I agree with the first highlight.
Unfortunately (second highlight) this is not relevant all the while Corbyn decides to stay put if my understanding of the labour process* is correct. The membership have a big proportion of the vote, and as we saw before, if Corbyn is on the slate he will be re-elected by the members. To get on the slate you need to be a challenged incumbent or (if the leader resigns) an MP with 50 MP sponsors. So hoping Corbyn will be replaced anytime soon is beyond consideration right now.
I don't like Corbyn. I have emoted about it repeatedly. Not because of the IRA thing but because he has been so ponderous over key issues: Brexit and Anti-semitism; and because, frankly, I can't warm to him. I find Boris' easy charm more appealing. But that's becuase like so many, I am taken in by charming conscience-free psychopaths. So I can't let my gut feeling rule....
That's why, reluctantly, my higher cognitive functions are reminding me, when I falter, to back the more honest man (and here the less honest man is a free-and-easy serial liar - there is no contest). I really dislike serial liars, egregious fact benders, and politicians happy to break any rule to get their way. And when their way is actually a goal they have selected to suit their own gain and nothing more.....words are needless.
*I urged people to vote against Corbyn on here last time - hoping a thrashing would prompt a resignation, and the labour process, MP-led at the start, would preclude another old labour missfit onto the slate. Sadly momentum still think they 'won' the last general election. And.....times have now changed. I'd back liberal if I thought this would help, but nationally, and in my constituency, it won't.
Anyway, I understand how you might consider Boris the lesser of two evils, and maybe he will end up doing little harm. Only time will tell. All the best from darkest Faversham
ps I hate the term 'ordinary' people. A labour bloke kept using the expression on the radio this morning. I think many of us will agree, we are not effing ordinary. We do our bit, for our families and society. That's not ordinary. We are not all bottom feeders and cud chewers. Our lives matter.
Hi Harry,
Yes, I take your point re the Labour process, but being an optimist, I reckon, if the Tories get a majority, then Corbyn will go and hopefully McDonnell with him. Trouble, is as you say, the 'membership' have a large say and another budding far left candidate may well be voted in. However, it would be a start and MAY provoke a rethink amongst all but the real hardliners. Actually, I have no idea who would or could be put forward as a moderate . Keir Starmer obviously has a good brain, but beyond his Brexit views, does anyone know what he believes in? I don't. I am impressed by Rachel Reeves though.
No, we may not be ordinary as individuals, but collectively, it ain't that bad.............and better than the likes of Plooks and MoS refer to some of us!