Because he’s not a communist and not Russian?
Nitpicking
Because he’s not a communist and not Russian?
I’m sure there are many of the Jewish faith who may not agree with that….
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
The kidz know.
I haven't read the thread, so this may have been mentioned before, but all those worrying/hoping that Corbyn will split the Labour vote: don't panic (or gloat) - it won't happen.
This was tried before. In 1996, disgusted by the rightward shift of New Labour, a group of Socialists under Arthur Scargill left Labour and set up a new left-wing Labour Party: Socialist Labour. There was much talk that it would split the Labour vote, but in it its first General Election in 1997 not only did it do nothing to stop the Blair landslide it only polled 0.2% of the vote. Not 2%, 0.2%. That was the high-water mark. Since then it has declined into total irrelevance, indeed in 2019 it only polled 494 votes.
It's a shame, because as an old-school 1970s Socialist it's my natural home (and of course they're staunchly anti-EU), but even I'll admit it's a wasted vote - assuming you can find one of their candidates of course.
It was remarkable how Britain's leading liar and documented racist won an election that many were convinced was against a racist liar who has by a country mile the MP with best documented history of fighting racism in all it's forms. A man that is only in parliament because he believes he can do something for those around him. In Corbyn's own constituency the vast majority of the local Jewish community hold him in the highest esteem because he has fought anti-Semitism from day one. How many MPs actually attend demonstrations and vigils against racism and racist violence, let alone organise those demonstrations. It is sad that many genuinely intelligent and well educated people can still regurgitate the tripe whipped up against Corbyn. My local MP was even claiming Jewish constituents were afraid to attend local party meetings on newsnight the week before the election. I had attended every one of those meetings for 3 years. The local left that ran the branch were majority Jewish. This includes a holocaust survivor, 2 children of holocaust survivors and an Israeli citizen. Israel was the topic of conversation once in that time after the massacre on the right to return march. A motion to condemn the violent response was supported by all but 2 people in the room. One of those opposed to the motion claimed all the dead were terrorists, then stormed out leaving the room in stunned silence.
The idea that Blair was a decent socialist that also set fire to the Middle East misses the point. His wars sum up the man, he was the wolf in sheep's clothing. Had the 2017 election been a week later after Glenthorpe Corbyn would have had a landslide. It took a massive effort by all those that preferred the status quo to persuade people they didn't want change - the Tories, Libs, media, Labour establishment, Rabbi Sachs, that Harry Potter woman etc. The final nail was when Starmer and the right of the party persuaded Corbyn to call a second referendum, destroying the support of the large base of leave voting labour voters in the north and places like Chingford. Where I was told this on the doorstep whilst canvasing over and over again.
Eer that’s definitely not what any of my Jewish friends think ! Most have traditionally voted Labour until Corbyn took power . Interestingly all but one have now gone back to support Labour because they have a new leader who thankfully isn’t like Corbyn . Ie doesn’t support prescribed terrorist groups like Hamas & IRA .
Astonishing that when we have a weak, lying, rule breaking PM who is being briefed against by half his party that Corbyn is seeking to split the progressive vote because Sub-Section 2, Paragraph 3, line 1 isn't quite socialist enough.
You can only conclude he never wanted power in the fist place. Some people are only comfortable criticising those who are actually leading from the sidelines. Jezza is one of them.
Yes. I am aware of the narrarative that Corbyn would have been a great PM and his legacy was stolen by a conspiracy of tories, Starmer, the media and the other people you mentioned. Much the same was said about Michael Foot (defeated by Murdoch). Personally I regard this as patronizing because you are casting a majority of voters as mugs who don't understand what's in their best interest. You may be correct to be patronizing (maybe voters are mostly mugs) but, if so Corbyn still had to work out how to win if he wanted to win, and should have had the wits to deal with the conspiracy. On that point alone (and there are many others) he was a massive failure.
I don't recall Corbyn calling a second referendum. I was very exercised about Brexit but I don't recall Corbyn showing any leadership on that whatsoever. If it whooshed me it would ave whooshed others. The idea that Corbyn's stance on Brexit, which he was 'forced' into by Starmer, is what swung the general election in favour of Johnson strikes me, frankly, as ludicrous. Don't believe everything you hear on the doorsteps of hesitant labour supporters in Chingford. And, personally I would never make political strategy on the back of the views of people who repeatedly elected Normal Tebbitt.
Presumably you regard Blair, who won 3 general eletions, as someone who did succeed in patronizing the mug electors, while doing all the things that pleased the likes of (and I will cut and paste) the Tories, Libs, media, Labour establishment, Rabbi Sachs, that Harry Potter woman and Starmer and the right of the party. That is itself a patronizing view; you appear to consider electors as wise when they vote hard old labour, but mugs when the vote soft labour (or tory, green, liberal or 'other').
Like my middle brother, you appear to still believe that the road to socialist utopia is 'no compromise with the electorate'. As a labour party member myself I find that laughable, and much prefer an electable labour party, one that seeks the best possible arrangements for society than can obtain sufficient support to put the party in power (the only way to effect change), because electors cannot be manhandled into the polling booth and made to vote; this is England, not China (or bloody Australia).
My advice is stop telling yourself that Johnston stole the election with the connivance of Starmer and his secret team of remainers. You'll end up like the old labour equivalent of the Trump gang. The name of the game, now is to win, not winge.
This.
The only people bringing up Corbyn these days are wistful old labourites so foolish they thought that Corbyn would win and save us all, encouraging Daily Mail reader types like potg to point and laugh at them.
Personally I quite like a bit of publicity about Corbyn, especially now that he is about to betray the labour party again, remindiing us how disloyal he was as a back bencher (repeatedly voting against the labour position) and warning against the folly of allowing a minority of noisy activists to hi-jack a political party. A lesson that conservatives will also need to learn soon as the folly of the Johnson gang become more evident.
Nice post Harry.
I think the issue is that if you share Corbyn's idealism, you're never going to agree to the point of view of others. This is not an issue around practicality, but more around fundamental socialist principles. Like many theories, these sound great, but don't work in practice - it doesn't stop the pursuance of utopia though.
I'm a natural Tory voter, but I can see that Boris has been a lying tool since he came to power. His right leaning principles talk to my view of the world but there is no way I would vote for him in the next election (I didn't in the last one either) because I neither like nor trust him. Its interesting that Corbynites still see their man as the Messiah with no shortcomings (one or two honourable exceptions on here tbf) and to just say it was the media is an insult to the population whose vote they seek.
I think he had some good ideas, but they need to be blended into a more moderate view of the world - not the "my way of the highway" view which many of the hard left seem to adhere to. An idealistic view of the world needs to be blended with practicalities.
HWT, do you really consider it disloyal to vote against the party if it’s something you disagree with?
Do you consider that all the Tory MPs now voting along with Johnson’s hardline Brexit party, even against their better judgement and even statements made in the past in support of our membership of the EU? Do you really believe that it is honourable to do a 180 degree turn because of personal advantage.
As for a noisy minority of Torys hijacking the party, I think that ship sailed some time ago.
If you need examples after all that’s happened over the last 2 years , then clearly you’re in denial..