We shall have to respectfully differ in opinion ;) Johnson has a large majority and his own momentum (sorry). It’s back to the old days, where you’ve never had it so good (because you’ll take what you’re given and be grateful for it while the rich get richer). I really don’t think the young left understands quite what a kicking it’s just taken. And where I live, those “extra” police are much needed. No revolution, thank you.
Fun and games with ballot papers
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostIf you mean the Lib Dems, they’re not a mass party. There’s been no serious break to the centre from Labour since the SDP joined the Liberals. Momentum has control of the party machinery, they will crown another loser to continue their project. Britain is essentially conservative with a small c. Alan Johnson said it all today. Go back to student politics if you’re in Momentum. You’re unelectable and today is the proof.
Anyway. It’s irrelevant. The Tories have got 5 years to do what they want. All those rabid lefties who’ve come of age since 2010 in an era of hung parliaments where every week is another cliffhanger can now reflect on their failure at length, as they are completely powerless.
Tragic. Avoidable. Heartbreaking.
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This is scary stuff. For 3 years on this side of the Pond we have been hearing from your side that the Yes voters were a bunch of uneducated,beer swilling, jingoistic, naive naifs who knew not what they were voting for, and that properly educated by their betters, would see the light of reason and vote correctly. So three years of indoctrination and the result is...What? I fear for us over here, where the Trump voters are discussed in the media as interesting insects that must be wiped out before they devour the edifice of Cilivilzation and are similarly harangued. The Democrats have been committing collective seppuku by touting candidates that are perceived by most Americans to be only slightly to the Right of Karl Marx. I fear that Trump will make Boris Johnson victory look puny in comparison in 2020
Let’s face it. The Barbarians are not just at the gates. They have over run everything
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostEspecially since the lack of an effective Opposition Party seems likely to continue for the foreseeable future.
It seems to me that Tory Remainers eventually decided to vote Tory anyway, while many Labour Leavers were put off by Labour offering a second referendum on something that as far as they were concerned had already been decided and which was likely to reverse that decision, so they voted for the only major party offering to "get it done". Also there is the Jeremy Corbyn factor of course. As will be clear to anyone who reads my posts I am a strong supporter of what Corbyn stood for, and also a supporter of his efforts to keep dissimulation and mudslinging out of politics (in which he failed badly of course), and it's also clear that what he stood for, in terms of policies, was popular with many people, who were then repelled by the caricature of Corbyn created for precisely that purpose by, well, everyone with an interest in seeing that none of the aforementioned policies became a reality, and a sufficiently loud voice to put that across. I don't think ideas like the national investment bank and the national education service, to name but two, are going to go away, at least I hope they don't because they represent a manifestly fairer way of doing things than the present one. If the tide finally turns in the USA that will certainly help.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostThis is scary stuff. For 3 years on this side of the Pond we have been hearing from your side that the Yes voters were a bunch of uneducated,beer swilling, jingoistic, naive naifs who knew not what they were voting for, and that properly educated by their betters, would see the light of reason and vote correctly. So three years of indoctrination and the result is...What? I fear for us over here, where the Trump voters are discussed in the media as interesting insects that must be wiped out before they devour the edifice of Cilivilzation and are similarly harangued. The Democrats have been committing collective seppuku by touting candidates that are perceived by most Americans to be only slightly to the Right of Karl Marx. I fear that Trump will make Boris Johnson victory look puny in comparison in 2020
Let’s face it. The Barbarians are not just at the gates. They have over run everything"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostEspecially since the lack of an effective Opposition Party seems likely to continue for the foreseeable future.
It has been an extraordinary last few days in politics. A new Tory PM his policies & strategies in apparent chaos, his party split as he sacks 21 of his own MP’s for putting best interests of the country ahead of their ambitions & the ambitions of disaster capitalists. A PM that within days of assuming leadership has lost the trust & support of his own brother. Trapped & unable to call a General Election Johnson is forced by the…
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Andy Freude
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI think this kind of thinking is a self-fulfilling prophesy, often made by the same people who work quite hard ensuring that it becomes a reality! There's no precedent for a break-away centrist party taking power that I know of, but there is at least to this day the legacy of Labour winning power in 1945.
You have a long memory if you don't see 1945 as history, and a slightly shorter one if you think the current manifestation of the Tory party is anything like the party of the 1950s and 1960s, the party of Macmillan and Heath.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostWhy do you think Corbyn's Labour was not an effective opposition? Off the top of my head I'd say that Corbyn-led Labour inflicted more defeats on the government than any other opposition in history... Google yielded this:
https://www.cambridgelabour.org.uk/r...sition-leader/
Delusional nonsense
The Labour party has failed COMPLETELY
shafted us as much as the Tories i'm afraid and the blame lies fair and square with the man in charge
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post
Tell me, Mr GG, how well do you think Labour would have done had they been sufficiently 'Remain' for your liking?
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostAh yes, someone mistakenly thought Corbyn wasn't an effective opposition leader, and I point out that he actually was, but so what when you can laugh and post an article from someone responsible for smearing him (self-fulfilling prophesy again).
Tell me, Mr GG, how well do you think Labour would have done had they been sufficiently 'Remain' for your liking?
If we had a credible opposition that was clearly against the suicide pact that is Brexit then the vast majority (and it probably now IS a majority of the whole country) of folks who want us to stay in the EU would vote for them to stop it. But, sadly, most of our politicians are far more interested in their own little playground squabbles and the like.
Sure, the media have it in for him
BUT that's the gig i'm afraid
it would be good if it wasn't but that's the way it is
When the Labour party was in power last time they realised this and worked around it.
So many of the folks I know keep chanting the whole "evil Tories" mantra and STILL believe in Corbyn when he clearly is NOT the answer (i'm sure i've said that before somewhere ?)
The myth of the Socialist "working class" is very powerful amongst the Labour party.
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Andy Freude
As far as the media coverage is concerned, no-one could say that Johnson got positive coverage: melting ice sculptures, jokes about hiding in a fridge, rants from Andrew Neil at him dodging media scrutiny, stories of the American 'businesswoman' amid claims of dodgy dealings when he was London mayor - all fully reported.
The fact is, his message was enough and his base didn't care about the media stories. Just like Trump. Similarly, voters didn't like the Labour message/policies or the leadership (Corbyn was the least popular with the general public).
For the Tories the election was all about tribal loyalty (and Brexit), for Labour it was about Brexit (in the heartlands where the damage was done). The idea that the Labour message was fine, the leadership was excellent and the party was only sunk by press smears is, I'm afraid, tribal loyalty - notwithstanding the fact that, for the Momentum/left-wing section of the party and voters, the message and Corbyn had their full support. I voted Labour and was entirely sympathetic to the manifesto policies, but that is nevertheless my view of the reality.
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Originally posted by Andy Freude View PostAs far as the media coverage is concerned, no-one could say that Johnson got positive coverage: melting ice sculptures, jokes about hiding in a fridge, rants from Andrew Neil at him dodging media scrutiny, stories of the American 'businesswoman' amid claims of dodgy dealings when he was London mayor - all fully reported.
The fact is, his message was enough and his base didn't care about the media stories. Just like Trump. Similarly, voters didn't like the Labour message/policies or the leadership (Corbyn was the least popular with the general public).
For the Tories the election was all about tribal loyalty (and Brexit), for Labour it was about Brexit (in the heartlands where the damage was done). The idea that the Labour message was fine, the leadership was excellent and the party was only sunk by press smears is, I'm afraid, tribal loyalty - notwithstanding the fact that, for the Momentum/left-wing section of the party and voters, the message and Corbyn had their full support. I voted Labour and was entirely sympathetic to the manifesto policies, but that is nevertheless my view of the reality.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Postthe point where Johnson has had to promise large numbers of people an enormous amount of stuff that he's going to have to deliver at least some of, if his majority isn't going to be wiped out at the next election
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostOtherwise needless to say I'm appalled that such a person has become prime minister, and, from a selfish point of view, I've never been so glad that I don't live in the UK. I think I'm going to give it a few months before I even set foot there.Last edited by ahinton; 14-12-19, 10:42.
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Originally posted by Andy Freude View PostAs far as the media coverage is concerned, no-one could say that Johnson got positive coverage: melting ice sculptures, jokes about hiding in a fridge, rants from Andrew Neil at him dodging media scrutiny, stories of the American 'businesswoman' amid claims of dodgy dealings when he was London mayor - all fully reported.
The fact is, his message was enough and his base didn't care about the media stories. Just like Trump. Similarly, voters didn't like the Labour message/policies or the leadership (Corbyn was the least popular with the general public).
For the Tories the election was all about tribal loyalty (and Brexit), for Labour it was about Brexit (in the heartlands where the damage was done). The idea that the Labour message was fine, the leadership was excellent and the party was only sunk by press smears is, I'm afraid, tribal loyalty - notwithstanding the fact that, for the Momentum/left-wing section of the party and voters, the message and Corbyn had their full support. I voted Labour and was entirely sympathetic to the manifesto policies, but that is nevertheless my view of the reality.
Of course, it's quite complex... there are many facets to trying to explain the GE result. Johnson has spent quite a few years cultivating his image via TV appearances, and his very real racism not to mention the racism of the Tory party was smothered by the periodic purported crises of antisemitism in the Labour party. I recall a quote of Goebbels where he suggests accusing your opponent of that which you yourself are guilty. So the BBC and others waged a war of attrition against Corbyn's Labour... and I think older people are more likely to be receptive to the news on TV.
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