- Jan 3, 2012
- 17,348
Like you, I am a centrist although slightly left of centre. Treat people as you would like to be treated yourself.
Couldn’t have put it better myself
Like you, I am a centrist although slightly left of centre. Treat people as you would like to be treated yourself.
And numerous opaquely funded think tanks....
Labour are really, really shit. I wish they weren't. I am desperate to vote Labour, I just can't. They are unelectable.
Blair used to get the same
Genuine question, why?
Labour are really, really shit. I wish they weren't. I am desperate to vote Labour, I just can't. They are unelectable.
Crikey.
Tell me, who was labour leader the last three times you voted labour?
I am guessing you are not on a wind up, so some clarification of your reasoning would be much appreciated, so that at very least I can learn how to re-educate myself.
They are in bits. They aren't a tour-de-force party like Blair in '97, full of new ideas and positivity. They are a party at war with itself, beholden to the unions. I don't want a socialist government any more than I want the Tories.
Their entire "campaign" seems to be "we don't like the Tories" without offering any actual solutions. The communication of the policy is shocking in this regard, some bizarre mutant hybrid of trying to appease the hard left while simultaneously undermining that with more centrist, electable fiscal policies.
It is a confused, Frankenstein's monster of far left socialist dogma, which Starmer has tried to blunt the edges of, pleasing nobody.
The party at its heart wants to be a socialist government. The public have clearly demonstrated they don't want that. The only way Labour can possibly win an election is a root and branch rebrand, a complete shunning of hard left ideology and to 100% endorse Starmer's move to the centre right.
As it stands they have absolutely no hope whatsoever of government.
Funny that elderly people who have witnessed both Labour and Conservative governments over their long lives choose unreservedly to return the Conservatives. Bit of a message there.
They are in bits. They aren't a tour-de-force party like Blair in '97, full of new ideas and positivity. They are a party at war with itself, beholden to the unions. I don't want a socialist government any more than I want the Tories.
Their entire "campaign" seems to be "we don't like the Tories" without offering any actual solutions. The communication of the policy is shocking in this regard, some bizarre mutant hybrid of trying to appease the hard left while simultaneously undermining that with more centrist, electable fiscal policies.
It is a confused, Frankenstein's monster of far left socialist dogma, which Starmer has tried to blunt the edges of, pleasing nobody.
The party at its heart wants to be a socialist government. The public have clearly demonstrated they don't want that. The only way Labour can possibly win an election is a root and branch rebrand, a complete shunning of hard left ideology and to 100% endorse Starmer's move to the centre right.
As it stands they have absolutely no hope whatsoever of government.
They are in bits. They aren't a tour-de-force party like Blair in '97, full of new ideas and positivity. They are a party at war with itself, beholden to the unions. I don't want a socialist government any more than I want the Tories.
Their entire "campaign" seems to be "we don't like the Tories" without offering any actual solutions. The communication of the policy is shocking in this regard, some bizarre mutant hybrid of trying to appease the hard left while simultaneously undermining that with more centrist, electable fiscal policies.
It is a confused, Frankenstein's monster of far left socialist dogma, which Starmer has tried to blunt the edges of, pleasing nobody.
The party at its heart wants to be a socialist government. The public have clearly demonstrated they don't want that. The only way Labour can possibly win an election is a root and branch rebrand, a complete shunning of hard left ideology and to 100% endorse Starmer's move to the centre right.
As it stands they have absolutely no hope whatsoever of government.
From that, I would presume that you didn’t listen to his speech today. If you did, you interpreted it all very differently to how I did.
Did you vote for Blair?
Did you rejoice at the passing of Corbyn?
I did both and I'm very pleased with today's conference speach and have hopes for labour going forward.
I presume you didn't listen to Starmer's conference speach then?
Lets be honest your never going to vote Labour, you show a complete misunderstanding of whats on offer,
That should read ...Did you vote for Blair?
Did you rejoice at the passing of Corbyn?
I did both and I'm very pleased with today's conference speach and have hopes for labour going forward.
I presume you didn't listen to Starmer's conference speach then?
Moving on to policies, he announced that a Labour government would upgrade 19 million homes so that they reach a minimum "Band-C" energy efficiency level, providing grants for low-income households to achieve this and low-interest loans for others.
The changes would include better insulation, double glazing and new heating systems, saving households £400 a year in bills on average, he promised.
Other pledges in the speech included:
Providing mental treatment within a month for all people in England who require it
Creating 8,500 more specialist mental health staff, providing an extra million people a year with help
Training "thousands" of extra teachers in England - his aides did not provide a more specific figure
What was missing, as always, was how this would be funded.
How about tax "the rich" for a change?
Embarrassing for him, but it is also boring up to now, especially the family bit, but he seems to be getting going now.
He may not have charisma, but in the same way I don't want jokes and ruffled hair, I just want results and a vast improvement from the car crash country that we live in.
Strange the way that political parties shoot themselves in the foot either in or out of Government.
Lets be honest your never going to vote Labour, you show a complete misunderstanding of whats on offer,