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  • Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    As a service to some of us that don't follow the internal politics of the Labour Party that closely, would you care to name some names? Who are these more able people of the left? Who should we be looking out for in trying to judge form?
    If Corbyn steps down within 2/3 years Jon Trickett is a possible. Miliband had him in the shadow cabinet office.
  • Roger said:

    Cyclefree

    "I must say I do find it amusing - in a grim way - that Nick Palmer, having spent any number of threads, telling us - in the teeth of all the evidence - that Corbyn's "friends", "associations" whatever just showed his openness to speaking to all sorts of people, to try and find common ground, to lay the ground work for peace etc,"

    By the same token should we consider the Prime Minister an irredeemable dilettante from his Bullingdon days? A time incidentally when Corbyn was demonstrating against the evils of apartheid.

    I know whose past most would find more laudable.


    The difference, Roger, is that Cameron left the Bullingdon club behind.

  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Blairism is rightly dead. There was no content to it, other than the promotion of Blair. It was no more substantial in the end than the Cheshire Cat's grin.

    Blair never really thought through what a social democratic party should be so once he left, there was nothing for his supporters to build on - as has been shown by Kendall's disappointing performance. Forget Blair.

    If there are any serious thinkers left in the Labour party, they need to start thinking now, hard, about what a left of centre party should stand for and be. They could start with SO's posts if they really have a blankness in their head about this. Even I could come up with something.

    That's what the Jarvis's and others should be doing. But even he - attractive as he appears to be - when recently interviewed, talked in cliches when asked about what his alternatives / proposals might be. There are lots of people who are well able to analyse why Labour lost and what its weaknesses are but seem scared or unwilling or unable to follow the evidence where it leads and what it means for what they ought now to be doing, possibly because it would involve the slaying of too many Labour sacred cows.

  • SunnyJimSunnyJim Posts: 1,106

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.

    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 49,961
    Cyclefree said:

    Roger said:

    Cyclefree

    "I must say I do find it amusing - in a grim way - that Nick Palmer, having spent any number of threads, telling us - in the teeth of all the evidence - that Corbyn's "friends", "associations" whatever just showed his openness to speaking to all sorts of people, to try and find common ground, to lay the ground work for peace etc,"

    By the same token should we consider the Prime Minister an irredeemable dilettante from his Bullingdon days? A time incidentally when Corbyn was demonstrating against the evils of apartheid.

    I know whose past most would find more laudable.

    ttps://www.google.fr/imgres?imgurl=https://pbs.twimg.com/media/COssc7tWwAA-JAg.jpg&imgrefurl=https://twitter.com/junayed_/status/642656272303656960&h=418&w=600&tbnid=xigV6E2bkHIPKM:&tbnh=120&tbnw=172&usg=__PSvKI6nvbgx8ssEvBcCte5sSmv0=&docid=cCPvT1OKj-ZCAM&sa=X&ved=0CDIQ9QEwB2oVChMIvOiWq-7zxwIVh10UCh1AGQMN

    Really? Cameron is like many I meet in the City and I have no particular love for them, frankly, to put it mildly.

    But I think your moral compass needs a bit of tuning if you think that, say, trashing a restaurant as a student (appalling as that is) is as bad as an MP inviting to Parliament on two occasions terrorist leaders a few days after their organisations have killed people in London and the government.

    One of Cameron's best moments as Prime Minister was the unreserved and gracious and much needed apology he made for Bloody Sunday. Corbyn can't even bring himself to condemn the IRA which is and was for many years an outfit which killed, tortured and disappeared people, some of them Catholics, ran criminal protection rackets and threatened anyone who tried to stand up to it and gloried in what it was doing.

    It is also worth noting that whilst Corbyn was waving placards, Fatcha was quietly but effectively getting on with the job of ensuring Mandela's release and apartheid's dismantling....
  • surbiton said:

    MattW said:

    Roger said:

    When you thought things couldn't get any worse a 3rd PLATO appears!

    (Must be all this talk about a 'just society.....')

    Didn't Plato have a doctrine of multiple forms?
    For a few months , she was AWOL - the best days in PB.
    What is it with you Labour supporting types? Why do you have such a problem with women? Oh, and being polite?
    I don't get it either. The attacks on female bloggers* are more aggressive from people who claim they are all for feminism but still appear to think women should be seen but not heard.

    * though SeanT aint doing righties any favours with MrsB atm.
    Indeed it is baffling. – the regular attacks on the PB ladies, may sum up neatly why Labour supporters this past week rejected every female candidate for the roles of Mayor of London, Deputy party leader and the Party Leadership itself.
  • justin124 So its a sort of overnight thing then..and because a new LOTO is frit of it we should abort
  • SunnyJim said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.

    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
    MPs like to back the winner, since they get the patronage and MPs know on which side their bread is buttered. If the winner is going to be on the left then they will get the nominations required.
  • HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    As a service to some of us that don't follow the internal politics of the Labour Party that closely, would you care to name some names? Who are these more able people of the left? Who should we be looking out for in trying to judge form?
    If Corbyn steps down within 2/3 years Jon Trickett is a possible. Miliband had him in the shadow cabinet office.
    Thanks. Is that it though? Just one chap? From your post I was expecting more names.
  • The idea of nominations for the left candidates in the next Labour Leadership election is like a version of Prisoner's Dilemma for Game Theory.

    If nobody nominates the left (don't confess in PD) then the better outcome may be reached. But if you nominate someone from the left then you get rewarded with patronage if they win. Game Theory shows that the left will get the nominations they require, especially when there is already a significant number of left wing MPs to start with so only need a few extra to cross the threshold.
  • TCPoliticalBettingTCPoliticalBetting Posts: 10,819
    edited September 2015
    SunnyJim said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
    Good question.
    1. The Labour hard left is a bit larger than Compass. There were some shy newbies in the 2015 intake. Look at the union affiliated ones.
    2. The reselections coming with boundary changes will sharpen minds.
    3. Expect further waves of "democracy" in CLPs from Corbyn via the NEC turning MPs into delegates....
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,724
    At least he didn’t read PPE or similar at Oxbridge!
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 49,961
    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?
  • Is no one answering the phone or is Corbyn still sucking his teeth...bodes well
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    I wonder about this. It will be popular but probably mainly with the people who are already on his side. Will it reach out to many others? Also it rather depends on what he is apologising for. Apologising for lying about intelligence is one thing: that was - if true - dishonest and poisoned the well for any future PM when making such an important decision.

    But is that Corbyn's objection. If his apology is because - as I understand - but I'm sure someone will enlighten me - he thinks the UK should not have gone to war in Iraq at all, regardless of intelligence or threat - then that may not help with people outside his existing supporters. I don't want a PM to take the country to war on a lie. But I also don't want a PM who is not willing to defend the country.

    The real issue for now is whether he refuses to agree with any steps to protect Britain from any sort of terrorist threat, particularly the major one from IS and its confreres. His initial reaction to the drones strike is not encouraging.

  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    That's the crux of the matter. John Cruddas has done oodles of work here and very cogent analysis.

    He's talked and talked about it - all his policy work during EdM before it was all ignored - and no one is willing to accept that they need to man up and craft something new.

    Corbynistas are the ultimate comfort-blanket huggers. TBH, it's the scale of his win that shocked me. 59%. Sure a chunk of that came from the newbies either full or £3er members/the idiocy of letting him on the ballot/the system used - but that speaks even more loudly to the paucity of what the ABCers had to offer.

    It may have been a hostile takeover of Labour by the hard Left, but frankly the board were asleep at the wheel and were easy pickings.
    Cyclefree said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Blairism is rightly dead. There was no content to it, other than the promotion of Blair. It was no more substantial in the end than the Cheshire Cat's grin.

    Blair never really thought through what a social democratic party should be so once he left, there was nothing for his supporters to build on - as has been shown by Kendall's disappointing performance. Forget Blair.

    If there are any serious thinkers left in the Labour party, they need to start thinking now, hard, about what a left of centre party should stand for and be. They could start with SO's posts if they really have a blankness in their head about this. Even I could come up with something.

    That's what the Jarvis's and others should be doing. But even he - attractive as he appears to be - when recently interviewed, talked in cliches when asked about what his alternatives / proposals might be. There are lots of people who are well able to analyse why Labour lost and what its weaknesses are but seem scared or unwilling or unable to follow the evidence where it leads and what it means for what they ought now to be doing, possibly because it would involve the slaying of too many Labour sacred cows.

  • malcolmg said:

    Camerons tweet is the standard party line as taken by Fallon.
    Simple and to the point. It bears repetition. There is nothing wrong with it at all. I fail to see how a half baked policy of printing money is anything but a grave threat to every family's security.

    It makes Cameron and his chums look like plonkers. People will only laugh and wonder how they can be so stupid.
    I think he is not trying to appeal to the Corbynistas, but plenty on the Labour right would agree.
    The only plonker here is mr g.
    The simple point being made is a quite incredibly true one.
  • Cyclefree said:

    Blairism is rightly dead. There was no content to it, other than the promotion of Blair. It was no more substantial in the end than the Cheshire Cat's grin.

    Actually I think Blairism towards the end with his academy reforms, introduction of some privatisation to the NHS etc showed that "third way" or "Blairism" might actually mean something.

    IE using market forces for social causes. Improving the social concerns the left have, with the tools that the right have. Using a practical means for a social end.

    Unfortunately for Blair's legacy the left now cares more about the means than the end, so this is viewed as "being a Tory".
  • FloaterFloater Posts: 14,195
    TGOHF said:

    DavidL said:

    . I think after the next election there will be lots of discussions about the bias in the system in favour of the Tories. But that will just be the reward for being nearest the centre. We are a moderate lot really.

    Polly has started already

    "The iron fist of our wicked electoral system means he must sway some who voted Tory in the 100 seats he must win"
    Good old delusional mad Polly.


    Strangely the system was not "wicked" when Labour was racking up the victories.

    Can't wait until she decides that Corbyn is her Viking warrior.
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    And if someone does icepick Jezza, it will be once a more credible hard-Lefter has been identified and groomed for the job.

    He was the Accidental Candidate on the ballot - the Left had put up others in the past and it was JC's turn. We could've had Trickett instead or anyone one of those who genuinely nominated him.

    SunnyJim said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.

    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
    MPs like to back the winner, since they get the patronage and MPs know on which side their bread is buttered. If the winner is going to be on the left then they will get the nominations required.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    justin124 said:

    JackW said:

    Marr indicating via Tom Watson upcoming interview that the Corbyn PMQ vacancy option may still be a runner.

    IMO Bercow and HoC procedure will say not.

    I don't think PMQ has a particularly long history. From memory it started in the late Macmillan era in the early 1960s.
    Maybe, but it's a creature of Parliament and not something that LotO can unilaterally decide is no longer part of his job description.
  • Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Apologising for Iraq will be about as popular as Clegg apologising for tuition fees.
  • Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    The Right tend to condescend to women

    Disagree.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 91,408

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Apologising for Iraq will be about as popular as Clegg apologising for tuition fees.
    The difference is Clegg was the one responsible, whereas Corbyn was not - even though Labour was, as a new face an apology might work.
  • Cyclefree said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Blairism is rightly dead. There was no content to it, other than the promotion of Blair. It was no more substantial in the end than the Cheshire Cat's grin.

    Blair never really thought through what a social democratic party should be so once he left, there was nothing for his supporters to build on - as has been shown by Kendall's disappointing performance. Forget Blair.

    ...

    'Blairism' was just old fashioned Wilson-type pragmatic social democracy.
    In rubbishing Blair you forget the disaster that was Brown who meddled all through the Blair years and was a disaster as Chancellor and as PM and a disaster for his party.
    The crime of Blair was not sacking Brown.
  • surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    Cyclefree said:

    surbiton said:

    eek said:

    I have to ask who on earth thought this was a sensible tweet...

    https://twitter.com/David_Cameron/status/642984909980725248

    I am a bit surprised at the Tory tactics. If they think Corbyn is a massive liability, shouldn't they let him stew in his own juice ? Why this guns blazing attack ?
    Wasn't it IDS who said you have 100 days to establish yourself as leader? The Tories are seeking to define Corbyn before he does it for himself. The finer points of some meeting with the IRA or some squalid anti-Semite invited to tea don't matter to the public. They want the public to know or dimly remember one thing and one thing only about Corbyn: that he/Labour are a threat to people's security. So that everything he says or does will be viewed through that prism.

    The Tories message is that Labour cannot be trusted with your security. It's a deceptively simple and adaptable message. If there's an IS attack and he equivocates or it turns out that one of his friends approve of it it will resonate. If he proposes some economic policy, it risks not being judged on its merits but as part of an attack on people's hard work and savings etc. The Tories want the public to make their mind up about Corbyn before he's even had a chance and long before any election campaign.

    Incidentally, I don't think that Labour will be tainted by Corbyn so much as demonstrate how weak the liberal progressive Labour brand really is. Rather Corbyn is a symptom of how Labour has tainted itself by its prolonged failure to stand up for the values it claims to believe in. It is Labour's weakness which has allowed that part of the Left which is eager to suck up to radical Islam and other illiberal groups to become so strong. Labour has had no antibodies with which to fight the illiberals. Hence Corbyn's victory.

    A truly strong, truly liberal, truly progressive, truly tolerant, truly anti-racist, truly anti-fascist, truly anti-totalitarian/anti-authoritarian Labour party would have batted Corbyn and his ilk away without fuss. But we have not had such a party on the left now for some time. Just a shell consisting of empty careerists ripe for takeover.


    To cut a long story short, Labour should be "Friends of Israel" - that's it !
  • kle4 said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Apologising for Iraq will be about as popular as Clegg apologising for tuition fees.
    The difference is Clegg was the one responsible, whereas Corbyn was not - even though Labour was, as a new face an apology might work.
    Apologising for something you were responsible for is credible, apologising for something you opposed is just stupid. He has no reason to apologise for Iraq, "I opposed that" is more credible and draws more of a line in the sand.

    Who will an Iraq apology from Corbyn appeal to? Stop the war types know that Corbyn was on their side already.
  • HurstLlamaHurstLlama Posts: 9,098

    Is no one answering the phone or is Corbyn still sucking his teeth...bodes well

    A very fair question, Mr. Dodd. Corbyn could not appear on Marr because he had to put a shadow cabinet together, a task which one would have thought he had already given considerable thought. Yet here we are a lunchtime without a single appointment being announced. No doubt this is the new way of doing politics and not pandering to the filthy Murdoch press.
  • Gaius said:

    Roger said:


    The horrific inequalities currently being waved in everyone's face with the plight of the migrants is unsustainable. Whether or not Corbyn is a useless politician isn't important. His overwhelming mandate as leader of the opposition means he'll be heard.

    His message that the level of inequality is unsustainable as is the subjugation of weak nations by powerful ones is unargueable.

    This is how he managed to cut through a very unradical Labour electorate to win decisively and his message will resonate. If I was a TORY (which thank the Lord I'm not sir....) I'd be seriously worried. The sight of the Prime Minister and his Tory chums posing in their Bullindon finery is now so inappropriate it's almost shocking

    I think we are witnessing nothing less than the destruction of socialism.

    As I have said before on here, that is Corbyn's real role: to finally kill Socialism as a political idea put to the voters in the mainstream. Once it has been consigned to the dustbin of history, the Labour Party can finally get on with proposing solutions for the real world, shorn of the necessity to pay homage to this long-expired political quackery.
    Wasn't the view that Socialism had died there in the 90's with the rise of New Labour?


  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    SunnyJim said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
    Surely the opposite is about to happen?

    Under Corbyn the £3 members will be those deciding policy at Conference, there will be takeovers of constituency parties by the trots and anyone calling themselves 'Blairite' can expect deselection.

    All the nutcases that Kinnock spent years kicking out of the party, well they're not just back, they're back with a vengeance.

    Even if JC doesn't contest the 2020 election, he'll be replaced as leader by a younger version of himself rather than a centrist.
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    From DT live
    Where is Jeremy Corbyn today?

    Mr Corbyn is currently attending an event in his constituency of Islington North, which has been in the diary for a long time.

    Sky News reports that a source close to Mr Corbyn said he did not want to miss the constituency event.

    Later this afternoon he will head to Labour's HQ in Westminster to carry on pinning down his new shadow cabinet.

    Is no one answering the phone or is Corbyn still sucking his teeth...bodes well

    A very fair question, Mr. Dodd. Corbyn could not appear on Marr because he had to put a shadow cabinet together, a task which one would have thought he had already given considerable thought. Yet here we are a lunchtime without a single appointment being announced. No doubt this is the new way of doing politics and not pandering to the filthy Murdoch press.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 39,756
    edited September 2015
    Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    A dish best served cold.
    Though serving cold tea doesn't seem the most overwhelming revenge in the world.
  • justin124 said:

    JackW said:

    Marr indicating via Tom Watson upcoming interview that the Corbyn PMQ vacancy option may still be a runner.

    IMO Bercow and HoC procedure will say not.

    I don't think PMQ has a particularly long history. From memory it started in the late Macmillan era in the early 1960s.
    But questions did take place in a slightly different format from about the 1880's. If Corbyn does not want to ask questions then there is no reason why the Speaker should allow some other nominee by the LOTO to ask them. Its entirely up to him and if anything he should favour backbenchers of his own choosing.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    edited September 2015
    Are we going to get any indications of a Shadow Cabinet being formed at any point? Or has he got to decide whether he's got enough people available for a "traditional" shadow structure first?
  • TudorRoseTudorRose Posts: 1,662

    kle4 said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Apologising for Iraq will be about as popular as Clegg apologising for tuition fees.
    The difference is Clegg was the one responsible, whereas Corbyn was not - even though Labour was, as a new face an apology might work.
    Apologising for something you were responsible for is credible, apologising for something you opposed is just stupid. He has no reason to apologise for Iraq, "I opposed that" is more credible and draws more of a line in the sand.

    Who will an Iraq apology from Corbyn appeal to? Stop the war types know that Corbyn was on their side already.
    And it will beg the question 'What do you support/believe now in terms of the region?' which might not go too well.
  • surbiton said:

    eek said:

    I have to ask who on earth thought this was a sensible tweet...

    https://twitter.com/David_Cameron/status/642984909980725248

    I am a bit surprised at the Tory tactics. If they think Corbyn is a massive liability, shouldn't they let him stew in his own juice ? Why this guns blazing attack ?
    Note that the line begins "The Labour Party" not "Jeremy Corbyn". They need to optimize for the case where he is no longer leader in 2020, since if he's still leader they're probably going to have an enjoyable election in any case.
  • So Corybn spends the morning at a NHS fun day instead of speaking to millions on the BBC... Bodes well.
    Why hasnt he announced any of his shadow team yet?
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074

    Cyclefree said:

    Blairism is rightly dead. There was no content to it, other than the promotion of Blair. It was no more substantial in the end than the Cheshire Cat's grin.

    Actually I think Blairism towards the end with his academy reforms, introduction of some privatisation to the NHS etc showed that "third way" or "Blairism" might actually mean something.

    IE using market forces for social causes. Improving the social concerns the left have, with the tools that the right have. Using a practical means for a social end.

    Unfortunately for Blair's legacy the left now cares more about the means than the end, so this is viewed as "being a Tory".
    Yes maybe - but the fact that the Tories are taking those proposals forward means that Labour have been left denuded and made it easy to make the charge that Labour were no more than Tory-lite. Plus it made Labour very prone to corporatism e.g. its favouring of PFI to spend more on public services rather than make the case for spending on public services. That was a policy borne out of cowardice and a lack of self-belief.

    Labour has tended to talk about public services as if they are all a good and all equally worthy of being in the public sector and having money spent on them. It should be starting by working out what the public needs, which of those should be in the public sector and why and how they should be funded so as to get the maximum possible output for the money spent. If they did this, though, they would have to accept that some services might not need to be in the public sector at all. It might also mean that the public would have to accept more in order to get the quality it wants. Instead Labour's policy is to defend the post-1945 settlement as if it can never ever be changed. It's absurd: Attlee's government was a good government for its times but it didn't hand down the 10 Commandments. Labour should stop acting as if it did.

  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    I don't mind Jezza doing a ritual apology on behalf of the Labour Party on Iraq. I was in favour of GW1 so don't have an axe to grind bar Blair's lying.

    I doubt his motives, but it needs doing even just for the sake of it. Like Cameron offering a free vote on fox-hunting.

    kle4 said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Apologising for Iraq will be about as popular as Clegg apologising for tuition fees.
    The difference is Clegg was the one responsible, whereas Corbyn was not - even though Labour was, as a new face an apology might work.
    Apologising for something you were responsible for is credible, apologising for something you opposed is just stupid. He has no reason to apologise for Iraq, "I opposed that" is more credible and draws more of a line in the sand.

    Who will an Iraq apology from Corbyn appeal to? Stop the war types know that Corbyn was on their side already.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,688
    Floater said:

    TGOHF said:

    DavidL said:

    . I think after the next election there will be lots of discussions about the bias in the system in favour of the Tories. But that will just be the reward for being nearest the centre. We are a moderate lot really.

    Polly has started already

    "The iron fist of our wicked electoral system means he must sway some who voted Tory in the 100 seats he must win"
    Good old delusional mad Polly.


    Strangely the system was not "wicked" when Labour was racking up the victories.

    Can't wait until she decides that Corbyn is her Viking warrior.
    Toynbee is something of a bad supporter for anyone to have. Every sensible word she has ever written seems likely to foreshadow a landmine of nonsense.

  • taffystaffys Posts: 9,753
    The crime of Blair was not sacking Brown.

    Blair should have taken Brown on, beaten him and then nominated his own team. He would have been skulking on the back benches, true, but so what.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074

    Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    A dish best served cold.
    Though serving cold tea doesn't seem the most overwhelming revenge in the world.
    Quite right. I was thinking of the Sicilian saying: "La vendica se magna fredda". Or we could use the Irish one: "Don't get mad. Get even."

  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    TBH, I think the rise of Corbynistas will put back Labour for a decade or more simply because of this fact.

    Blair convinced us that Socialism wasn't Labour - it was this new confection of Third Wayery between right-left.

    Now the stone has been lifted and all these hard-Lefties have scuttled out and taken over. It's perfectly reasonable for Tories and others to point to this and say Told You, They Never Changed.

    Like Labour ruining the economy twice - once could be circumstances, twice is by design.

    Gaius said:

    Roger said:


    The horrific inequalities currently being waved in everyone's face with the plight of the migrants is unsustainable. Whether or not Corbyn is a useless politician isn't important. His overwhelming mandate as leader of the opposition means he'll be heard.

    His message that the level of inequality is unsustainable as is the subjugation of weak nations by powerful ones is unargueable.

    This is how he managed to cut through a very unradical Labour electorate to win decisively and his message will resonate. If I was a TORY (which thank the Lord I'm not sir....) I'd be seriously worried. The sight of the Prime Minister and his Tory chums posing in their Bullindon finery is now so inappropriate it's almost shocking

    I think we are witnessing nothing less than the destruction of socialism.

    As I have said before on here, that is Corbyn's real role: to finally kill Socialism as a political idea put to the voters in the mainstream. Once it has been consigned to the dustbin of history, the Labour Party can finally get on with proposing solutions for the real world, shorn of the necessity to pay homage to this long-expired political quackery.
    Wasn't the view that Socialism had died there in the 90's with the rise of New Labour?


  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,688

    Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    A dish best served cold.
    Though serving cold tea doesn't seem the most overwhelming revenge in the world.
    Tea and revenge are quite different though!

    Certainly tea and revenge when served cold will be all the better for good service though.

  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074
    surbiton said:

    Cyclefree said:

    surbiton said:

    eek said:

    I have to ask who on earth thought this was a sensible tweet...

    https://twitter.com/David_Cameron/status/642984909980725248

    I am a bit surprised at the Tory tactics. If they think Corbyn is a massive liability, shouldn't they let him stew in his own juice ? Why this guns blazing attack ?
    Wasn't it IDS who said you have 100 days to establish yourself as leader? The Tories are seeking to define Corbyn before he does it for himself. The finer points of some meeting with the IRA or some squalid anti-Semite invited to tea don't matter to the public. They want the public to know or dimly remember one thing and one thing only about Corbyn: that he/Labour are a threat to people's security. So that everything he says or does will be viewed through that prism.

    The Tories message is that Labour cannot be trusted with your security. It's a deceptively simple and adaptable message. If there's an IS attack and he equivocates or it turns out that one of his friends approve of it it will resonate. If he proposes some economic policy, it risks not being judged on its merits but as part of an attack on people's hard work and savings etc. The Tories want the public to make their mind up about Corbyn before he's even had a chance and long before any election campaign.

    Incidentally, I don't think that Labour will be tainted by Corbyn so much as demonstrate how weak the liberal progressive Labour brand really is. Rather Corbyn is a symptom of how Labour has tainted itself by its prolonged failure to stand up for the values it claims to believe in. It is Labour's weakness which has allowed that part of the Left which is eager to suck up to radical Islam and other illiberal groups to become so strong. Labour has had no antibodies with which to fight the illiberals. Hence Corbyn's victory.

    A truly strong, truly liberal, truly progressive, truly tolerant, truly anti-racist, truly anti-fascist, truly anti-totalitarian/anti-authoritarian Labour party would have batted Corbyn and his ilk away without fuss. But we have not had such a party on the left now for some time. Just a shell consisting of empty careerists ripe for takeover.


    To cut a long story short, Labour should be "Friends of Israel" - that's it !
    If you say so. Not quite sure where you get that from in my reply. But interesting to see what's in your head, I suppose.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527
    HYUFD said:

    RodCrosby said:

    ydoethur said:

    I remember OGH writing threads about the Labour bias within the electoral system, and I further recall him writing another thread that it had either gone or was now a tory bias.. anyone recall where we are?

    This is the second one:

    http://www2.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2015/05/29/how-scotland-and-the-ld-collapse-almost-completely-reverses-the-bias-in-the-electoral-system/
    The uncomfortable fact is that, after the boundary changes, whoever would lead Labour will need a 1997-style swing to achieve a bare majority in 2020 - a feat only achieved by Blair himself.

    No wonder even Prescott was saying the unthinkable yesterday, that Labour should consider all options, including pacts and coalitions.

    PR might be back on the agenda too, I guess.
    Attlee got an 11% swing in 1945, Blair a 10% swing in 1997, so Attlee did it too, albeit over 50 years prior
    Getting the Tories out ,though, - rather than Labour winning - requires a small swing! In a 650 HOC Tories will need 310 seats post 2020 to continue as a minority Government.
  • "The Filthy Murdoch Press" that must include the BBC and the Mirror and Guardian..
  • MattWMattW Posts: 18,099
    Omnium said:

    Floater said:

    TGOHF said:

    DavidL said:

    . I think after the next election there will be lots of discussions about the bias in the system in favour of the Tories. But that will just be the reward for being nearest the centre. We are a moderate lot really.

    Polly has started already

    "The iron fist of our wicked electoral system means he must sway some who voted Tory in the 100 seats he must win"
    Good old delusional mad Polly.


    Strangely the system was not "wicked" when Labour was racking up the victories.

    Can't wait until she decides that Corbyn is her Viking warrior.
    Toynbee is something of a bad supporter for anyone to have. Every sensible word she has ever written seems likely to foreshadow a landmine of nonsense.

    I think we should install Polly on the 4th Plinth as an audio installation to deter Corbynite demonstrations.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,074

    Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    The Right tend to condescend to women

    Disagree.
    Some on the right, then. In the two areas where I've worked, I've seen plenty of it. And not everyone on the left is like what I've described either. Still if we can't have a few enjoyable stereotypes on a Sunday lunchtime, when can we?!
  • john_zimsjohn_zims Posts: 3,399
    @alex

    'Are we going to get any indications of a Shadow Cabinet being formed at any point? Or has he got to decide whether he's got enough people available for a "traditional" shadow structure first?'

    Looks like there's a shortage of volunteers,only managed to find one person so far,whilst eight have thrown in the towel.



  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    i think it's called Displacement Activity.

    He can't leave his old life behind and given his unwillingness to take charge of anything - he's scared of the change too.

    So Corybn spends the morning at a NHS fun day instead of speaking to millions on the BBC... Bodes well.
    Why hasnt he announced any of his shadow team yet?

  • MattWMattW Posts: 18,099
    Sandpit said:

    SunnyJim said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
    Surely the opposite is about to happen?

    Under Corbyn the £3 members will be those deciding policy at Conference, there will be takeovers of constituency parties by the trots and anyone calling themselves 'Blairite' can expect deselection.

    All the nutcases that Kinnock spent years kicking out of the party, well they're not just back, they're back with a vengeance.

    Even if JC doesn't contest the 2020 election, he'll be replaced as leader by a younger version of himself rather than a centrist.
    Nopt aty *this* conference though, since the deadline for applications was in July or August.
  • Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    I can't resist posting this (although it's not as good as the driving one):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LS37SNYjg8w
  • ST Quite mild under the circs..
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    edited September 2015

    So Corybn spends the morning at a NHS fun day instead of speaking to millions on the BBC... Bodes well.
    Why hasnt he announced any of his shadow team yet?

    Does he actually realise that he's LotO now? Will he notice when he sees double the usual salary at the end of the month?
  • Floater said:

    TGOHF said:

    DavidL said:

    . I think after the next election there will be lots of discussions about the bias in the system in favour of the Tories. But that will just be the reward for being nearest the centre. We are a moderate lot really.

    Polly has started already

    "The iron fist of our wicked electoral system means he must sway some who voted Tory in the 100 seats he must win"
    Good old delusional mad Polly.


    Strangely the system was not "wicked" when Labour was racking up the victories.

    Can't wait until she decides that Corbyn is her Viking warrior.
    Say what you like about Polly Toynbee, as I'm sure you will, but she has been pretty consistent about the UK's electoral system.
    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/15/britain-rotten-electoral-system-nose-peg-vote-swap-tories-out

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/may/23/dismal-eu-ballot-corrupt-electoral-system-safe-seats-rotten

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polly_Toynbee

    and, no I don't agree with her about much, but I do like people to stick to the facts.
    So, if you have a link showing Polly Toynbee praising FPTP during Labour's period in power could you post it?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    138 for England. Rubbish.
  • OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,688
    Betfair have a really fascinating market developing as to when JC will cease to become Labour leader. The spreads are miles wide at the moment, but the framework is great.

    Some of the prices (and they're all awful) are mine.

    If Corbyn actually thinks through stuff (clearly for the first time) he'll be in an incredible position. Oddly he now has this freedom.

    "Jeremy Corbyn when he goes home tonight, and sits musing really can influence the nation. " - I believe this to be a truism - astonishing though it is.
  • England all out 138 in the deciding one day international against Australia.
  • Tipping point alert.

    'Analysis: What does Jeremy Corbyn mean for Scotland and the SNP?

    ...And in return they will get independence. Scotland is already on the tipping point and a generation of Tory governments delivered by an unelectable Labour Party will give voters the final shove they need. But by working constructively within the Union in its final years, the SNP will reap real rewards. The eventual separation would be less acrimonious, progressive English opinion less uniformly hostile. The next five years, or however long Jeremy Corbyn lasts in the job, allow the SNP to set out its stall for an independent Scotland that is a friend and ally to the remaining UK.

    The party that was supposedly heading to Westminster to wreck the joint could be the best thing that’s happened to parliamentary politics in a long time. It would take hard work and a genuine political will but Labour’s self-injury paves the way for the SNP to become the unofficial opposition.'

    http://tinyurl.com/on9tbxh

  • Corbyn will obviously take some time to create his shadow cabinet team. I mean, it's a bit like cold calling...

    "Hello, I wonder if you would be interest... ", "No thank you."

    "Good morning, can I ...", "Not interested, bye."

    "Hi, I'm not selling anything...", "F*** off"

    See. It will take a while.

  • Cyclefree said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    It won’t be a Blairite. With under 5 per cent of the membership, Blairites are becoming extinct.

    They are the red squirrels of the Labour Party now.

    On the subject of Blairism, I think Corbyn promised to apologise on behalf of the Labour Party for Iraq. I think that will be a popular move.
    Blairism is rightly dead. There was no content to it, other than the promotion of Blair. It was no more substantial in the end than the Cheshire Cat's grin.

    Blair never really thought through what a social democratic party should be so once he left, there was nothing for his supporters to build on - as has been shown by Kendall's disappointing performance. Forget Blair.

    ...

    'Blairism' was just old fashioned Wilson-type pragmatic social democracy.
    In rubbishing Blair you forget the disaster that was Brown who meddled all through the Blair years and was a disaster as Chancellor and as PM and a disaster for his party.
    The crime of Blair was not sacking Brown.
    I wonder whether Blair regrets that - he certainly felt that the relationship was dysfunctional and that it was stopping him achieving his Legacy. But his calculation seemed to be that he didn't have enough strength in the party to sack Brown.
  • TGOHFTGOHF Posts: 21,633
    Corbo Isnt in power here - just a limp bewildered puppet.

  • Floater said:

    TGOHF said:

    DavidL said:

    . I think after the next election there will be lots of discussions about the bias in the system in favour of the Tories. But that will just be the reward for being nearest the centre. We are a moderate lot really.

    Polly has started already

    "The iron fist of our wicked electoral system means he must sway some who voted Tory in the 100 seats he must win"
    Good old delusional mad Polly.


    Strangely the system was not "wicked" when Labour was racking up the victories.

    Can't wait until she decides that Corbyn is her Viking warrior.
    Say what you like about Polly Toynbee, as I'm sure you will, but she has been pretty consistent about the UK's electoral system.
    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/apr/15/britain-rotten-electoral-system-nose-peg-vote-swap-tories-out

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/may/23/dismal-eu-ballot-corrupt-electoral-system-safe-seats-rotten

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polly_Toynbee

    and, no I don't agree with her about much, but I do like people to stick to the facts.
    So, if you have a link showing Polly Toynbee praising FPTP during Labour's period in power could you post it?
    From memory, Toynbee was one of those lefties who thought that a "fairer" electoral system would lead to some kind of perpetual rainbow coalition. I'm sure you can dig up stuff she wrote back in the 90s that would say pretty much the same thing.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    MattW said:

    Sandpit said:

    SunnyJim said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    How would a candidate from the left ever get on the ballot again?
    Surely the opposite is about to happen?

    Under Corbyn the £3 members will be those deciding policy at Conference, there will be takeovers of constituency parties by the trots and anyone calling themselves 'Blairite' can expect deselection.

    All the nutcases that Kinnock spent years kicking out of the party, well they're not just back, they're back with a vengeance.

    Even if JC doesn't contest the 2020 election, he'll be replaced as leader by a younger version of himself rather than a centrist.
    Nopt aty *this* conference though, since the deadline for applications was in July or August.
    Interesting. Surely the new leader can add his own votes at the conference though?
  • CD13CD13 Posts: 6,349
    Mr Flashman,

    "Corbo Isnt in power here - just a limp bewildered puppet."

    Interesting leadership already. Instead of getting a shadow cabinet together, he's attending a demo on Saturday afternoon and attending an event in Islington on Sunday.

    Come PMQs, he'll be looking for another demo to attend. Jezza is still seventeen so you've got to excuse him.
  • TCPoliticalBettingTCPoliticalBetting Posts: 10,819
    edited September 2015

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    As a service to some of us that don't follow the internal politics of the Labour Party that closely, would you care to name some names? Who are these more able people of the left? Who should we be looking out for in trying to judge form?
    If Corbyn steps down within 2/3 years Jon Trickett is a possible. Miliband had him in the shadow cabinet office.
    Thanks. Is that it though? Just one chap? From your post I was expecting more names.
    The others are (for now) people touted by the hard left, Nandy, Lewis etc. i want to see more of them in action before elevating into ones to watch. But, this clear out in the shadow cabinet will create room for some to gain internal credibility. Personally they look more like clean skins without Corbyn's baggage.
  • Tud..The party that headed for Westminster made themselves look like prats..
  • AlanbrookeAlanbrooke Posts: 23,559

    Tipping point alert.

    'Analysis: What does Jeremy Corbyn mean for Scotland and the SNP?

    ...And in return they will get independence. Scotland is already on the tipping point and a generation of Tory governments delivered by an unelectable Labour Party will give voters the final shove they need. But by working constructively within the Union in its final years, the SNP will reap real rewards. The eventual separation would be less acrimonious, progressive English opinion less uniformly hostile. The next five years, or however long Jeremy Corbyn lasts in the job, allow the SNP to set out its stall for an independent Scotland that

    The party that was supposedly heading to Westminster to wreck the joint could be the best thing that’s happened to parliamentary politics in a long time. It would take hard work and a genuine political will but Labour’s self-injury paves the way for the SNP to become the unofficial opposition.'

    http://tinyurl.com/on9tbxh

    utopian to say the least.

    voters still not up for an Indyref

    economic questions still not answered

    and nobody seriously imagines the SNP "is a friend and ally to the remaining UK." at least not the english part of it.
  • I saw the real leader of the Labour Party on Sky News..His name is Len and he runs a Union called Unite
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    Isn't it convention that the LotO and the PM extend good wishes on each major religious day? It's Jewish New Year - has Jezzbollah done one yet?

    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/rosh-hashanah-2015-david-camerons-message
  • TudorRoseTudorRose Posts: 1,662
    CD13 said:

    Mr Flashman,

    "Corbo Isnt in power here - just a limp bewildered puppet."

    Interesting leadership already. Instead of getting a shadow cabinet together, he's attending a demo on Saturday afternoon and attending an event in Islington on Sunday.

    Come PMQs, he'll be looking for another demo to attend. Jezza is still seventeen so you've got to excuse him.

    There isn't going to be a shadow cabinet. Corbyn will just let whoever fancies responding to a debate get up and do their stuff.

    Actually, given his lack of support amongst MPs it might not be a bad strategy!
  • ArtistArtist Posts: 1,882
    The SNP's angle on Corbyn is interesting. You would have thought as true progressives, they'd be championing Corbyn to potentially bring real anti austerity to the whole of the UK and be delighted that Labour had listened to their criticisms from four months ago and finally returned to its old Labour roots to break free from the Westminster establishment.

    It's almost as if everything the SNP apparently stood for is a load of hot air...
  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656

    surbiton said:

    eek said:

    I have to ask who on earth thought this was a sensible tweet...

    https://twitter.com/David_Cameron/status/642984909980725248

    I am a bit surprised at the Tory tactics. If they think Corbyn is a massive liability, shouldn't they let him stew in his own juice ? Why this guns blazing attack ?
    Note that the line begins "The Labour Party" not "Jeremy Corbyn". They need to optimize for the case where he is no longer leader in 2020, since if he's still leader they're probably going to have an enjoyable election in any case.
    And they are right to so. Corbyn is a manifestation of the extreme, but his tendencies exist throughout the Labour Party: a distaste for the West; a comfort with racism against white people; a failure to condemn Islamic intolerance; a dislike for English patriotism.

    To take an example, is there a single prominent Labour politician who has condemned Diane Abbott, who has said several outright racist remarks?
  • Labour Party wake up..there are a number of small bags containing 30 pieces of silver to be picked up.. just give Corbyn a call..he will be ever so grateful..
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    Ooh, a duck for Joe Burns. Aus 2 runs for 1 wkt.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,768
    edited September 2015
    Angela Eagle is being tipped for Shadow Chancellor. Labour are truly stuffed if that's the best they can manage. Even Chris Leslie would have done a better job than she will.

    EDIT - and to think I was (and am!) worried about Osborne hubris. Read this almost incredible piece on Labour's shadow cabinet:
    Len McCluskey, boss of the UK's biggest union Unite and key Corbyn backer, says he is not concerned about the resignations.

    He told Sky News the new team will be "top class" and "maybe the best we've had in a long time".

    "There's no need for any of us to lose sleep over this," he said.

    "The talent within the Labour Party is that good that we'll have an enormous, talented team, united and going forward to challenge this Tory government and their horrible, oppressive austerity programme."
    http://news.sky.com/story/1551572/corbyns-frontbench-team-will-be-top-class

    Those whom the gods wish to destroy...
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    As a service to some of us that don't follow the internal politics of the Labour Party that closely, would you care to name some names? Who are these more able people of the left? Who should we be looking out for in trying to judge form?
    If Corbyn steps down within 2/3 years Jon Trickett is a possible. Miliband had him in the shadow cabinet office.
    Thanks. Is that it though? Just one chap? From your post I was expecting more names.
    The others are (for now) people touted by the hard left, Nandy, Lewis etc. i want to see more of them in action before elevating into ones to watch. But, this clear out in the shadow cabinet will create room for some to gain internal credibility. Personally they look more like clean skins without Corbyn's baggage.
    Lewis has said he doesn't want a Shadow Cabinet post. When you can't even rely on your supporters...
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614

    Isn't it convention that the LotO and the PM extend good wishes on each major religious day? It's Jewish New Year - has Jezzbollah done one yet?

    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/rosh-hashanah-2015-david-camerons-message

    Ms Plato, one fears that a lot of conventions are about to disappear! Who the hell is going to be Corbyn's Chief of Staff, in charge of all this necessary protocol that his boss couldn't give an Aylsbury Duck about..?
  • alex. said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    As a service to some of us that don't follow the internal politics of the Labour Party that closely, would you care to name some names? Who are these more able people of the left? Who should we be looking out for in trying to judge form?
    If Corbyn steps down within 2/3 years Jon Trickett is a possible. Miliband had him in the shadow cabinet office.
    Thanks. Is that it though? Just one chap? From your post I was expecting more names.
    The others are (for now) people touted by the hard left, Nandy, Lewis etc. i want to see more of them in action before elevating into ones to watch. But, this clear out in the shadow cabinet will create room for some to gain internal credibility. Personally they look more like clean skins without Corbyn's baggage.
    Lewis has said he doesn't want a Shadow Cabinet post. When you can't even rely on your supporters...
    Replacements as PM tend to be either friendly or hostile - establishment or reactionary.

    Unless Corbyn wins a major victory (probably would require he becomes PM) in 2020 the replacement will be hostile, whether it comes in 2018 or August 2020.
  • The Shadow Cabinet "flouncers" are bad losers, plain and simple!

    Sore-Loserman :lol:
  • JWisemannJWisemann Posts: 1,082
    I'm a feminist in that I believe in equal treatment. Plato is as much of a blinkered prat as the most idiotic of the men on here (no mean feat), and I'm not afraid to point that out.
    She has the double whammy, in terms of crimes against the Internet, of not only being thick and arrogant (not a good combo), but also posting tons of clickbait, which is even more inexcusable. It'd be sexist for me to have double standards when being compelled by common decency to point this out, just because she is a delicate, defenceless female, or whatever.
  • TudorRoseTudorRose Posts: 1,662
    ydoethur said:

    Angela Eagle is being tipped for Shadow Chancellor. Labour are truly stuffed if that's the best they can manage. Even Chris Leslie would have done a better job than she will.

    EDIT - and to think I was (and am!) worried about Osborne hubris. Read this almost incredible piece on Labour's shadow cabinet:

    Len McCluskey, boss of the UK's biggest union Unite and key Corbyn backer, says he is not concerned about the resignations.

    He told Sky News the new team will be "top class" and "maybe the best we've had in a long time".

    "There's no need for any of us to lose sleep over this," he said.

    "The talent within the Labour Party is that good that we'll have an enormous, talented team, united and going forward to challenge this Tory government and their horrible, oppressive austerity programme."
    http://news.sky.com/story/1551572/corbyns-frontbench-team-will-be-top-class

    Those whom the gods wish to destroy...

    I can't help noticing that the photo caption says 'Mr Corbyn leaves his home for a long-planned mental health event'.
  • England all out 138 in the deciding one day international against Australia.

    England = Burnham/Cooper/Kendall?
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    TudorRose said:

    ydoethur said:

    Angela Eagle is being tipped for Shadow Chancellor. Labour are truly stuffed if that's the best they can manage. Even Chris Leslie would have done a better job than she will.

    EDIT - and to think I was (and am!) worried about Osborne hubris. Read this almost incredible piece on Labour's shadow cabinet:

    Len McCluskey, boss of the UK's biggest union Unite and key Corbyn backer, says he is not concerned about the resignations.

    He told Sky News the new team will be "top class" and "maybe the best we've had in a long time".

    "There's no need for any of us to lose sleep over this," he said.

    "The talent within the Labour Party is that good that we'll have an enormous, talented team, united and going forward to challenge this Tory government and their horrible, oppressive austerity programme."
    http://news.sky.com/story/1551572/corbyns-frontbench-team-will-be-top-class

    Those whom the gods wish to destroy...
    I can't help noticing that the photo caption says 'Mr Corbyn leaves his home for a long-planned mental health event'.
    Genuine LOL at that. :D
  • Cyclefree said:

    Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    The Right tend to condescend to women

    Disagree.
    Some on the right, then. In the two areas where I've worked, I've seen plenty of it. And not everyone on the left is like what I've described either. Still if we can't have a few enjoyable stereotypes on a Sunday lunchtime, when can we?!
    Turnip Taliban?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,776
    Cyclefree said:

    It's a fair question: why is the Labour Party so institutionally misogynistic?

    Or is it just down to their activists?

    The Right tend to condescend to women, acting all surprised if a woman utters a fully formed sentence all by herself ("Aren't you clever!"). The Left tend to be in favour of feminism if it means they can get more sex without any of that commitment nonsense. But once they've had it, the women are there just to make the tea.

    Still, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.

    I wouldn't say Labour is mysogynistic, but I have noticed a tendency for women who oppose "progressive" causes to be on the receiving end of unpleasant sexualised abuse.
  • alex.alex. Posts: 4,658
    I think it's going to be quite amusing watching how Corbyn goes about determining the party line on HOC votes. Whatever outsiders think about whipping, the fact is that the one thing it does do is save MPs a lot of time working out how to vote - especially in areas where they really have little interest. Take away some that and they won't know what to do which could result in some amusing outcomes.
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    edited September 2015
    It's reminding me of the first days of Obama when his team did all manner of incredibly crass and stupid things to signal how different and edgy they were.

    Such as the WH gift shop toys for the PM and iPod for HMQ - and the desk...
    Sandpit said:

    Isn't it convention that the LotO and the PM extend good wishes on each major religious day? It's Jewish New Year - has Jezzbollah done one yet?

    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/rosh-hashanah-2015-david-camerons-message

    Ms Plato, one fears that a lot of conventions are about to disappear! Who the hell is going to be Corbyn's Chief of Staff, in charge of all this necessary protocol that his boss couldn't give an Aylsbury Duck about..?
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 35,776

    surbiton said:

    MattW said:

    Roger said:

    When you thought things couldn't get any worse a 3rd PLATO appears!

    (Must be all this talk about a 'just society.....')

    Didn't Plato have a doctrine of multiple forms?
    For a few months , she was AWOL - the best days in PB.
    What is it with you Labour supporting types? Why do you have such a problem with women? Oh, and being polite?
    I don't get it either. The attacks on female bloggers* are more aggressive from people who claim they are all for feminism but still appear to think women should be seen but not heard.

    * though SeanT aint doing righties any favours with MrsB atm.
    Indeed it is baffling. – the regular attacks on the PB ladies, may sum up neatly why Labour supporters this past week rejected every female candidate for the roles of Mayor of London, Deputy party leader and the Party Leadership itself.
    He Who Must Not be Named had a particularly charming way with female posters, when he posted here.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 66,768
    TudorRose said:

    ydoethur said:

    Angela Eagle is being tipped for Shadow Chancellor. Labour are truly stuffed if that's the best they can manage. Even Chris Leslie would have done a better job than she will.

    EDIT - and to think I was (and am!) worried about Osborne hubris. Read this almost incredible piece on Labour's shadow cabinet:

    Len McCluskey, boss of the UK's biggest union Unite and key Corbyn backer, says he is not concerned about the resignations.

    He told Sky News the new team will be "top class" and "maybe the best we've had in a long time".

    "There's no need for any of us to lose sleep over this," he said.

    "The talent within the Labour Party is that good that we'll have an enormous, talented team, united and going forward to challenge this Tory government and their horrible, oppressive austerity programme."
    http://news.sky.com/story/1551572/corbyns-frontbench-team-will-be-top-class

    Those whom the gods wish to destroy...
    I can't help noticing that the photo caption says 'Mr Corbyn leaves his home for a long-planned mental health event'.

    Poor Michael Foot was once photographed next to a sign saying something like 'Psychiatric Ward', if John O'Farrell is to be believed.
  • Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 48,926
    edited September 2015
    alex. said:

    Icarus said:

    Has the Labour Party changed for the foreseeable future? Will the next leader come from the Corbyn wing of the party or be back to New Labour.

    The book on the next leader must be a very open one.

    Highly likely that next Leader comes from same wing. There are some people more able than Corbyn from that wing and they now will have an opportunity to become known.
    As a service to some of us that don't follow the internal politics of the Labour Party that closely, would you care to name some names? Who are these more able people of the left? Who should we be looking out for in trying to judge form?
    If Corbyn steps down within 2/3 years Jon Trickett is a possible. Miliband had him in the shadow cabinet office.
    Thanks. Is that it though? Just one chap? From your post I was expecting more names.
    The others are (for now) people touted by the hard left, Nandy, Lewis etc. i want to see more of them in action before elevating into ones to watch. But, this clear out in the shadow cabinet will create room for some to gain internal credibility. Personally they look more like clean skins without Corbyn's baggage.
    Lewis has said he doesn't want a Shadow Cabinet post. When you can't even rely on your supporters...
    To quote Wayne Rooney:

    "Nice to see your home fans boo ya! That's what loyal support is!"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IweagwHnNbo


  • JEOJEO Posts: 3,656
    surbiton said:



    To cut a long story short, Labour should be "Friends of Israel" - that's it !

    The nastiness of the Corbyn supporter mentality has been revealed clearly since he got elected. First we had one calling Kendall a "witch" and now we have one saying that anyone having an issue with coddling up to Islamist anti-semites has to be an Israeli lackey. And then we have several supporters defending Hamas and Hezbollah, two vicious militant groups.

    It is clear just how rotten the Labour Party is in its heart. The Blairite domination among the parliamentary party was merely a facade covering the intolerance and extremism beneath. Now it has been removed the full ugliness of what lies beneath is revealed.
  • TSE - suggestion for a future thread. Unite and their role in backing the last 3 Labour Leaders. 2 of whom lost their GEs.
  • calumcalum Posts: 3,046
    Interesting piece from Marr:

    http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2015/09/we-pundits-were-wrong-about-jeremy-corbyn-so-why-are-we-so-sure-that-hell-flop/

    It would be interesting to know how the Labour leader result would have played out as the others dropped out. I think the pundits need to reflect upon the convincing nature of Corbyn's victory, which came in the face of relentless ABC messaging from the MSM, party grandees etc. I think the unexpectedly early Corbyn attacks from Cameron & co are evidence that they can sense danger.
  • Plato_SaysPlato_Says Posts: 11,822
    :sunglasses:
    TudorRose said:

    ydoethur said:

    Angela Eagle is being tipped for Shadow Chancellor. Labour are truly stuffed if that's the best they can manage. Even Chris Leslie would have done a better job than she will.

    EDIT - and to think I was (and am!) worried about Osborne hubris. Read this almost incredible piece on Labour's shadow cabinet:

    Len McCluskey, boss of the UK's biggest union Unite and key Corbyn backer, says he is not concerned about the resignations.

    He told Sky News the new team will be "top class" and "maybe the best we've had in a long time".

    "There's no need for any of us to lose sleep over this," he said.

    "The talent within the Labour Party is that good that we'll have an enormous, talented team, united and going forward to challenge this Tory government and their horrible, oppressive austerity programme."
    http://news.sky.com/story/1551572/corbyns-frontbench-team-will-be-top-class

    Those whom the gods wish to destroy...
    I can't help noticing that the photo caption says 'Mr Corbyn leaves his home for a long-planned mental health event'.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 49,614
    JWisemann said:

    I'm a feminist in that I believe in equal treatment. Plato is as much of a blinkered prat as the most idiotic of the men on here (no mean feat), and I'm not afraid to point that out.
    She has the double whammy, in terms of crimes against the Internet, of not only being thick and arrogant (not a good combo), but also posting tons of clickbait, which is even more inexcusable. It'd be sexist for me to have double standards when being compelled by common decency to point this out, just because she is a delicate, defenceless female, or whatever.

    Mr Wisemann, really?

    Isn't it amazing that the Conservative party, the CONSERVATIVE party, only managed to elect a woman as leader 40 years ago, talks about individuals on merit rather than which 'group' they are from, and has managed to eliminate the casual misogyny of the left that you so epitomise?
  • MikeKMikeK Posts: 9,053

    The Shadow Cabinet "flouncers" are bad losers, plain and simple!

    Sore-Loserman :lol:

    You are taking your conversion to Corbynism a bit too seriously, Sunil, old chap. ;)
  • Labour Party..wake up..there are a number of small bags containing 30 pieces of silver just waiting to be picked up..just give Corbyn a call..he will be ever so grateful..but you will be expected to support and sympathise with the Brit killing IRA ..The Argentine claims on the Falklands..Spains claims on Gibralter..support some fiendish groups in the ME..pay homage to Putin..condemn as a crime the killing of some Islamic nutjobs who were planning a massacre on Whitehall..you will have to hate the armed forces and NATO..make friends with a whole bunch of murdering bastards who hate us..still 30pieces of silver aint ba bad price for your conscience is it
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