Jeremy Corbyn - Not Not Labour Party(?), not a Communist (BBC)

He's just a populist, that's all he is. Populism suffers from the same issue left or right, offering simple solutions for often complex problems.

It pains me so many on the left can't see the issues with him. He's a man stuck in the 70's, yeah some of the stuff he says sounds good. Rebalancing the economy? Yeah, great. How's he going to do that though? Well he talks about bringing those low wage jobs back to Britain so either those low wage workers need to get used to be paid £3 an hour or he's not going to be able to achieve it. And let's not forget this is a man who called for the enacting of Article 50 pretty much quicker than anyone in politics - the day after the referendum. Brexit is far more damaging to everyone is this country than pretty much anything else he advocates, yet he's happy to go along with it so his wet dreams can possibly be achieved (which they never will - the direction of post Brexit Britain is in the hands of the Tories). He's a man who hasn't really changed his opinions on absolutely anything since the 70's, some admire him as principled, I see a man who just quite frankly doesn't seem very intelligent and who the world left behind years ago. He's basically just offering the left wing version of Trump, more polite and less abrasive sure, but promising to his support a world that cannot be achieved.

Whilst on his support, the Trump supporters of the left. It's startling how similar they are. Conspiracies over the media, the cult of personality, any criticism is made up by someone from the other side, justification for anything and everything.
Not to be rude but just read some articles and books. Because honesty what your saying is stupidly shite.
 
Not to be rude but just read some articles and books. Because honesty what your saying is stupidly shite.

Typical Corbynista response. No actual take down, its just wrong.

You wanna tell me how he's being smeared with his utterly stupid plans of bringing manufacturing back to the UK? The obsession with a sector we've long since pretty much lost. That it's not a throwback to the 70's from someone who never moved on? He's just another regressive with the view that manufacturing = good honest work, services = bad. Christ the man wants to bring coal back. The sooner people like him move on from this ancient view and start looking at what the UK is now, the better.

Principled but dim. That's a nice epitaph for Corbyn.
 
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Typical Corbynista response. No actual take down, its just wrong.

To give the benefit of the doubt, other people have said 'read a book' before in argument. So, you know.

"neoliberalism"

"echo chamber"

"smear"


The list grows almost by the hour. This is all they have.
 
Of course, Blair. How could we forget him? Still absolutely central to everything, apparently.
 
"Read a book"

"Neoliberalism"

"Echo chamber"

"Blair"

"Iraq"

I feel we should make some kind of informal list. I do enjoy the part where we also have to pretend to be staggered that this government is maintaining a healthy, enviable given the circumstances, position in opinion polling. The left have nothing. The Corbyn left that is. If it wasn't for the fact this is the worst time to have vacant idiots at the wheel of the opposition, you'd almost feel sorry for them.
 
You've posted a link to the search results for the term 'Blair' in this thread. Which is supposed to be a response to something, I'm presuming?
you're the only who keeps mentioning blair, the rest of us don't give a solitary feck, stop mentioning him if you're so sick of hearing about him, the rest of us certainly are
 
you're the only who keeps mentioning blair, the rest of us don't give a solitary feck, stop mentioning him if you're so sick of hearing about him, the rest of us certainly are

You've just posted a link showing that you've mentioned him four times in this thread since Friday.
 
You've just posted a link showing that you've mentioned him four times in this thread since Friday.
1: https://www.redcafe.net/threads/jeremy-corbyn-labour-leader.409447/page-282#post-22963854

oh there's a shock, i was making fun of another stupid oscie posts

2: https://www.redcafe.net/threads/jeremy-corbyn-labour-leader.409447/page-280#post-22959048

oh look who brought him up, again

3: https://www.redcafe.net/threads/jeremy-corbyn-labour-leader.409447/page-277#post-22957287

ok i'll give you that one

4: https://www.redcafe.net/threads/jeremy-corbyn-labour-leader.409447/page-263#post-22885810

a few Fridays ago but look who brought him up again
 
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Typical Corbynista response. No actual take down, its just wrong.

You wanna tell me how he's being smeared with his utterly stupid plans of bringing manufacturing back to the UK? The obsession with a sector we've long since pretty much lost. That it's not a throwback to the 70's from someone who never moved on?

Labour Alternative models of ownership

https://labour.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Alternative-Models-of-Ownership.pdf

More radically, however, last year the Labour Party published an Alternative Models of Ownership document which outlined a series of measures designed to shift the balance of economic power away from business and towards worker’s and their communities. These include the establishment of producer-consumer cooperatives, where decisions on what is to be produced, and how, are taken; Municipal, local-level ownership ranging from community shops to social enterprises, where profits are reinvested for community needs; and large scale nationalisation – of industries such as rail, the utilities and the postal service. All of these would be backed up by finance provided by the state, the Bank of England, other banks and the private sector.

Technology and Post Capitalism

James Meadway is the Economic advisor to the Shadow Chancellor.



The ‘Preston Model’ and the modern politics of municipal socialism

https://www.opendemocracy.net/neweconomics/preston-model-modern-politics-municipal-socialism/


As indicated above, one of the leading models of re-emerging, modern-day municipal socialism in the UK is to be found in Preston. In 2011, the city—which had been declining economically since the 1970s—was reeling from a bitter double blow. Central government funding was plummeting under the austerity regime of Cameron’s coalition government and long held revitalization plans based on a £700 million shopping centre had collapsed. The newly-elected Labour council realized that they needed to come up with a new strategy. It was then that Councillor Matthew Brown, Cabinet Member for Social Justice, Inclusion, and Policy, stepped forward with his ideas. Inspired by alternative forms of economic development around the world, including the Mondragón cooperatives in the Basque region of Spain and the Evergreen Co-operatives in Cleveland, Ohio, Brown and his fellow councillors began to develop plans to deploy Preston’s existing assets and financial clout to catalyse a new local economic model that builds wealth rather than extracts it from the community. Working with the Manchester-based CLES, Preston Council approached the large anchor institutions in the area and came up with a strategy to shift as much of their spending and procurement back into the local economy as possible. In 2013, six of the local institutions that signed up for the effort spent around £38m in Preston and £292m in Lancashire as a whole. By 2017 this had skyrocketed to £111m and £486m respectively. The new localized contracts cover everything from school lunches to large-scale construction projects. Moreover, contracts shifted locally have a multiplier effect, as pounds circulate and recirculate throughout the local economy, creating jobs which in turn lead to more spending on goods and services, which then leads to the creation of more jobs, and so on.

Preston has been lauded by the Labour leadership and by sections of the media as an example of what could be achieved—albeit on a far greater scale—nationally under a Corbyn-led government. “This kind of radicalism”, argued John McDonnell in a 2016 speech at the Preston-based, worker-owned transport company TAS, “is exactly what we need across the whole country”.

Labour set to include pilot of radical basic income policy in next manifesto, John McDonnell says

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...-corbyn-poverty-social-benefits-a8471616.html

Asked whether he could envisage a pilot of basic income forming part of Labour’s next blueprint for government, he replied: “It’s one of those things I think we can get into the next manifesto and see, it’s worth a try. There have been pilots elsewhere. I’m trying to wait for the feedback.”

But yeah the 70's or whatever.
 
Definitely not an unhinged cult.
Your anger at Corbyn and his supporters is quite extraordinary.

Honestly, most of the Momentum supporters I know follow a similar pattern. They have baby boomer generation parents who are starting to need the NHS so have become aware of the strain on it. They have kids stuck in underfunded state schools and commute to jobs on a very cynically run privatised rail network. Add to this that they’re a generation that can’t afford to get on the housing market.

In all your ire, the thing you never mention is that Corbyn’s supporters were first brought together by their desire to seek an end to austerity and support a politician who wants to rebalance the wealth distribution in the U.K.

To me, they all seem like perfectly ordinary things to want to address through politics. But sure, carry on hurling bile and insults at people.
 
Your anger at Corbyn and his supporters is quite extraordinary.

Honestly, most of the Momentum supporters I know follow a similar pattern. They have baby boomer generation parents who are starting to need the NHS so have become aware of the strain on it. They have kids stuck in underfunded state schools and commute to jobs on a very cynically run privatised rail network. Add to this that they’re a generation that can’t afford to get on the housing market.

In all your ire, the thing you never mention is that Corbyn’s supporters were first brought together by their desire to seek an end to austerity and support a politician who wants to rebalance the wealth distribution in the U.K.

To me, they all seem like perfectly ordinary things to want to address through politics. But sure, carry on hurling bile and insults at people.


His supporters were first brought together to 'win back' the Labour party. They didn't, and don't, give a toss about anything beyond that. Hence losing general elections is now something the Labour party celebrates. It's why Tory Brexit is something the Labour party do not wish to oppose. You talk about redistribution of wealth yet are perfectly fine with the policies of Brexit that he shares with the hardline Tory right, that will make this country significantly poorer than before. There isn't any joined-up thinking. You like the idea of Corbyn, but like others in the same position you're not willing to deal with the realities of Corbyn.

What matters to those of us who oppose him is that we see him as the biggest asset the Tory party could wish for and therefore see him as an unwitting enabler of all those things you listed above. Do we really think an opposition with its act together would have allowed this govt to get away with 5% of the shite it gets away with?

But even on that we're not even allowed to attribute the performance of the opposition to the leader of the opposition, are we? It's all someone else's fault, isn't it? Like Brexit, the fault lies not with the people in charge of the fecking disaster, it lies with people who have spend 2/3 years pointing out what an absolute fecking disaster it is.
 
His supporters were first brought together to 'win back' the Labour party. They didn't, and don't, give a toss about anything beyond that. Hence losing general elections is now something the Labour party celebrates. It's why Tory Brexit is something the Labour party do not wish to oppose. You talk about redistribution of wealth yet are perfectly fine with the policies of Brexit that he shares with the hardline Tory right, that will make this country significantly poorer than before. There isn't any joined-up thinking. You like the idea of Corbyn, but like others in the same position you're not willing to deal with the realities of Corbyn.

What matters to those of us who oppose him is that we see him as the biggest asset the Tory party could wish for and therefore see him as an unwitting enabler of all those things you listed above. Do we really think an opposition with its act together would have allowed this govt to get away with 5% of the shite it gets away with?

But even on that we're not even allowed to attribute the performance of the opposition to the leader of the opposition, are we? It's all someone else's fault, isn't it? Like Brexit, the fault lies not with the people in charge of the fecking disaster, it lies with people who have spend 2/3 years pointing out what an absolute fecking disaster it is.
You really need to sort out your unbelievably grating habit of presenting crap as fact.

Corbyn won the leadership election simply because he opposed austerity and this fired the imagination of Labour members. Earlier in the thread you declared that Corbyn supporters were united through a need to moan about his enemies. That’s wrong, as they were united by his alternative to austerity.

It’s also completely wrong to say Corbyn supporters celebrated a general election loss. You know this, so don’t waste time lying. Knives were sharpened on the basis that everyone expected Labour to suffer a landslide defeat and well intentioned supporters were fired up that he confounded wide spread predictions.

What are the ‘realities of Corbyn I’m unwilling to deal with’ please?

And who is the alternative leader that you suppose would have got Labour a better result in the last election?
 
You really need to sort out your unbelievably grating habit of presenting crap as fact.

Corbyn won the leadership election simply because he opposed austerity and this fired the imagination of Labour members. Earlier in the thread you declared that Corbyn supporters were united through a need to moan about his enemies. That’s wrong, as they were united by his alternative to austerity.

It’s also completely wrong to say Corbyn supporters celebrated a general election loss. You know this, so don’t waste time lying. Knives were sharpened on the basis that everyone expected Labour to suffer a landslide defeat and well intentioned supporters were fired up that he confounded wide spread predictions.

What are the ‘realities of Corbyn I’m unwilling to deal with’ please?

And who is the alternative leader that you suppose would have got Labour a better result in the last election?

What alternative to austerity? Even at the last election he stood on a platform that pledged at best only a moderate increase on the "austerity" level spending of the government. And one of the biggest realities of Corbyn you're unwilling to deal with is that his policy on Brexit is pretty much exactly the same as Jacob Rees-Mogg. Hence why the last thing any Corbyn supporter in this thread wishes to address, is Brexit.

Then there's also the terrible polling, the being marred in antisemitism, highly questionable past statements of support and solidarity with terrorists - some of whom murdered British citizens deliberately - the fact that his supporter base echo Trump's ("Conspiracy", "Smear", "Biased media","Witch-hunt") and the fact Labour are now completely irrelevant. Aside from the antisemtiism debacle, when was the last time there was a keynote speech, policy announcement, setting or slight influencing of the agenda or any point in the last 4 months when the Labour party have nailed this government's balls to the floor on anything?

But sure, the problem isn't that this is the least effective opposition anyone can remember in 30 years, the problem is with people who have the gall to notice that this is the least effective opposition anyone can remember in 30 years. You see schools crumble, the NHS on its knees and a government that is getting away with everything and an opposition either unwilling or incapable of doing anything about it which you support and you make yourself feel better by pretending it's not you who is part of the problem, it's the others.
 
And one of the biggest realities of Corbyn you're unwilling to deal with is that his policy on Brexit is pretty much exactly the same as Jacob Rees-Mogg.
totally, that's why labour voted in favour of the ERG amendments and the lib dems turned up to the crucial votes and brought down the government
 
Rees-Mogg wants to leave the EU, single market, and customs union.

Corbyn wants to leave the EU, single market and customs union.

I'm guessing this is the point where we pretend this represents a difference of position. Noticing reality is now a thing no longer permitted.
 
What alternative to austerity? Even at the last election he stood on a platform that pledged at best only a moderate increase on the "austerity" level spending of the government. And one of the biggest realities of Corbyn you're unwilling to deal with is that his policy on Brexit is pretty much exactly the same as Jacob Rees-Mogg. Hence why the last thing any Corbyn supporter in this thread wishes to address, is Brexit.

Then there's also the terrible polling, the being marred in antisemitism, highly questionable past statements of support and solidarity with terrorists - some of whom murdered British citizens deliberately - the fact that his supporter base echo Trump's ("Conspiracy", "Smear", "Biased media","Witch-hunt") and the fact Labour are now completely irrelevant. Aside from the antisemtiism debacle, when was the last time there was a keynote speech, policy announcement, setting or slight influencing of the agenda or any point in the last 4 months when the Labour party have nailed this government's balls to the floor on anything?

But sure, the problem isn't that this is the least effective opposition anyone can remember in 30 years, the problem is with people who have the gall to notice that this is the least effective opposition anyone can remember in 30 years. You see schools crumble, the NHS on its knees and a government that is getting away with everything and an opposition either unwilling or incapable of doing anything about it which you support and you make yourself feel better by pretending it's not you who is part of the problem, it's the others.
Nope.

Very happy to talk Brexit but I think there’s a long way to go. Momentum have come out in favour of a second referendum so it will be interesting to see how Labour policy eventually manifests itself.

Out of interest, do you know who was actually the official figurehead for Labour’s remain campaign?

Also still waiting for your suggestion of a leader who would have polled better in the last GE?
 
Another new idea is the proposed changes in quantitive easing, going from money given to commercial banks as happens now, to a national investment bank that doesn't give billions of pounds to wankers in the city of london.
Ah I forgot that rather big one.

Theres a critique to be had at the labours policy and how they will try to implement both from the left & right which could be a interesting discussion but people just repeating headlines they've seen in a newspaper is well a bit rubbish.
 
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Also still waiting for your suggestion of a leader who would have polled better in the last GE?
n-OWEN-SMITH-628x314.jpg
 
May got more votes than Corbyn. Polled a higher share than Corbyn. In the current polls she's ahead of Corbyn in 'best leader'.

If they think Corbyn is doing well, they must think she's doing absolutely brilliantly. Or is that another one of those facts we have to pretend we don't know and should instead chastise ourselves by repeating "he's a man of peace" and pretending not to notice Corbyn is doing everything he can to enable a Tory Brexit?
 
May got more votes than Corbyn. Polled a higher share than Corbyn. In the current polls she's ahead of Corbyn in 'best leader'.

If they think Corbyn is doing well, they must think she's doing absolutely brilliantly.

You still haven't said who you reckon would've done better than him.
 
You still haven't said who you reckon would've done better than him.

What's the point? No matter who I'd name the response will be the same. It isn't a genuine question at all it's just waiting me to say someone then whoever I say it'll be dismissed.

That's so we don't end up talking about why a Tory leader who ran arguably the worst campaign any political leader of the two main parties has ever ran in modern British electoral history, still won.

The usual cabal of apologists for Corbyn that turn up to stifle and repress any kind of discussion on here have now turned up. You, Silva, Dobba, Nuts, Sweet Square. Occasionally when a normal outsider tends to dip their toe in the thread they're scared off pretty soon after.
 
What's the point? No matter who I'd name the response will be the same. It isn't a genuine question at all it's just waiting me to say someone then whoever I say it'll be dismissed.

That's so we don't end up talking about why a Tory leader who ran arguably the worst campaign any political leader of the two main parties has ever ran in modern British electoral history, still won.

The usual cabal of apologists for Corbyn that turn up to stifle and repress any kind of discussion on here have now turned up. You, Silva, Dobba, Nuts, Sweet Square.
You have no idea how to argue, other than to resort to the dismissive and the personal.

YOU made it all about Corbyn so grow a pair and tell us who’d have polled more. Otherwise you’re a blowhard on an angry rant against an individual without offering solutions.

Any progress on working out who the figurehead for Labour’s remain campaign was?
 
That's were we are. We're not to talk about what Corbyn's said, who he's associated with how he polls, what his performance is as leader or why he's shoulder-to-shoulder with May on Brexit.

Instead we have to ask Oscie who he thinks would have polled better than him at the last election, and then whoever he says say:


":lol::lol::lol:, [/NAME]"

Because that distracts from the fact Labour finished 2nd to a government in turmoil having the worst campaign any of the two major parties have likely ever had at an election. And thats the most important thing.
 
That's were we are. We're not to talk about what Corbyn's said, who he's associated with how he polls, what his performance is as leader or why he's shoulder-to-shoulder with May on Brexit.

Instead we have to ask Oscie who he thinks would have polled better than him at the last election, and then whoever he says say:


":lol::lol::lol:, [/NAME]"

Because that distracts from the fact Labour finished 2nd to a government in turmoil having the worst campaign any of the two major parties have likely ever had at an election. And thats the most important thing.
How pathetic. It’s absolutely fecking crucial - if you can’t name someone who’d have done better then it’s YOU who’s keeping the Tories in by refusing to back the leader who had the best chance to beat them.

How can anyone take your endless complaints seriously if you have no alternative?!
 
I have plenty of alternatives but the question wasn't asked in order to find out who they were, it was asked so you could fire back with your prepared comeback that I suspect would have been in line with what I outlined in my last post. You're just annoyed I didn't give you the chance to play the game.
 
And the chair of Labour’s Remain campaign was arch Corbyn-basher Alan Johnson. He’s played an absolute blinder in getting us to all forget that.
 
What's the point? No matter who I'd name the response will be the same. It isn't a genuine question at all it's just waiting me to say someone then whoever I say it'll be dismissed.

That's so we don't end up talking about why a Tory leader who ran arguably the worst campaign any political leader of the two main parties has ever ran in modern British electoral history, still won.

The usual cabal of apologists for Corbyn that turn up to stifle and repress any kind of discussion on here have now turned up. You, Silva, Dobba, Nuts, Sweet Square. Occasionally when a normal outsider tends to dip their toe in the thread they're scared off pretty soon after.

Oh feck off - I've asked you a basic question here and you aren't answering. I've told you time and time again I don't vote Corbyn and have plenty of criticisms of him.
 
I think one of the reasons why so few people aside from the Corbyn apologists, and myself, ever post in this thread is that there seems absolutely no point.

Terrible opposition leader performing awfully against the worst government in living memory and yet this thread is pretty much wall-to-wall defending of him.
 
I think one of the reasons why so few people aside from the Corbyn apologists, and myself, ever post in this thread is that there seems absolutely no point.

Terrible opposition leader performing awfully against the worst government in living memory and yet this thread is pretty much wall-to-wall defending of him.
Rubbish. Stop playing the victim card - the anti-Corbyn argument was probably the predominant voice in this thread until a couple of pages back. Your argument ends if you’re completely unable to suggest an alternative.