Gremlin
Life President⭐
Smith saying he/Labour will challenge the article 50 thing (if he wins) will **** off a lot of the Labour root supporters.
Not to mention his own constituents.
Smith saying he/Labour will challenge the article 50 thing (if he wins) will **** off a lot of the Labour root supporters.
The government have had very little legislation pass through parliament without being watered down or scrapped. That has come to a halt since the party leader has been made to fight another leadership election. Whatever you think of Corbyn it is generally agreed that he will win this second leadership election and the only effect this election will have will be to reaffirm his support from the membership, publicise the disunity in the party and give the Tories 3 months to do whatever they want.
The promotion of Smith to leader contender shows that the challenge is half arsed - he has been an MP for 6 years, few people had ever heard of him and despite the low level of coverage they get he makes as many 'gaffs' as the likes of Corbyn and Boris Johnson.
The Tories can do what they want right now because the leader of the Labour Party is being made to reapply for his job and be involved in numerous lengthy televised debates.
Wow?!!Wow.
Do you really believe Corbyn was being an effective Leader of the Opposition prior to the leadership challenge? Do you really think that if he wins the leadership challenge he will all of a sudden become an effective Leader of the Opposition and that is the only thing stopping him?
Wow?!!
Depends how you define effective - he has been in the job for less than a year and in that time Labour have won big elections in London, Sheffield, Bristol, Oldham and in some with increased majorities, the government have had to water down or abandon major legislation and the Labour membership has nearly doubled and I think I'm right in saying their membership is now more than all other UK parties combined. So taking those major things into account - if the party were sensible they would accept that the leader is elected by the members and though his brand of socialism may not be their brand of socialism they are better off working with it and trying to adapt it rather than confront it and in doing so confront maybe 400,000 of the membership.
Will Labour decide to use the strengths to their advantage and work on reducing the weaknesses? Probably not. And will that affect how effective the opposition is - most definitely.
Sorry, thought I said Leader of the Opposition not leader of the Labour party:unsure:
Labour membership being boosted by Trots returning to the party or Tories signing up to sabotage Labour is neither here nor there when it comes to the running of the country. The victory of a London mayor who had to distance himself from Corbyn during the campaign is hardly a ringing endorsement of Corbyn either, but as that has nothing to do with being an effective Leader of the Opposition we can let that slide, like you did the car crash that is Labour in Scotland.
If the party were sensible they would accept that their MPs, who are incidentally elected by the country and hold a far wider mandate between them than Corbyn, have cottoned onto the fact that Corbyn is useless and find a replacement who can better hold May to account. Surely there's got to be someone vaguely competent in Labour?
Come on Yorkie....give us a clue who?
It's not really brewing, it was news a couple of weeks ago.There's a very funny story brewing around the Labour conference over a botched tender for security, where it looks like the conference security is going to have to be provided by a company one of the labour Unions paying for the conference is boycotting. To attend all delegates will be crossing a picket line!
It's like Labour have elected Barna.
Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the Labour Party are the same thing. But I accept your apology (despite not really knowing what you are apologising for).Sorry, thought I said Leader of the Opposition not leader of the Labour party:unsure:
Labour membership being boosted by Trots returning to the party or Tories signing up to sabotage Labour is neither here nor there when it comes to the running of the country. The victory of a London mayor who had to distance himself from Corbyn during the campaign is hardly a ringing endorsement of Corbyn either, but as that has nothing to do with being an effective Leader of the Opposition we can let that slide, like you did the car crash that is Labour in Scotland.
If the party were sensible they would accept that their MPs, who are incidentally elected by the country and hold a far wider mandate between them than Corbyn, have cottoned onto the fact that Corbyn is useless and find a replacement who can better hold May to account. Surely there's got to be someone vaguely competent in Labour?
what did Sadiq have that Zac didn't?
A personality.
Zac Goldsmith came across as a very wealthy Tim nice but dim. With his uncle Boris having to hold his hand he was a disaster.
The next election will be fought on Brexit....Labour could end up in third place.
what did Sadiq have that Zac didn't?
A personality.
Zac Goldsmith came across as a very wealthy Tim nice but dim. With his uncle Boris having to hold his hand he was a disaster.
The next election will be fought on Brexit....Labour could end up in third place.
No they wont.
So it may not fit your mindset of how politics works but the way I see it is the way forward for Labour is the membership. Miliband was constantly slated in the Tory press and lost. Kahn was constantly slated in the Tory press and won. The main difference was not in policy or personality but in the doubling of the membership that came with Corbyn. That's how I see it and that in the route to effective opposition - bottom up. And Labour have a...erm......very big bottom.
So it may not fit your mindset of how politics works but the way I see it is the way forward for Labour is the membership. Miliband was constantly slated in the Tory press and lost. Kahn was constantly slated in the Tory press and won. The main difference was not in policy or personality but in the doubling of the membership that came with Corbyn. That's how I see it and that in the route to effective opposition - bottom up. And Labour have a...erm......very big bottom.
Labour can go on making the same mistake of trying to win the middle ground or trying to win over Tory voters but the biggest untapped source of votes is the people that don't vote - those are the people that Labour can win over.
The main difference is that Ed Miliband was running for the country and Sadiq Khan for London. Of course, London had a Conservative mayor for eight years, but that was due to Boris Johnson being an exceptional politician rather than any great love for the Tory party across London.
Full credit to Khan for winning that election, particularly in light of the rubbish thrown at him, but him winning London does not equate to Jeremy Corbyn having a realistic chance of winning a general election.
Not sure exceptional politician is correct wording, more he had a good PR team behind to be one of "ordinary " people could relate to him
Dangling from a zip wire was one heck of a PR stunt, so was the Rugby tackle in the football match some years ago, very cleverly keeps him in the public eye as Good old Boris
He may have been a clever Politician in the way he waited to see which side he came out on Brexit, if true Cameroon offered him the world to change sides and yet he ends up in TM cabinet, maybe keep your friends close and your enemies closer
Would never call Boris an exceptional politician, just knows how to play the crowds
UTS
Third - so who would be first and second?what did Sadiq have that Zac didn't?
A personality.
Zac Goldsmith came across as a very wealthy Tim nice but dim. With his uncle Boris having to hold his hand he was a disaster.
The next election will be fought on Brexit....Labour could end up in third place.
If I talk about making the same mistakes what would make you think that I'm taking about the three elections they won rather than the two more recent ones they lost?Mistake? They won three elections. Some mistake. They then had the car crash that was Gordon Brown and Ed Millibland. They lost those elections because of them and a very untimely worldwide crash that the tories managed to blame Labour for, not because of the middle ground.
Mind you, if GB and EM were car crashes where does that leave Corduroy? Train crash I suppose.
The main difference is that Ed Miliband was running for the country and Sadiq Khan for London. Of course, London had a Conservative mayor for eight years, but that was due to Boris Johnson being an exceptional politician rather than any great love for the Tory party across London.
Full credit to Khan for winning that election, particularly in light of the rubbish thrown at him, but him winning London does not equate to Jeremy Corbyn having a realistic chance of winning a general election.