AlastairWatts
Active member
The same tune was played a hundred years ago when the choice was the Tories and the Whigs - parliamentary representation is structured and designed to protect the interests of the ruling elites. Voting once every 4 or 5 years for tweedledum or tweedledee is not democracy.
Corbyn's election as LP leader came out of the blue - a monumental f*ck-up by the Blairites who were so bland that they wanted a punch-bag to make the leadership election interesting. It blew up spectacularly in their faces. close to 500,000 people joined the LP as a result of the campaign to election Corbyn as leader and in its aftermath and - contrary to what Mellor said in a later response to me - it was not an 'army of student activists'. My family members and my in-laws living in Britain - all in their 60s - joined the LP to support Corbyn and his policies. The last time they did anything remotely political was 30 years ago when they boycotted the poll tax.
Starmer isn't a social democrat - he is a down the line tory - and the UK isn't 'left of centre' - it has two Tory parties - yet between 60%-75% of the population openly support socialist policies (as demonstrated in opinion poll after opinion poll).
Of course it was a coup - the fact that Corbyn resigned is irrelevant (although he should have dug in and fought the Blairites) - the Blairites spent 4 years attacking Corbyn, manufacturing fake scandals, repeatedly attempting to remove him as leader and doing their utmost to undermine his support among the public.
and yet another election defeat - or go for Blairite policies (without the illegal wars) and Labour to win?
What is the difference between a Tory government implementing Tory policies or a Blairite government implementing Tory policies apart from the colour tie they wear?
Working class people do not need pale pink Tories being 'tougher on benefits than the Tories' - they need the socialist policies that they support implemented and to do that a new mass party of working class people needs to be built in the UK (and in Ireland and many other countries as well).
Srewth. That's all straight out of the Daily Worker. Have you been 'away' for the last twenty years?