bishblaize
Full Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2014
- Messages
- 4,280
I swear if an opinion poll told you to walk off a cliff you'd do it.
I'm well aware that the general public does not currently seem to be aligned with Corbyn's views. We currently have a Conservative majority government.
That doesn't mean that those in Labour who don't consider themselves left wing can look to marginalise 60% of the membership. Especially not with underhand tactics as we have seen.
My point was - use the 60% as a starting point. If it can't respect its own members who voted for it then frankly I don't see how the public should be expected to trust it. Then the party should look at where it should compromise in order to make its platform more desirable to the general public. Some of this will be changing policies, some simply how those policies are marketed.
It just seems like many in the PLP are sticking their fingers in their ears, screaming, and refusing to play along. It's not constructive in any way, shape, or form.
Yeah, evidence, who needs it, right? Anyway, I'd have thought the point fairly obvious. Labour needs around 10M votes at the next election. Building the party around 250,000 people who are unrepresentative of that group of people is unlikely to be successful.
If the argument to just plodding along is that, "Yeah, but everyone sticking together is the best way to get rid of the Tories.", then that only further highlights my point that Labour basically exists as a party to oppose the Tories, instead of in their own right.
This gets down to the nub of it of course. There are broadly speaking two points of view here. That the party should represent its people regardless of whether that makes them popular enough to get into Government or not. Or that the party is a vehicle for putting a left wing Government into place and if it could never do that it may as well not exist.
That said, I would point to the origins of the Labour Party here. The party coalesced out of all sorts of different groups - Unions, Fabians, Liberals, methodist christian socialists, (proper) socialists and various other community groups. They had a wide range of views between them and there were areas of distinct disagreement. But they came together because there was no other way to get their views heard in Government.
I see no reason that the party should split simply because they have contrasting motivations for their actions, if their goals are the same. Of course if groups within the party end up with different ends, not just means, then cooperation perhaps becomes impossible.