When you elect a party leader who can't even work with his own caucus? Very much so.Yeah democratic election results are annoying aren't they.
This is exactly why Sanders would have been a disaster for Democrats.
When you elect a party leader who can't even work with his own caucus? Very much so.Yeah democratic election results are annoying aren't they.
When you elect a party leader who can't even work with his own caucus? Very much so.
This is exactly why Sanders would have been a disaster for Democrats.
Labour MPs are totally out of touch with the membership.
They refused to accept the will of the members when we elected the "wrong" person last time, and they will still refuse to accept it if we vote for Corbyn again.
This has nothing to do with The EU Referendum, that's just a convenient smokescreen.
You make it sound as if things haven't been awful since he started.Sad to see Labour deciding to self implode at a critical moment as always. And as you say it isn't comfortable being a socialist party anymore, too many years of being Thatcher lite.
Seems to me that if Labour politicians can't stomach the leader elected by party members, that's pretty much game over for the party itself.
He didn't do enough to back his own fucking parties policy. He's meant to be the fucking leader. Either lead and get them to change the policy or put your back into it. He's a fucking disaster who hasn't managed to actually move the polls towards Labour in the face of a dysfunctional largely disliked Tory Government which has been tearing itself to pieces over Europe.
I thought the "Labour Heartlands" voted overwhelmingly to Leave?
Because people continually conflate popularity with party members and with the electorate at large. His "support" is still tiny in the grand scheme of things.If Corbyn has all of this support then why are they all resigning? You'd think all the cynical career politicians would be riding Corbyn's popularity to a thumping majority![]()
Probably going to be cancelling my membership, then.
Unless they manage to find an actual left-winger to lead, which I strongly doubt.
This.
People here are just panicking because we need strong left representation NOW. The current Labour MP's haven't allowed him to be.
At this point in the cycle given the advantages he's had of an unloved Tory Government tearing itself to pieces if they were to have any chance of even improving on 2015 they'd need to be polling about 2% higher, given that there could be an election in 4 months they'd be lucky to stay above 200 MP's. MP's aren't daft they know how this works.
Labour were at their most successful with a 'central' leader, if they want to win the next election they need a strong 'central' leader again, appealing to the liberal facebook/twitter student types has just put them in a race to the bottom with the lib dems.
They need to understand that the UK is a mostly 'middle' politics country and relying on the types of people who couldn't be bothered to go vote in the EU referendum (but are more then happy to bitch about it online) isn't the key to success.
Yeah democratic election results are annoying aren't they.
That would,do make absolutely no difference unless he somehow does a magic trick and manages to gain, rather than lose seats.Wouldn't it be somewhat likely that corbs could secure an alliance with SNP?
When you elect a party leader who can't even work with his own caucus? Very much so.
This is exactly why Sanders would have been a disaster for Democrats.
Wouldn't it be somewhat likely that corbs could secure an alliance with SNP?
And I wish them all the best, but centrist politics don't represent me and I won't support them.
Or Libdems, they might bounce back if things go this way. I doubt UKIP will ever be the second biggest party.I hope you're happy with Conservative government with a UKIP opposition in perpetuity then.
I hope you're happy with Conservative government and a UKIP opposition in perpetuity then.
Or Libdems, they might bounce back if things go this way. I doubt UKIP will ever be the second biggest party.
I think they (LD) will do pretty well with remain voters, even if they won't be entirely trusted.
Sometimes people do need to make the least bad choice.
Or Libdems, they might bounce back if things go this way. I doubt UKIP will ever be the second biggest party.
I think they (LD) will do pretty well with remain voters, even if they won't be entirely trusted.
Sometimes people do need to make the least bad choice.
As opposed to a Conservative government and an indistinguishable opposition forever?
Besides, I'm going north.
I hope you're happy with Conservative government and a UKIP opposition in perpetuity then.
Not enough byebitch.gifs in the world to sum up how I feel about this guy.
If people want to blame somebody for how Brexit turned out look no further.
I'd rather vote for what I believe and lose them settle for the lesser of two evils. That's what got us to this point.
Wouldn't it be somewhat likely that corbs could secure an alliance with SNP?
And I wish them all the best, but centrist politics don't represent me and I won't support them.
Imagine a Lab/SNP Coalition.
It'd be sorta good?
I thought the "Labour Heartlands" voted overwhelmingly to Leave?
There are not 172 Blairites Labour MPs, and to frame this as a Blairite coup of people who were against Corbyn from day 1 ignores that it's become much larger than that. It's a very convenient excuse, I guess.
it's called the shadow cabinet here, though that does sound like something from Harry Potter. Hopefully he'll choose wisely next tim eand not try to make peace with the blairite portion of the party.
This.
People here are just panicking because we need strong left representation NOW. The current Labour MP's haven't allowed him to be.
There's barely 30 Blairite MP's left in the PLP and that's being generous.
I'd rather vote for what I believe and lose them settle for the lesser of two evils. That's what got us to this point.
Honestly, I think Lib Dems could make some gains since they're going in hard on a policy of ignoring the referendum result.
Definitely. They will be very interesting - I'm voting for them as they're going to be the only centrist (though not entirely centrist) party unless things change. The tories will near certainly slide right which is worrying.Honestly, I think Lib Dems could make some gains since they're going in hard on a policy of ignoring the referendum result.
Yeah, exactly. I'm really hoping they make gains as I quite like their politics.In Lib Dem / Conservative marginals you should certainly feel free to vote for the Lib Dems. In many parts of the country if you support someone other than Labour you are getting either the Conservatives or at this point, UKIP.
Do you think any of the nonsense we have had to put up with in this referendum would have happened under even the most right wing Labour parliament? Do you not really not see how awful the Conservatives have been over the past 6 years? If you think the Labour party are just as bad then you should feel free to go.
It's actually not ignoring the result. To implement re-entering the EU requires winning a general election, which would give the party a newer mandate than the referendum.
It's very remarkable to me to see a party leader so at odds with the politicians in his party.
What if Corbyn just doesn't leave and wins the leadership election? At what point do the Labour MPs leave and form a separate party? That's possible, right?
One of the Tories' scare stories at the last election was "a Labour government, propped up by the SNP". While I have nothing against the SNP, it'd probably make Labour even less electable in England than it its now.
I also agree with you on the self indulgence of voting for something that'll never win by the way. It isn't pragmatic and just makes no sense really(imo)
I think this is more a reflection of pre-existing concerns about Corbyn than the Brexit vote. I suspect if you had a confidence vote the day after he was elected leader, you'd have a similar breakdown. The challenge here is that the party membership and the party's MPs want diametrically opposite things in a leader right now. It's not clear which has the greater moral authority to lead, especially in light of the fact that Corbyn does not seem to be making much of an impact on the electorate at large (which I think is probably a factor driving some of the marginal Labour MPs to get onboard with the no-confidence motion).
One thing this highlights--and a variety of other cases in other Westminister parliaments over the last 30 years also highlight this--is that when you pick a leader who has some grassroots or public appeal, but no support within the party organization (or particularly a leader who is hostile to the party organization and sticks with his own people), things don't tend to work out. Parties work best as a well-oiled machine. Canada's Liberal Party (roughly analogous to Labour on the spectrum, including moving right in the 90s to capture the Center) went through this in the 2000s. Sometimes it takes a period of being lost in the woods to really unite the party and then be able to make a comeback in public support.
It does seem difficult for me to believe that Corbyn is, really in his heart, a Leave-r. Just on strategic terms alone: Labour cannot win anything resembling a government without Scotland, a "leave" result is the best way to lose Scotland. If the claim is that his support was lukewarm because he wanted a decent leave result to send a message, I could buy that (that would put him in the same vote as all the other turds whose strategic miscalculation led to this result), but if the claim is that he deeply personally supports Leave, I just don't see it. But again I don't think the confidence vote is actually about Brexit, I think it's just a proximate cause that the forces within the party who have been trying to get rid of him since day one are using to get rid of him.