How has Jezza not been frog marched out of labour HQ yet
Doesn't take much indoctrination to see the big red star on Labour propaganda as Marxist,though.
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My Christmas tree has a big red star on it, doesn’t mean it’s Marxist.
When Ed Miliband allowed new members a vote, Momentum flooded in and took over the party. Even Tories were joining and voting for Corbyn. I think Labour are now one more bad appointment away from becoming obsolete.
The Blairites have spent decades expelling people from the LP that they felt were a threat to their power and control - since Corbyn was elected leader the Blairite bureaucracy have either expelled or refused membership to over 170,000 people - because they were supporters of Corbyn and his policies.
In political life there are two key democratic processes - the right of party members to select the candidate that is representing the party - and the right to decide policy through an annual conference and demand that political representatives implement these policies - the Blairites have demonstrated an utter contempt for the democratic process within the LP since the 1980s. Corbyn should now struggle to democratise the LP against the Blairites.
Those who are not members of the LP can then decide whether to support them or not - in the knowledge of the policies of the LP are and that those who are elected will implement those policies - and that is how the political process should operate.
The shambles that occurred yesterday is the result of a number of factors -
1. Corbyn failing to stick to his Leave position and caving into the Blairites on the issue of Brexit
2. The Blairites sabotaging the election campaign - those who were not standing spending large sums on advertising telling voters not to vote for Corbyn - and many those who were standing telling people that they wouldn't support Corbyn for PM
3. This has been the culmination of 3 years of active sabotage by the Blairites
4. A disgraceful, deceitful and scurrilous propaganda campaign against Corbyn accusing him of racism and anti-semitism (and a whole load of other crap besides) - not surprising given that most of the media in Britain is owned by billionaires.
5. Momentum also bear some responsibility for failing to build a mass, campaigning opposition to the Blairites, instead spending a lot of their time attacking others on the left who supported Corbyn.
As for 'listening to the people' - this is a soundbite - Corbyn's policies of defending the NHS, re-nationalising public services, defending education, reversing the austerity cuts etc - are popular among working class people - this election was not about those policies - it was about 'getting brexit done'.
Ken Livingston’s agrees with you (LBC this morning). Apparently Labour did nothing wrong and the answer is to ‘regulate’ the internet and the printed press. A lady rang in to say she has been blind from birth and has never read or even picked up a newspaper and she did not vote Labour. She and I’m sure plenty of others listening felt rather patronized by this line that we are all brainwashed. Labour is beginning to resemble a cult, with its advocates feeling they are revealers of truth.
Interesting. What percentage of the total votes cast did those votes reflect?
2005 35%
2010 29%
2015 30%
2017 40%
2019 32%
All efforts should be made to get Momentum out of the party but with the unions supporting them that's a big ask.o
Next leader has to be Keir Starmer shirley?
Not sure Starmer, a middle-class, trendy London based Remainer who led the charge for the second referendum policy would be best placed to reconnect with all those Northern, working class, leave voting, ex-Labour seats ..
My Christmas tree has a big red star on it, doesn’t mean it’s Marxist.
I don’t think that’s official Labour Party literature, anyway.
of a centre left party? sure. of Labour with Momentum controlling the party and the membership entralled to nationalisation and limitless spending? not happening.
Not sure Starmer, a middle-class, trendy London based Remainer who led the charge for the second referendum policy would be best placed to reconnect with all those Northern, working class, leave voting, ex-Labour seats ..
Think Momentum has had it's day, to be honest. It's day was sometime around 1970
Not sure Starmer, a middle-class, trendy London based Remainer who led the charge for the second referendum policy would be best placed to reconnect with all those Northern, working class, leave voting, ex-Labour seats ..