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Tories have a slim parliamentary majority, with a number of slim wins in marginal seats. With only a few other right of Labour seats (UKIP, DUP...?), that makes the rest of the house already 'left of Tory'. Unite that, regaining some of the marginals because those individual votes were split... I think that's more likely than regaining enough of the split-vote to make up the difference without recapturing votes and seats from the like of the SNP and the Greens.QuoteI disagree but I hope that most voters in the leadership election agree with you!I don't know that I'd vote for a Corbyn Labour any more than Miliband Labour - I'm waiting to see what Fallon does. This is just how I see the things from a Labour perspective.O.
I disagree but I hope that most voters in the leadership election agree with you!
Quote from: Shaker on August 13, 2015, 10:28:49 AMQuote from: jakswan on August 13, 2015, 10:08:55 AMQuote from: Shaker on August 13, 2015, 09:40:55 AMWhen has he been right about anything before?Maybe 1997, 2001 and 2005?Well, for a start I asked when he had ever been right about anything, not the electorate. But seeing as you mention it: is that your yardstick of rightness - the election of somebody like Blair? It's not mine.He had a strategy / policies which he thought would get him elected and he was right.
Quote from: jakswan on August 13, 2015, 10:08:55 AMQuote from: Shaker on August 13, 2015, 09:40:55 AMWhen has he been right about anything before?Maybe 1997, 2001 and 2005?Well, for a start I asked when he had ever been right about anything, not the electorate. But seeing as you mention it: is that your yardstick of rightness - the election of somebody like Blair? It's not mine.
Quote from: Shaker on August 13, 2015, 09:40:55 AMWhen has he been right about anything before?Maybe 1997, 2001 and 2005?
When has he been right about anything before?
And I will ask again, what is Labour for? Anyone got any ideas?
Tories have a slim parliamentary majority, with a number of slim wins in marginal seats. With only a few other right of Labour seats (UKIP, DUP...?), that makes the rest of the house already 'left of Tory'. Unite that, regaining some of the marginals because those individual votes were split... I think that's more likely than regaining enough of the split-vote to make up the difference without recapturing votes and seats from the like of the SNP and the Greens.
Picking up on the discussion on whether there is enough of a left vote to win , I see that UKIP are being counted here as 'right' . I would suggest that this isn't really that true. A lot of the UKIP voters are people who used to vote Labour. Even if we take Jack Knave, our own resident Kipper, much of what he espouses is what would be regarded as left wing, particularly in regards to business. The whole left right thing is an overdone simplicity.
UKIP and Tory are fairly authoritarian, though - typically considered right-wing as they've often gone hand in hand - with Labour fairly central on that score and the Greens and Lib Dems fairly libertarian.politicalcompass.org tracks that sort of thing quite well.O.
O, I'd put Labour firmly in the authoritarian segment, since they want the state to oversee most things. Tory would - with their free enterprise, free market approach - would seem to be less authoritarian. UKIP - I'm not sure. Farage seems to me to be very much a free-marketeer yet other things he says seem to put him firmly into the authoritarian group.
Doesn't matter who wins we are not seeing a Labour govt for 10 years unless the Tories split on Europe. The reduction in seats and boundary changes will guarantee that.
What is the problem exactly?
QuoteWhat is the problem exactly?Loath him or hate him, you've got to give Blair credit for one thing - he made Labour electable.The Corbynites are Hell-bent on achieving the opposite.
It is, UKIP are pretty much between Labour and Tory economically, whilst Lib Dems are left of both and Greens still further left.UKIP and Tory are fairly authoritarian, though - typically considered right-wing as they've often gone hand in hand - with Labour fairly central on that score and the Greens and Lib Dems fairly libertarian.politicalcompass.org tracks that sort of thing quite well.
Quote from: Lapsed Atheist on August 13, 2015, 02:38:52 PMQuoteWhat is the problem exactly?Loath him or hate him, you've got to give Blair credit for one thing - he made Labour electable.The Corbynites are Hell-bent on achieving the opposite.But Blair's approach may in the long run be responsible for the problem that now exists. Having triangulated, the Tories responded by triangulating back. Labour now has no real point.
Every article like this is another nail in the Blairite coffin, I think, so they are all getting their panties in a right knot - sit back and enjoy, I think.