Captain Dart
Well-Known Member
Within the next 3 months. With new Tory & Labour leaders.
Do you all think so too?
Do you all think so too?
Yep. I love Hilary Benn. I'm in PLP and like Corbyn but if we are to have any chance of defeating Tories then a new leader will have to be found to fight Boris as I think he'll be the new PM
Exciting times. I love politics!
There might be an official and an independent Labour party then. :angelic:Don't think they'll be a new Labour leader.
Within the next 3 months. With new Tory & Labour leaders.
Do you all think so too?
Totally agree that Corbyn isn't a leader, if anything McDonnell is better, but possibly more scary.Depends who the Labour leader is. The curveball as ever, is Corbyn.
Recently everone's been wrong in reading the will of the people. Was there an argument to be made to rope a dope, and have the Tories split apart and then try an election thinking they had an easy run?
I dunno tbh. I can align with the left... but Corbyn is patently showing himself as not a leader. He's had ample opportunity to call this government to account, and has failed mostly every time.
Totally agree that Corbyn isn't a leader, if anything McDonnell is better, but possibly more scary.
It's SDP all over again.
Until we get politicians with the bollocks to actually fight for what they believe in and not be 'whipped' into following party lines then we won't move forward. I couldn't stomach a Labour government that doesn't listen to it's core voters anymore than an arrogant Tory government that lies and cajoles. Too many nest liners and self interested career politicians all over the place. They are not trusted anymore !Just rejoined the Labour Party. Blair persuaded me to leave...
It is all in the air... and that scares me a little.
Back when I were a lad, I resigned my Labour Membership when Tony Blair got rid of Clause IV (the commitment to put the means of production in the hands of the people). As I get older, I get a little more pragmatic as I see the bigger damage done by having a principled opposition to a Conservative Party (especially to my job prospects!).
I had high hopes for Gordon Brown as the path through that rupture, but he let himself get moulded by his party into something he wasn't. I do worry as we see the splits becoming visible in the main parties however then, with the decline of the Liberals thanks to Clegg's insanity, we risk the rise of the disturbing radical sides...
Until we get politicians with the bollocks to actually fight for what they believe in and not be 'whipped' into following party lines then we won't move forward. I couldn't stomach a Labour government that doesn't listen to it's core voters anymore than an arrogant Tory government that lies and cajoles. Too many nest liners and self interested career politicians all over the place. They are not trusted anymore !
Indeed, and that's a big part of the 'problem'. Corbyn has already said he would stand for leader again so what is this coup going to achieve? There will be months of Labour infighting when they should be taking advantage of a leaderless Conservative party and then after all that Corbyn will be voted in again.Hugely popular among the young.
Hugely popular among the young.
I thought despite his lack of credentials he would show us what the Labour Party is all about, take us back to its founding values.
I'm starting to have my doubts. We could really have done with one side or the other having a decisive victory. With it being so close and not a unanimous result across the four countries of the UK it seems to have brought about a situation that wasn't really considered, or at least the consequences.I don't think ultimately the UK will leave, the next Government will just cut a better deal with the EU.
The whole thing is a mess and needs sorting ASAP. The longer the uncertainty goes on the more damage there is likely to be to the economy and the longer it will take to recover.
The rest of the EU don't appear to want to wait around. The way the exit procedure works we're not really in the driving seat here, the EU can apply a lot of pressure in terms of the negotiations to push the UK to a swift exit.Alternatively not jumping swiftly allows for a compromise to be found, that can be spun as a 'victory' for all bar the most mentalist of extremists.
The rest of the EU don't appear to want to wait around.
Indeed the clock doesn't start ticking until we invoke article 50 but that is the only thing on our side, everything else is stacked in the EU's favour by design to make leaving an unattractive prospect. They will not be happy to let us just sit on the result for months without doing anything. A long period of uncertainty is bad for both the EU and the UK.And the way it works we are in the driving seat in terms of time, as nothing happens until we say we want to bog off!
They will not be happy to let us just sit on the result for months without doing anything.
Bet they're shitting themselves at the prospect of having to take up the financial strain if UK actually leaves.Germany seem quite happy for that.
They've said there's no need to rush, that's different. Its not saying it can be put on hold indefinitely with no indication of timescale given.Germany seem quite happy for that.
They've said there's no need to rush, that's different. Its not saying it can be put on hold indefinitely with no indication of timescale given.
Depends who the Labour leader is. The curveball as ever, is Corbyn.
Recently everone's been wrong in reading the will of the people. Was there an argument to be made to rope a dope, and have the Tories split apart and then try an election thinking they had an easy run?
I dunno tbh. I can align with the left... but Corbyn is patently showing himself as not a leader. He's had ample opportunity to call this government to account, and has failed mostly every time.
Donald Tusk, president of the European council, Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European commission, and Martin Schulz, president of the European parliament along with Mark Rutte, prime minister of the Netherlands and EU president have said any delay to Britain’s exit would “unnecessarily prolong uncertainty”.You are saying the EU don't want to wait around. Germany seem more than relaxed with our timescales.
Donald Tusk, president of the European council, Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European commission, and Martin Schulz, president of the European parliament along with Mark Rutte, prime minister of the Netherlands and EU president have said any delay to Britain’s exit would “unnecessarily prolong uncertainty”.
Unfortunately they aren't the only country in the EU. And if you actually look at what was said "It shouldn't take forever, that's right, but I would not fight for a short timeframe" it doesn't indicate to me that Germany are happy to wait around indefinitely with no timescale given for us to decide what we're doing.And Germany seem quite happy.
Jeremy Corbyn would win an even bigger landslide if Labour MPs forced him to undergo a fresh leadership election, a new poll has revealed.
The ElectionData/YouGov poll of party members found that 62% would re-elect Mr Corbyn, up from the 59.5% of first preferences he received when he swept to victory last September.