After Corbyn
Re: After Corbyn
I really like Jess Phillips but she's not the person to lead the party, she's far too frank and cheery with her opinions. Guile and slyness doesn't particularly suit her.
Re: After Corbyn
I dunno about that. I was looking forward to her tearing Johnson a new one at Prime Minister's Porkies Questions.
And remember that if you botch the exit, the carnival of reaction may be coming to a town near you.
Fintan O'Toole
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Re: After Corbyn
Phillips was never going to get Unions and/or CLP backing. This was entirely as intended by the Corbyn era changes to the system, designed to discourage challenges to his position by placing barriers to standing in the hands of CLP activists and union leadership.
Starmer looks like breaking through that, and needs to reduce the barriers to standing as leader.
Starmer looks like breaking through that, and needs to reduce the barriers to standing as leader.
Just tell 'em I'm broke and don't come round here no more.
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Re: After Corbyn
Nandy now officially joins Starmer on the ballot. With Corbyn 2.0 also certain to get there, and Thornberry pretty certain not to, there's yer runners and riders.
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Re: After Corbyn
Think I'll probably go for Nandy first, then Starmer second, and not at all for Rebecca "Why The" Long-Bailey.
If truth is many-sided, mendacity is many-tongued
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Re: After Corbyn
You and your crayzzeee roaming charges.
Just tell 'em I'm broke and don't come round here no more.
Re: After Corbyn
Do you see any of these as an election winner, or just a safe pair of hands whilst whoever wins consolidates and stabilises the party for 2025?El Pollo Diablo wrote: ↑Wed Jan 22, 2020 2:09 pmThink I'll probably go for Nandy first, then Starmer second, and not at all for Rebecca "Why The" Long-Bailey.
Reason I ask is that I wonder if a.n.other party could also get their act together in that timeframe.
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Re: After Corbyn
Honestly, I think it depends more on what the tories do than Labour themselves. I think in 2010 when the tories almost reversed their deficit which was similar to labour's now, that was in large part because people had grown tired of labour. If the tories f.ck up Brexit then that will play a role, as long as Labour have the gumption to go after them.plodder wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 3:30 amDo you see any of these as an election winner, or just a safe pair of hands whilst whoever wins consolidates and stabilises the party for 2025?El Pollo Diablo wrote: ↑Wed Jan 22, 2020 2:09 pmThink I'll probably go for Nandy first, then Starmer second, and not at all for Rebecca "Why The" Long-Bailey.
Reason I ask is that I wonder if a.n.other party could also get their act together in that timeframe.
I think Starmer might well have the sense to do it right. The main thing I like about nandy is that she performs well with the media and is thoughtful. She makes me feel a bit uncomfortable, but that's probably a good thing, really. I don't know how she'd do with the leadership but it's got to be better than corbyn. I see Starmer more as the safe pair of hands, and probably the one with the best chance of winning an election overall, but the more I see of nandy the more I like her.
If truth is many-sided, mendacity is many-tongued
Re: After Corbyn
Being good at 'Leading the Party' and 'Sticking it to Boris' are likely two different skill sets. Which is more important in opposition?
I reckon Starmer would be better at the former and Nandy better at the later.
I think Boris would much rather go up against Sir Starmer in the chamber - he can be tarnished with the liberal london metropolitan elite brush very easily and attacked more strongly, "mano e mano". Boris will hate going up against a strong northern lass at PMQ's, who can't be tagged as London elite, can't be tagged as continuity Corbyn, can't slam the labour party for failing to elect a woman leader, and he'll need to watch every word out of his mouth lest he slips into misogyny / mansplaining - all delightfully awkward for Boris.
So on that basis alone I wouldn't be sad to see her win - they're in opposition so policy doesn't matter for years. Keeping Boris on his toes does.
I reckon Starmer would be better at the former and Nandy better at the later.
I think Boris would much rather go up against Sir Starmer in the chamber - he can be tarnished with the liberal london metropolitan elite brush very easily and attacked more strongly, "mano e mano". Boris will hate going up against a strong northern lass at PMQ's, who can't be tagged as London elite, can't be tagged as continuity Corbyn, can't slam the labour party for failing to elect a woman leader, and he'll need to watch every word out of his mouth lest he slips into misogyny / mansplaining - all delightfully awkward for Boris.
So on that basis alone I wouldn't be sad to see her win - they're in opposition so policy doesn't matter for years. Keeping Boris on his toes does.
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unless its Lion or Osterich poo... http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/mythbus ... -turd.html
unless its Lion or Osterich poo... http://dsc.discovery.com/videos/mythbus ... -turd.html
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Re: After Corbyn
This is the top job in a national political party, they are supposed to have all the skills needed, or they might as well not bother. Another lesson from the wasted, damaging Corbyn years.
And this "safe pair of hands" stuff is essentially meaningless, beyond "not being Corbyn". Starmer has set out his pitch and is certainly saying he won't move far to the right. I see no reason to assume Starmer would not lead a reasonable radical government. Meanwhile his forensic demolition skills have been praised much, not least in dismantling Davis over his repeal bill. Unlike Nandy, he hasn't made up a fictitious history over Brexit to appease his local Tories. What has Nandy ever actually done that leads you to think she could stick it to Johnson?
But let's keep this in perspective, none of these are ever going to be PM. If one of them does well as leader, they just might nudge Labour out of "complete laughing stock" to "not near government". Marina Hyde hit the spot when she described it as like "the soap opera of a faraway ant colony". And Momentum consider neither Starmer nor Nandy to be a "viable candidate". Their star may not be as bright nationally as before the clusterf.ck, but they still control the party machinery at all levels.
And this "safe pair of hands" stuff is essentially meaningless, beyond "not being Corbyn". Starmer has set out his pitch and is certainly saying he won't move far to the right. I see no reason to assume Starmer would not lead a reasonable radical government. Meanwhile his forensic demolition skills have been praised much, not least in dismantling Davis over his repeal bill. Unlike Nandy, he hasn't made up a fictitious history over Brexit to appease his local Tories. What has Nandy ever actually done that leads you to think she could stick it to Johnson?
But let's keep this in perspective, none of these are ever going to be PM. If one of them does well as leader, they just might nudge Labour out of "complete laughing stock" to "not near government". Marina Hyde hit the spot when she described it as like "the soap opera of a faraway ant colony". And Momentum consider neither Starmer nor Nandy to be a "viable candidate". Their star may not be as bright nationally as before the clusterf.ck, but they still control the party machinery at all levels.
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Re: After Corbyn
Over at the anthill, I know Corbyn 2.0 is a certainty to be on the ballot. But, I thought she'd do better, faster, at this stage, especially out in the CLPs. Latest in the Graun live blog today is:
CLPs:
Starmer: 18
Corbyn 2.0: 5
Thornberry: 3
Nandy: 1
Affiliates:
Starmer: 3 (enough)
Nandy: 3 (enough)
Corbyn 2.0: 1
Plenty of CLPs to go, but the strength of early support for The Starmster is striking. Now that 2 are over the line, there might be more nominations for the others, to get them into the contest.
And comedy update, McDonnell has released a video supporting Burgon for deputy. I'm not going to watch it, even my pointless life is too precious to spend time on that.
CLPs:
Starmer: 18
Corbyn 2.0: 5
Thornberry: 3
Nandy: 1
Affiliates:
Starmer: 3 (enough)
Nandy: 3 (enough)
Corbyn 2.0: 1
Plenty of CLPs to go, but the strength of early support for The Starmster is striking. Now that 2 are over the line, there might be more nominations for the others, to get them into the contest.
And comedy update, McDonnell has released a video supporting Burgon for deputy. I'm not going to watch it, even my pointless life is too precious to spend time on that.
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Re: After Corbyn
I'd genuinely rather have a cactus with googly eyes on it as deputy leader than Richard Burgon.
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Re: After Corbyn
If anyone else is wrestling with that decision, we should at least see the contenders.
A cactus with googly eyes:
Richard Burgon, yesterday:
A cactus with googly eyes:
Richard Burgon, yesterday:
Just tell 'em I'm broke and don't come round here no more.
Re: After Corbyn
I think you've overestimated how much people outside of your political tradition care about mansplaining.TopBadger wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 11:12 am
I think Boris would much rather go up against Sir Starmer in the chamber - he can be tarnished with the liberal london metropolitan elite brush very easily and attacked more strongly, "mano e mano". Boris will hate going up against a strong northern lass at PMQ's, who can't be tagged as London elite, can't be tagged as continuity Corbyn, can't slam the labour party for failing to elect a woman leader, and he'll need to watch every word out of his mouth lest he slips into misogyny / mansplaining - all delightfully awkward for Boris.
It will be a huge deal in the pages of the Guardian and the Independent. Sure. You've got to learn to see that conceptual world as alien to the thinking of most British people in order to win elections.
Nandy is the daughter of a Marxist academic and the granddaughter of a liberal MP. The liberal elite thing absolutely sticks. Sorry. This isn't going to work.
You need the para from notts. Doesn't matter if he turns out to be a bit thick. Really doesn't.
Re: After Corbyn
Dan Jarvis is a while off though, he's mayoring up in Sheffield, biding his time. We'll get all that "this is my calling" guff once the civil war is won.
I was listening to a load of Southern urban metropolitan Labour supporters on QT last night. They lived in Stoke Newington, their kids keep getting stabbed and they're mostly black.
I was listening to a load of Southern urban metropolitan Labour supporters on QT last night. They lived in Stoke Newington, their kids keep getting stabbed and they're mostly black.
Re: After Corbyn
You strike me as the kind of man who never listens to women.sheldrake wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2020 5:12 amI think you've overestimated how much people outside of your political tradition care about mansplaining.TopBadger wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 11:12 am
I think Boris would much rather go up against Sir Starmer in the chamber - he can be tarnished with the liberal london metropolitan elite brush very easily and attacked more strongly, "mano e mano". Boris will hate going up against a strong northern lass at PMQ's, who can't be tagged as London elite, can't be tagged as continuity Corbyn, can't slam the labour party for failing to elect a woman leader, and he'll need to watch every word out of his mouth lest he slips into misogyny / mansplaining - all delightfully awkward for Boris.
My 50-year old sisters in law are very aware of the term and how annoying it is.
One's a Telegraph tory & the other pays no attention to daily political goings on, and is just managing, living in a sh.tty village in a deeply tory county in the midlands.
Old people (like >70) might not use the term or might just think it's the natural way of things (the same sort of people who think that UKIP MEPs are perfectly normal & reasonable), but anyone born in or after the 60s won't
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Re: After Corbyn
Some personally abusive posts and responses to them have been moved to quarantine
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Re: After Corbyn
GoodWoodchopper wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2020 5:17 amSome personally abusive posts and responses to them have been moved to quarantine
Masking forever
Putin is a monster.
Russian socialism will rise again
Putin is a monster.
Russian socialism will rise again
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Re: After Corbyn
How much effect does PMQ's have on voter's views of a candidate? I imagine if they're a consistently bumbling shambles who embarrasses themselves every single time then it might be an issue, but otherwise?TopBadger wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 11:12 amBeing good at 'Leading the Party' and 'Sticking it to Boris' are likely two different skill sets. Which is more important in opposition?
I reckon Starmer would be better at the former and Nandy better at the later.
I think Boris would much rather go up against Sir Starmer in the chamber - he can be tarnished with the liberal london metropolitan elite brush very easily and attacked more strongly, "mano e mano". Boris will hate going up against a strong northern lass at PMQ's, who can't be tagged as London elite, can't be tagged as continuity Corbyn, can't slam the labour party for failing to elect a woman leader, and he'll need to watch every word out of his mouth lest he slips into misogyny / mansplaining - all delightfully awkward for Boris.
So on that basis alone I wouldn't be sad to see her win - they're in opposition so policy doesn't matter for years. Keeping Boris on his toes does.
I've not got a preference in the race (I honestly am not interested in whatever the hell happens, see who comes out in charge at the end and see where it goes from there), I just think if too much credence is put onto the weekly pointless shouty match.
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Re: After Corbyn
please carry on your argument about the decision in this threadWoodchopper wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2020 5:17 amSome personally abusive posts and responses to them have been moved to quarantine
viewtopic.php?f=16&t=773
"I got a flu virus named after me 'cause I kissed a bat on a dare."
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Re: After Corbyn
How many have said that they would have voted tory except that they couldn't vote for Johnson because he's a womanizing lying cheat, so didn't vote tory? Because Johnson wins elections, so someone must be voting for him. And they know what kind of man he is.tom p wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2020 2:13 pmYou strike me as the kind of man who never listens to women.sheldrake wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2020 5:12 amI think you've overestimated how much people outside of your political tradition care about mansplaining.TopBadger wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 11:12 am
I think Boris would much rather go up against Sir Starmer in the chamber - he can be tarnished with the liberal london metropolitan elite brush very easily and attacked more strongly, "mano e mano". Boris will hate going up against a strong northern lass at PMQ's, who can't be tagged as London elite, can't be tagged as continuity Corbyn, can't slam the labour party for failing to elect a woman leader, and he'll need to watch every word out of his mouth lest he slips into misogyny / mansplaining - all delightfully awkward for Boris.
My 50-year old sisters in law are very aware of the term and how annoying it is.
One's a Telegraph tory & the other pays no attention to daily political goings on, and is just managing, living in a sh.tty village in a deeply tory county in the midlands.
Old people (like >70) might not use the term or might just think it's the natural way of things (the same sort of people who think that UKIP MEPs are perfectly normal & reasonable), but anyone born in or after the 60s won't
having that swing is a necessary but not sufficient condition for it meaning a thing
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Re: After Corbyn
Mrs. Snooze and I have been spending quite a lot of time recently discussing who will get our vote, and I think we are both leaning towards Lisa Nandy. It has sometimes occurred to me that Nandy's gender might give her an advantage because Johnson would have to pick his words more carefully when talking to her, but I think I would be careful about voicing that opinion. It's the sort of statement that can be taken more than one way, particularly when said by a man to a woman. I'd hesitate to use the phrase "Northern Lass" to describe her, for rather similar reasons.
In six days the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them. The human body was knocked up pretty late on the Friday afternoon, with a deadline looming. How well do you expect it to work?
Re: After Corbyn
Yougov poll here: https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/ar ... l-election with breakdowns by age/gender etc. People are definitely voting for Boris, and some of them are women. 18-24 age range if you're looking for a gender gap. 25+ and it's pretty much gone.shpalman wrote: ↑Mon Jan 27, 2020 9:46 amHow many have said that they would have voted tory except that they couldn't vote for Johnson because he's a womanizing lying cheat, so didn't vote tory? Because Johnson wins elections, so someone must be voting for him. And they know what kind of man he is.tom p wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2020 2:13 pmYou strike me as the kind of man who never listens to women.
My 50-year old sisters in law are very aware of the term and how annoying it is.
One's a Telegraph tory & the other pays no attention to daily political goings on, and is just managing, living in a sh.tty village in a deeply tory county in the midlands.
Old people (like >70) might not use the term or might just think it's the natural way of things (the same sort of people who think that UKIP MEPs are perfectly normal & reasonable), but anyone born in or after the 60s won't
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Re: After Corbyn
Need to work on stategies to get young people to vote and discourage the oldies. Could be a good project for Labour in tandem with pro democracy activists.
Masking forever
Putin is a monster.
Russian socialism will rise again
Putin is a monster.
Russian socialism will rise again