London Irish
Well-known member
No I'm afraid they do.
What about this over-reaching fact: Labour haven't won an election in this country without a centre-leaning front bench since 1974.
I think you mean 2005. Whatever fizz was in New Labour went flat years ago, there is no point trying to stick that back in the bottle and pretending it will be to anyone's taste. Blarism lost all those Scottish seats, Jim Murphy the arch Blairite was in charge of the party up there then. Yes Corbyn didnt win them back because the Scots already have their own Corbyn in Sturgeon.
"New Labour" lost votes in every single election after 1997. By 2005, Blair got less votes than Corbyn did last Thursday. When Blair left he was the most unpopular prime minister on record. Gordon Brown carried the can for that in the 2010 election defeat. Ed Miliband didn't so much better in 2015. In 2017, Labour got its biggest increase in votes since 1945, a jump of 3 million voters.
Rather than the simplistic narrative on Corbyn (he's resigned now anyway, so really time to talk about something else), Labour needs to look at what it did right in between 2015 and 2017 and build on that. The policies were good and popular. Part of that will be looking at what it did wrong between 2017 and 2019 also, of course. Forgetting about its Labour Leave voters I'd say is number one