Do you want to discuss boring politics? (235 Viewers)

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Thank you for proving my point.

I haven’t. My point is no one believes Labour will deliver these promises without substantial damage to the economy and individual lives.

Even McDonald admitted a run on the pound didn’t he? So if the Tories promises these they’d believe they are at least capable of potential delivery - Labour they would see as the cost of delivery would impact them negatively and would just assume they are incompetent liars
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
I haven’t. My point is no one believes Labour will deliver these promises without substantial damage to the economy and individual lives.

Even McDonald admitted a run on the pound didn’t he? So if the Tories promises these they’d believe they are at least capable of potential delivery - Labour they would see as the cost of delivery would impact them negatively and would just assume they are incompetent liars

Which is all a matter of perception and not the substantive truth. George Osborne admitted that ‘Labour crashed the economy’ was spin that worked better than even he had hoped. He also went on to concede that the Brown government acted reasonably and they would likely have reacted similarly to the crisis.

Realise it or not you have proven my point quite effectively
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Which is all a matter of perception and not the substantive truth. George Osborne admitted that ‘Labour crashed the economy’ was spin that worked better than even he had hoped. He also went on to concede that the Brown government acted reasonably and they would likely have reacted similarly to the crisis.

Realise it or not you have proven my point quite effectively

No I haven’t. Labour have a massive credibility issue. It’s easy to pat themselves on the back and say the public like our policies. The problem is they are seen as incompetent and more importantly likely to cost more in the pocket

if you ask would you like zero income tax I’m sure people would

Get a focus group and show a picture of Len Mccloskey and ask would you vote for a party that gets funding from this man. If the answer is a resounding no what are you going to do
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
No I haven’t. Labour have a massive credibility issue. It’s easy to pat themselves on the back and say the public like our policies. The problem is they are seen as incompetent and more importantly likely to cost more in the pocket

if you ask would you like zero income tax I’m sure people would

Get a focus group and show a picture of Len Mccloskey and ask would you vote for a party that gets funding from this man. If the answer is a resounding no what are you going to do

My point was perception overrides substance-all you are saying reinforces that. I’m sure we could show all the rather wealthy donors to the Tories if you really want to go down that route.

I’m sure Starmer laughing at the teaching unions killed that off anyway
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
My point was perception overrides substance-all you are saying reinforces that. I’m sure we could show all the rather wealthy donors to the Tories if you really want to go down that route.

I’m sure Starmer laughing at the teaching unions killed that off anyway

There is no substance to a manifesto - it isn’t a binding contract - McDonnell eventually admitted a lot was undeliverable in a term anyway didn’t he?
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
There is no substance to a manifesto - it isn’t a binding contract - McDonnell eventually admitted a lot was undeliverable in a term anyway didn’t he?

The 2019 manifesto became a desperate effort to take the narrative away from Brexit, even I had a hard time voting Labour then. The perception that Labour wrecked the economy in 2008 still carries strongly now and it originated from Osborne and Cameron’s bullshitting, admitted to be so years afterwards.

A manifesto is not binding but is also not meaningless as promises made to the electorate.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
It is substantive

We used to run focus groups at Jaguar and it was owners of other luxury brands. So we’d ask what they’d like to see in a car and not tell them what marque the car was but then say the car meets all the criteria they apparently want

It gave people in engineering a warm feeling but it missed the point. The brand was tarnished and as soon as you revealed it’s a Jaguar no one wanted to be associated with it even though it ticked boxes. Old mans brand, behind the game, can’t be true, need to buy two as one will be in the garage

Exactly. The perception does not equal the truth. I've not been paying attention over the last few years but I know in reliability surveys Jag were one of the top rated brands but amongst the general public it still had that 'will it break down?' mentality towards it, as had any British name due to an archaic opinion based on the BL period of the 1970's. Mercs on the otherhand people had an opinion were bulletproof despite the build quality and reliability have fallen of a cliff.

You can then relate that to politics where you've got an opinion of Labour's abilities largely based still on a view from the 1970's whereas the Tories have a reputation enhanced way beyond what they are actually achieving.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Very much true when people are polled on their perceptions of the parties and politicians compared to their policy preferences. The Conservatives did a terrible job of their 10 years in government and got rewarded with a bumper majority off the back of a meaningless 3 word slogan.

It’s not about anything substantive really is it? Johnson polls as ‘looking more ministerial’ whereas Corbyn polled better on ‘cares about people like me’. And of course that woman on QT who voted Tory but seemed genuinely upset and surprised at her benefits being cut and it harder to get by. The formula is:

Long words
Posh accent
Acting like a rumbunctious clown
Wave the flag
Raise the pint

Bumper majority

With all due respect, this kind of thinking is exactly why Labour finds itself out of touch with the electorate.

The party just doesn’t seem capable of confronting its own electoral failures. Generally, its traditional working class base feels like the Labour Party is a party for the cities and middle class graduates. Brexit accelerated the disconnect for a number of reasons as, frankly, the Labour establishment failed to understand why people voted for Brexit in the first place. Increasingly, fringe social issues and a fixation on identity politics has only exasperated the disconnect between the Party and its traditional base.

It’s also worth noting that Labour has literally given up and made no effort to try and discredit the SNP to win back some Scottish seats. Hence, you’ve got the Tories as the second largest Scottish party now.

The Labour Party has shown nothing it’s learned anything from its wipeout in Scotland, and risks the same thing across the Red Wall.

There are serious issues with the Labour Party that it needs to confront or it’ll face electoral oblivion and/or extinction.
There are serious issues with the Labour Party that it needs to confront or it’ll face electoral oblivion and/or extinction.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Not really true, is it?

Labour haemorrhaged votes on both sides of the Brexit debate. Lost around 1 million votes to the Lib Dem’s and the Greens and about 800 thousand votes to the Brexit Party and the Tories. The Remainer’s were not happy happy with Labour lack of commitment to a second referendum whilst the Leaver’s weren’t happy at Labour’s lack of commitment to Brexit.

In the aftermath of the election, Momentum campaigners and even McDonnell conceded the manifesto program was meant for a 10 year government. On the doorstep, campaigners found people didn’t find the overall Labour offering to be credible.

Having popular policies is one thing, but it has to fit into a wider, viable program for government. Which was lacking a coherent policy on the issue of the day: Brexit.

Point of order: you’re taking 2017 to 2019 changes which will minimise Brexit losses and maximise Remain losses. Should take 2015-2019, 2017 was very much a one off election in terms of voting patterns.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Exactly. The perception does not equal the truth. I've not been paying attention over the last few years but I know in reliability surveys Jag were one of the top rated brands but amongst the general public it still had that 'will it break down?' mentality towards it, as had any British name due to an archaic opinion based on the BL period of the 1970's. Mercs on the otherhand people had an opinion were bulletproof despite the build quality and reliability have fallen of a cliff.

You can then relate that to politics where you've got an opinion of Labour's abilities largely based still on a view from the 1970's whereas the Tories have a reputation enhanced way beyond what they are actually achieving.

Perception can also equal the truth - and the majority of people I suspect if surveyed in a cosy Labour focus group would list working class association and trade union association as massive negatives to voting for them but they would just be ignored
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Perception can also equal the truth - and the majority of people I suspect if surveyed in a cosy Labour focus group would list working class association and trade union association as massive negatives to voting for them but they would just be ignored

Eh? You think people don’t vote Labour because they’re associated with the working class? That’s a new one.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Point of order: you’re taking 2017 to 2019 changes which will minimise Brexit losses and maximise Remain losses. Should take 2015-2019, 2017 was very much a one off election in terms of voting patterns.

Was it?

The UKIP vote in 2015 was largely similar to the Brexit Party vote in 2019 in the constituencies they actually stood in.

Labour should’ve done one of two things to mitigate the electoral wipeout:

1) Went all in with the 2nd referendum option as the Lib Dem’s did
2) Accepted Brexit and made the case for Lexit (Left wing Brexit)

In any case, it did neither, tried to sit on the fence and was impaled by the electorate.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Perception can also equal the truth - and the majority of people I suspect if surveyed in a cosy Labour focus group would list working class association and trade union association as massive negatives to voting for them but they would just be ignored

Yes it can equal the truth. But you yourself gave an example which proved it's not necessarily the case. So as you apparently work for Jag why have you not learnt from your mistakes and rectified them? To which your, justifiable, reply, would be we have. But the perception among the public is that you haven't, so I therefore guess you haven't.

Of course Labour will have links to unions, but are you saying those links are as bad as they were in the 70's? Was there massive strike action in the Blair/Brown era comparable to the 70's? Do trade unions have anywhere near the power they used to have? Even under 'Commie' Corbyn did they feel emboldened to encourage massive widespread strikes? Yet that association is still commonly made.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
With all due respect, this kind of thinking is exactly why Labour finds itself out of touch with the electorate.

The party just doesn’t seem capable of confronting its own electoral failures. Generally, its traditional working class base feels like the Labour Party is a party for the cities and middle class graduates. Brexit accelerated the disconnect for a number of reasons as, frankly, the Labour establishment failed to understand why people voted for Brexit in the first place. Increasingly, fringe social issues and a fixation on identity politics has only exasperated the disconnect between the Party and its traditional base.

It’s also worth noting that Labour has literally given up and made no effort to try and discredit the SNP to win back some Scottish seats. Hence, you’ve got the Tories as the second largest Scottish party now.

The Labour Party has shown nothing it’s learned anything from its wipeout in Scotland, and risks the same thing across the Red Wall.

There are serious issues with the Labour Party that it needs to confront or it’ll face electoral oblivion and/or extinction.
There are serious issues with the Labour Party that it needs to confront or it’ll face electoral oblivion and/or extinction.

But literally a few pages ago we had others saying the problem is that they're too far left and not focusing enough on the middle class under a Blairite strategy.

So which is it? Are they too entrenched as a middle class party and ignoring the man on the street or are they not doing enough to appeal to the 'Middle England' because they're obsessed with this working class image?

It's impossible to confront the issues when people are telling you you're doing the exact opposite things. And when the things they complain about them not doing are applicable just as much, in not more so, to the party they did vote for.


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D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Was it?

The UKIP vote in 2015 was largely similar to the Brexit Party vote in 2019 in the constituencies they actually stood in.

Labour should’ve done one of two things to mitigate the electoral wipeout:

1) Went all in with the 2nd referendum option as the Lib Dem’s did
2) Accepted Brexit and made the case for Lexit (Left wing Brexit)

In any case, it did neither, tried to sit on the fence and was impaled by the electorate.
Or at the very least, managed some kind of pact with the Lib Dems. They only moved to full-on revoke because Labour took their policy when it looked popular, but they explained it less well than the Libs had done... mainly because they refused to say what position they'd be championing in said second referendum!
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Was it?

The UKIP vote in 2015 was largely similar to the Brexit Party vote in 2019 in the constituencies they actually stood in.

Labour should’ve done one of two things to mitigate the electoral wipeout:

1) Went all in with the 2nd referendum option as the Lib Dem’s did
2) Accepted Brexit and made the case for Lexit (Left wing Brexit)

In any case, it did neither, tried to sit on the fence and was impaled by the electorate.

Yeah it was, lots of soft Tories and centre left Remainers voted Corbyn in 2017 purely to stop/soften Brexit, also many Brexiters left Labour post 2016 pre 2017.

Moreover if you’re looking at the impact of Brexit, why wouldn’t you compare before and after instead of slightly after and a bit more after?

1) was impossible electorally, there was never a majority for a second referendum.

2) was impossible politically, huge chunks of the party would’ve raised hell.

The die was cast for the left/centre-right on Brexit with the fucking awful Remain campaign, all Corbyn could do IMO was choose the dressing he wanted on his shit sandwich.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
But literally a few pages ago we had others saying the problem is that they're too far left and not focusing enough on the middle class under a Blairite strategy.

So which is it? Are they too entrenched as a middle class party and ignoring the man on the street or are they not doing enough to appeal to the 'Middle England' because they're obsessed with this working class image?

It's impossible to confront the issues when people are telling you you're doing the exact opposite things. And when the things they complain about them not doing are applicable just as much, in not more so, to the party they did vote for.


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Middle England != Middle Class

Also a lot of middle class people don’t see themselves as middle class. See fatso in this thread and the QT “£80k is average” guy.

It’s all about eating quinoa and riding a homespun vegan penny fathing or whatever.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
With all due respect, this kind of thinking is exactly why Labour finds itself out of touch with the electorate.

The party just doesn’t seem capable of confronting its own electoral failures. Generally, its traditional working class base feels like the Labour Party is a party for the cities and middle class graduates. Brexit accelerated the disconnect for a number of reasons as, frankly, the Labour establishment failed to understand why people voted for Brexit in the first place. Increasingly, fringe social issues and a fixation on identity politics has only exasperated the disconnect between the Party and its traditional base.

It’s also worth noting that Labour has literally given up and made no effort to try and discredit the SNP to win back some Scottish seats. Hence, you’ve got the Tories as the second largest Scottish party now.

The Labour Party has shown nothing it’s learned anything from its wipeout in Scotland, and risks the same thing across the Red Wall.

There are serious issues with the Labour Party that it needs to confront or it’ll face electoral oblivion and/or extinction.
There are serious issues with the Labour Party that it needs to confront or it’ll face electoral oblivion and/or extinction.

I am not running for political office. I am saying though that the way the ‘winner’ is decided by perception and personalities pisses me off big time.
 

David O'Day

Well-Known Member
Think you’re right, which is kinda depressing considering it’s Jo Cox’s old seat and that’ll mean the ratty little terrorist got what he wanted.

As I said the voting last week shows it will be very close, it was around 1% in the tories favour

Also the small town voting last week is was a lot closer than the narrative people are telling.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
But literally a few pages ago we had others saying the problem is that they're too far left and not focusing enough on the middle class under a Blairite strategy.

So which is it? Are they too entrenched as a middle class party and ignoring the man on the street or are they not doing enough to appeal to the 'Middle England' because they're obsessed with this working class image?

It's impossible to confront the issues when people are telling you you're doing the exact opposite things. And when the things they complain about them not doing are applicable just as much, in not more so, to the party they did vote for.


giphy.gif

It’s a balancing act and always has been for Labour

Tory Remainers were more willing to vote for Brexit than there were to vote potentially remaining in the EU under a Labour government led by Corbyn. Simultaneously, Labour Leave voters abandoned the party to vote the Brexit Party or Conservative.

Blair would not win an election in the UK if he his career had reborn to today. Back in 1997 through to 2010, Labour could rely on unwavering support from its traditional base whilst appealing to ‘Middle England’. Equally, Corbyn was throughly rejected in 2019 and there were warning signs from the 2017 election too.

The electoral landscape has been changing from 2010 and Labour either has to; rebuild its old electoral coalition or find a new one to win power. Its popularity among students and cities will not win them an election alone.

The Labour moderate and left wings of the party arguing over the direction of the party is like two bald men arguing over a comb. That analogy was taken from Paul Embrey, an advocate for Blue Labour.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
It’s a balancing act and always has been for Labour

Tory Remainers were more willing to vote for Brexit than there were to vote potentially remaining in the EU under a Labour government led by Corbyn. Simultaneously, Labour Leave voters abandoned the party to vote the Brexit Party or Conservative.

Blair would not win an election in the UK if he his career had reborn to today. Back in 1997 through to 2010, Labour could rely on unwavering support from its traditional base whilst appealing to ‘Middle England’. Equally, Corbyn was throughly rejected in 2019 and there were warning signs from the 2017 election too.

The electoral landscape has been changing from 2010 and Labour either has to; rebuild its old electoral coalition or find a new one to win power. Its popularity among students and cities will not win them an election alone.

The Labour moderate and left wings of the party arguing over the direction of the party is like two bald men arguing over a comb. That analogy was taken from Paul Embrey, an advocate for Blue Labour.

The thing is the trust in Labour in these communities was economic not cultural originally. You voted Labour because you knew your shop steward or your union rep and would be drenched in workplace politics.

Once that was unhooked, the cultural chasm between the liberal middle class wonks and the conservative (small c) workers was exposed.

So getting their traditional voter coalition together now is virtually impossible. What do you offer the working man who feels like he has everything?

It would really need to be a Liberal not a Labour Party and I don’t know what that looks like in modern Britain or where it gets it’s voter coalition. But the Lib Dem’s seem to do well in the shires and the like that were traditionally Conservative. Maybe there’s a new coalition there?

All depends how long the Brexit honeymoon lasts I guess. The amount of political capital that bought the Tories can’t be underestimated. Thatcher was an equivalent and it took twenty years for them to be cleaned of that stench. So you’re looking at mid 2030s before Labour can rehabilitate themselves.

Grim.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Anybody got a spare 535 quid to help a friend out?
Going to be the best episode of The Sheriffs are Coming ever. They rock up at Downing Street but Boris Johnson has them by the nuts because he paid for nothing in the flat so they leave empty handed and an agreement that Boris pays £10 a month for the next 6 years.

Or. Boris pleads poverty before getting a mate to pay over the phone by credit card. Hello, Lord Brownlow. It’s Boris here, I’m in a bit of a pickle.

Or. Boris hides in a fridge pretending he’s no where near home and won’t be back for hours.
 

Skybluefaz

Well-Known Member
Going to be the best episode of The Sheriffs are Coming ever. They rock up at Downing Street but Boris Johnson has them by the nuts because he paid for nothing in the flat so they leave empty handed and an agreement that Boris pays £10 a month for the next 6 years.

Or. Boris pleads poverty before getting a mate to pay over the phone by credit card. Hello, Lord Brownlow. It’s Boris here, I’m in a bit of a pickle.

Or. Boris hides in a fridge pretending he’s no where near home and won’t be back for hours.
Bootlickers like it'sabatch will be sharing a go fund me for him on Facebook to get it paid.
 

Philosoraptor

Well-Known Member
The thing is the trust in Labour in these communities was economic not cultural originally. You voted Labour because you knew your shop steward or your union rep and would be drenched in workplace politics.

Once that was unhooked, the cultural chasm between the liberal middle class wonks and the conservative (small c) workers was exposed.

So getting their traditional voter coalition together now is virtually impossible. What do you offer the working man who feels like he has everything?

It would really need to be a Liberal not a Labour Party and I don’t know what that looks like in modern Britain or where it gets it’s voter coalition. But the Lib Dem’s seem to do well in the shires and the like that were traditionally Conservative. Maybe there’s a new coalition there?

All depends how long the Brexit honeymoon lasts I guess. The amount of political capital that bought the Tories can’t be underestimated. Thatcher was an equivalent and it took twenty years for them to be cleaned of that stench. So you’re looking at mid 2030s before Labour can rehabilitate themselves.

Grim.

I disagree. Labour has moved progressively right since Kinnock whilst the people who mainly supported them, the working class hasn't. What we have now is a chasm of differences between many at the local and national level of Labour, and the working class. This has already been played out in Scotland where they have lost many heartlands and all the way to Durham, where Labour first started their journey, to the North and the Midlands.

Moving right is not going to cut the mustard with the people you are historically meant to represent. Seems like 9 years is an ideal time to disenfranchise these people and to pick up votes on the right.

Here's another prediction for the next by-election, exactly the same thing that has happened to labour in Hartlepool with the grassroots or people historically linked to Labour, will go into an uproar once again.

Any idea when the Forde Inquiry is going to release their report?
 
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shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I disagree. Labour has moved progressively right since Kinnock whilst the people who mainly supported them, the working class hasn't. What we have now is a chasm of differences between many at the local and national level of Labour, and the working class. This has already been played out in Scotland where they have lost many heartlands and all the way to Durham, where Labour first started their journey, to the North and the Midlands.

Moving right is not going to cut the mustard with the people you are historically meant to represent. Seems like 9 years is an ideal time to disenfranchise these people and to pick up votes on the right.

Here's another prediction for the next by-election, exactly the same thing that has happened to labour in Hartlepool with the grassroots or people historically linked to Labour, will go into an uproar once again.

Any idea when the Forde Inquiry is going to release their report?

I mean there’s literally no data to back up your point and tons to back up mine. If what you said was true the trends wouldn’t have got rocket boosters under Corbyn. He was very left wing but culturally turned off voters.

As for the Forde Report, same as it’s been for ages, after the ICO investigation finishes.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
I disagree. Labour has moved progressively right since Kinnock whilst the people who mainly supported them, the working class hasn't. What we have now is a chasm of differences between many at the local and national level of Labour, and the working class. This has already been played out in Scotland where they have lost many heartlands and all the way to Durham, where Labour first started their journey, to the North and the Midlands.

Moving right is not going to cut the mustard with the people you are historically meant to represent. Seems like 9 years is an ideal time to disenfranchise these people and to pick up votes on the right.

Here's another prediction for the next by-election, exactly the same thing that has happened to labour in Hartlepool with the grassroots or people historically linked to Labour, will go into an uproar once again.

Any idea when the Forde Inquiry is going to release their report?

This is another where the answer offered is the complete opposite of another person, both of whom appear to be non-Labour voters and thus the party must be looking to appeal to.

You're saying the party has moved right whereas their base hasn't, but just a page or two ago there was someone saying the party has gone back towards the left when the base has moved right. Whichever way they move there is someone there telling them they need to head in the other direction.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Going to be the best episode of The Sheriffs are Coming ever. They rock up at Downing Street but Boris Johnson has them by the nuts because he paid for nothing in the flat so they leave empty handed and an agreement that Boris pays £10 a month for the next 6 years.

Or. Boris pleads poverty before getting a mate to pay over the phone by credit card. Hello, Lord Brownlow. It’s Boris here, I’m in a bit of a pickle.

Or. Boris hides in a fridge pretending he’s no where near home and won’t be back for hours.

It's this that makes me so annoyed at the 'the public aren't interested' spiel the spokespeople always go into.

The man who is First Lord of the Treasury says he needs 10 times the average wage of a British worker just to get by each year, a lot of that due to his own inability to control himself and keep it in his pants. Is this the 'sound economic management' that the Tories are so renowned for? This from a man who currently is given a grace-and-favour place to live.

But much more relevant as to why the British public need to know is that given he has such money problems, he is therefore far more susceptible to bribery or to be beholden to interest groups who will given him money in exchange for favours in office. Is this what you really want from a PM? At it's worst, if you mix it with his clear lack of morals, it does put into question whether the person in the top position in the land is currently potentially vulnerable to foreign influence?
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
The thing is the trust in Labour in these communities was economic not cultural originally. You voted Labour because you knew your shop steward or your union rep and would be drenched in workplace politics.

Once that was unhooked, the cultural chasm between the liberal middle class wonks and the conservative (small c) workers was exposed.

So getting their traditional voter coalition together now is virtually impossible. What do you offer the working man who feels like he has everything?

It would really need to be a Liberal not a Labour Party and I don’t know what that looks like in modern Britain or where it gets it’s voter coalition. But the Lib Dem’s seem to do well in the shires and the like that were traditionally Conservative. Maybe there’s a new coalition there?

All depends how long the Brexit honeymoon lasts I guess. The amount of political capital that bought the Tories can’t be underestimated. Thatcher was an equivalent and it took twenty years for them to be cleaned of that stench. So you’re looking at mid 2030s before Labour can rehabilitate themselves.

Grim.

Going back to Grendel's thing earlier about brand perception, it does seem Labour's brand is now poison. So is the Lib Dem's after the coalition after choosing the wrong hill to die on, which is unfortunate (or Tories coming up lucky yet again) as given the state of the Labour party 10 years ago you'd have said the Lib Dems stood to gain big from an imploding Labour. Whether they can regain that public opinion remains to be seen but given what they've done since it's not looking likely unless the Tories fuck up massively (and even then the media will manage it to not make it seem so bad).

The brand that probably has scope going forward given the increasing prevalence of the environmental situation are the Green's. If they can just quieten down their ultra-militant woke brigade and focus on their raison d'etre I feel this may be where the challenge will come from eventually.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Grendel - Isn't one of your big things about how beholden to the Union's Labour are and thus the influence they have over them and their policies?

But you think it's fine to have a PM who is seemingly broke and thus the potential for interference and influence by almost anybody with money, be it businesses, individuals or foreign states, is massive?
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Grendel - Isn't one of your big things about how beholden to the Union's Labour are and thus the influence they have over them and their policies?

But you think it's fine to have a PM who is seemingly broke and thus the potential for interference and influence by almost anybody with money, be it businesses, individuals or foreign states, is massive?

I would rather be beholden to bodies representing workers as opposed to faceless millionaires but each to their own
 

David O'Day

Well-Known Member
The thing is the trust in Labour in these communities was economic not cultural originally. You voted Labour because you knew your shop steward or your union rep and would be drenched in workplace politics.

Once that was unhooked, the cultural chasm between the liberal middle class wonks and the conservative (small c) workers was exposed.

So getting their traditional voter coalition together now is virtually impossible. What do you offer the working man who feels like he has everything?

It would really need to be a Liberal not a Labour Party and I don’t know what that looks like in modern Britain or where it gets it’s voter coalition. But the Lib Dem’s seem to do well in the shires and the like that were traditionally Conservative. Maybe there’s a new coalition there?

All depends how long the Brexit honeymoon lasts I guess. The amount of political capital that bought the Tories can’t be underestimated. Thatcher was an equivalent and it took twenty years for them to be cleaned of that stench. So you’re looking at mid 2030s before Labour can rehabilitate themselves.

Grim.

It'll be well before the mid 2030s - the brexit honeymoon isn't built to last and would be starting wain if it wasn't for covid and also voters get bored of parties and people will get bored of the tories.
 

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