Islington North has been Labour since 1930's with massive majorities.
He won, for the first time, in 1983 by 5000 votes - that is not a massive majority
Islington North has been Labour since 1930's with massive majorities.
He won, for the first time, in 1983 by 5000 votes - that is not a massive majority
He won, for the first time, in 1983 by 5000 votes - that is not a massive majority
Didn't his predeccessor as MP join the SDP, making the 83 election a bit unusual?
nor am I
Fascinating way of looking at this! The Labour Party was infiltrated by 250,000 odd paying their £3.00 to get Corbyn elected by the then increased membership. That is not quite the situation you are trying to portray.
Prophetic.More gross complacency and/or misdirection from the NSC Blue Boys.
We have a "poll" of more than a thousand people making a real voting choice in a traditional Labour area.
The result was that the number of people actually voting Labour went UP by 10%.
Those are the facts.
Despite all of the anti-Corbyn media smearing, when it comes to knocking on doors and getting the vote out there is only one party that is prepared for a General Election. (Clue: It is the biggest political party in Europe and it isn't the Tories.)
Remember It's the hope that kills you
That was only for the first election: the £3 membership didn't apply for the second and he won that by an even bigger majority
One possible result popped into my head earlier today that, while unlikely, is still more likely than makes any logical sense. Let's say the Tories squeak home with a wafer-thin reduced majority, something like 2-3 seats.
The Tory knives would then be out for May, for having called an unnecessary election on a gamble that backfired; Corbyn, meanwhile, would be strengthened by Labour's unexpectedly good showing.
So, we'd have a situation where the victor was was under more pressure to resign than the loser. I'm not sure that's ever happened in British politics before.
As I said, there are a lot of "what ifs" there, and I don't think it's a likely set of circumstances -- but the fact that it's even a possible set of circumstances is really, really weird.
It's a shame that the Tories didn't prepare for an election they called
Is that meant to bother me?
When can we start the 'May - time to go' thread?