There's something, if not comforting, then at least familiar about the ones who can only reel out names, slogans, soundbitesand catchphrases instead of argument. You always know were you are with them - nowhere.
I have two problems with Corbyn.
The first is that I don't agree with his hard left political positions. I have always been soft left and a pragmatist rather than an ideologue on political issues. So I'm centre right in Labour party terms (rather than Corbyn hard left), but centre left in overall political terms (as opposed to Corbyn's hard, hard left).
But that isn't the only issue. The second is one of leadership - a leader must have the ability and experience to lead if they are to be effective. Corbyn is woefully inexperienced as a leader and really doesn't demonstrate any leadership skills. Now if he was 30 you might perhaps excuse his lack of leadership - but he is 67 and prior to becoming leader his most significant leadership position in all his time in politics is chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on the Chagos Islands. No position as a minister (however junior), nor a shadow minister, no role as leader of a council etc. And you have to ask why - regardless of his political positions, were he to have previously demonstrated leadership skills, he would have ended up in some more senior roles, somewhere, at sometime. But he didn't and that ably demonstrates first his lack of leadership skills, secondly his chronic lack of leadership experience, which we see to ably and painfully at the moment.
And this isn't a failure of all his like minded political colleagues. Like him or loath him Ken Livingston has held significant leadership positions over many years - he has leadership skills and abilities if even if you don't agree with his political positions.
So to my mind the Labour party currently have a leader who cannot lead, and also has policies I (and the vast majority of the public) don't agree with. The Tories must think Christmas has come early which is a real shame. If Labour had a competent and electable leader, given that the Tories are tearing themselves apart they'd be romping towards victory in 2020 and way ahead in the mid-term polling - yet they are languishing several points behind the Tories in most current polls. For an opposition to have any chance in the next general election they need to be well ahead at this stage in the political cycle.
And back on topic - where on earth is Corbyn in the EU debate - he is completely invisible - he should be out there selling a positive case for the EU, relentlessly campaigning to get Labour voters to vote remain. There was some horrifying polling recently which indicated that almost half of Labour voters don't even know that the official Labour position on the referendum is to vote for remain. FFS. Even his Union chums are getting really twitchy about his lack of leadership on the EU referendum.
Corbyn should do a Sadiq Khan - agree, on this issue to share a platform with other leaders across the political spectrum in support of remain - ideally with Farron, Lucas, Sturgeon and Wood as well as Cameron. That would send an extremely strong message.