to hinder their leader the moment he got elected though.

The PLP have made things so much more difficult for themselves than they needed to. they should have rallied behind Corbyn to begin with and behaved as a united group. then if things didn't get better and if corbyn showed to be unsuitable even with complete party backing then i don't think people would be defending him nearly as much and would be much more welcoming to a different leader.

and if things got better with the party uniting behind corbyn then that's great. By being unruly like the plp have been theyve jsut created easy excuses for corbyn and his supporters.
 

PJV3

Member
PMQs was Blair's idea. It does serve a good function, though.

I generally trust Ipsos Mori on reporting LD voting intentions the best. If the LDs are on 11%, that's very cheering.

UKIP's vote slowly collapsing is also nice to see

This really should be it for UKIP.

If things go badly I imagine it will be tough finding anyone to admit they supported them, shy Tory is going to be nothing compared to the Shy lunatic.

Also, I really hope the Libdems bounce back in a lot of areas, it might be one of the few ways to control Tory ambitions.
 
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