Dave the OAP
Well-known member
Yvette Cooper or Jess Phillips.
If not, they should both be on the next strictly!
If not, they should both be on the next strictly!
David Miliband, although he should have been the last-but-two leader and Labour wouldn't then be in this mess.
They should beg David Milliband to get back into politics (if they don’t fancy Peter Kyle).
Just watched Wes Streeting MP for Illford North on the BBC
Very impressed, just the kind of centre left, eloquent, anti Corbynism leader the Labour party need.
FFS lets get someone like him in charge before the loonies convince themselves that they need to move further left when all the evidence and logic says they need to move to the centre.
If Boris stays for the full 5 years, it will be almost 50 years since anyone but Tony Blair won an election for Labour. He was the most successful leader ever and he was a centre left politician that drove the hard left out, Labour needs to begin that battle again or stay in opposition for ever. Wes could be a good start.
For me, the next leader needs to come from outside the London metropolitan elite. Starmer, Thornberry, Lammy represent a remain based culture in the Labour party that the Labour heartlands have rejected even if the cosmopolitan vote has stayed strong. Long-Bailey as a Salford born to a dockyard worker rising up to become a solicitor in law and into the party would resonate with the communities that Labour have just lost. There will be other candidates too.
Between the surprise popularity of the 2017 campaign and this one, Labour appear to have lost the essential basic message of a fairer society. Instead a garbled message of free things with no real detail of why or what that means and how it would work. Free broadband may well be a brilliant policy for a dynamic productive engaged workforce, however without context, or detail, it mostly felt like a giveaway. People don't want giveaways, they want to be housed, fairly paid for hard work, their children educated and their families health needs taken care of.
Labour cannot win without the proud hard working communities around the country, and those communities I feel will continue to feel patronised by London-centric politicians who they little understand and who they feel little understand them.
This is going to be less about policies, more about identity. Can Labour be outward looking not inward, can they compromise, innovate into a progressive looking offering that looks forward beyond reflections of a tainted past.
Milliband had a retail campaign like a shopping list of desires. 2017 'for the many' got the tone almost right in creating a fairer society, but that success got blown out of proportion for a 2019 black friday giveaway to mask the elephant in the room. Perhaps a return to basics. What can you talk about to an ordinary person on the doorstep that they will relate to and doesn't sound pie in the sky, and strikes them as a fairer way of doing things.
The soul of the party is on the line. Hoping this damaging defeat is a wake up call to members that a previous winning mantra of 'education education education' might need to be 'compromise compromise compromise'.
Ah yes, the Shadow Business Secretary who thought that companies were taxed on turnover, not profits.
Might as well get Blair back if you think Milliband is the answer
Corbyn should remain as leader and launch a struggle within the party to remove the Blairites who remain in control of the LP bureaucracy.
Labour lost this election because Corbyn attempted to accommodate the Blairites by caving in on his previous Leave position (coupled with the fact that he refused to take action against LP councilllors who imposed Tory cuts on local services).
The Blairites have been sabotaging Corbyn's leadership since he was elected - and the time has come now to make the public representatives of the LP more representative of the vast majority of the membership.
Corbyn should remain as leader and launch a struggle within the party to remove the Blairites who remain in control of the LP bureaucracy.
Labour lost this election because Corbyn attempted to accommodate the Blairites by caving in on his previous Leave position (coupled with the fact that he refused to take action against LP councilllors who imposed Tory cuts on local services).
The Blairites have been sabotaging Corbyn's leadership since he was elected - and the time has come now to make the public representatives of the LP more representative of the vast majority of the membership.
Corbyn should remain as leader and launch a struggle within the party to remove the Blairites who remain in control of the LP bureaucracy.
Labour lost this election because Corbyn attempted to accommodate the Blairites by caving in on his previous Leave position (coupled with the fact that he refused to take action against LP councilllors who imposed Tory cuts on local services).
The Blairites have been sabotaging Corbyn's leadership since he was elected - and the time has come now to make the public representatives of the LP more representative of the vast majority of the membership.
Long-Bailey is cast in the same Momentum mould as Corbyn and Lansman, an identical agenda. Unpalatable to 2/3 of the electorate.
Corbyn should remain as leader and launch a struggle within the party to remove the Blairites who remain in control of the LP bureaucracy.
Labour lost this election because Corbyn attempted to accommodate the Blairites by caving in on his previous Leave position (coupled with the fact that he refused to take action against LP councilllors who imposed Tory cuts on local services).
The Blairites have been sabotaging Corbyn's leadership since he was elected - and the time has come now to make the public representatives of the LP more representative of the vast majority of the membership.
Momentum is massively overplayed. They represent less than 10% of the Labour membership. She's simply been a loyal MP since her election in 2015, and we don't actually know how policy direction anymore than we know what Starmer or others will be.
If your assertion that the centre ground is what the electorate want, then that ignores a) the vote share of 2017, and b) how poorly the Lib Dems have done on a centrist manifesto that the IFS basically said was the best out of the main parties. An endorsement that has returned nothing.
It also simplifies the policy argument that Labour can only win with a centrist policy book when Labour had Scotland through those years, the SNP vote has changed all that, and Brexit has hardened the Scottish vote. The SNP can neither be called a party of the center.
It's a very confused picture with Brexit, Corbyn and McDonnell's baggage. The actual policies in 2017 went down well, only they overcompensated in this election because Labour was the party most effected by huge numbers of Leave voters in the North and Wales, but huge numbers of remain in the cities.
Not as straightforward as you're making out.
Labour needs a competent public performer who will put the right noses out of joint (on both sides), capable of laying into Johnson as and when he cocks up (as he inevitably will) and is prepared to "tell it like it is". A proper dose of salts.
For me, there's only one candidate for this. Jess Phillips.