Mockney
Not the only poster to be named Poster of the Year
Maybe he’s legally barred from having any policies by News Corp incase it spoils the potential book profits?
More on the book (from May in The Times):
That almost sounds satirical. He started writing it to organise his thoughts, and then realised there was some good quality stuff.
He can't write policies but he will write a book. Waste of space.writing a book about how to fix the country before devising any policy. it's a farce.
should resign or be forced into no confidence vote. he's exactly what the uk does not need + exactly what labour does not need. as frosty said, labour needs a radical platform. transformational policy is the new aspirationalism in the era of the green new deal. except unlike the tory brand it offers common utility and tangible benefits to most people.
Yes, still waiting to see if Starmer can stand the heat his own side is putting to his feet!Still waiting.
Andy Burnham.Fecking beige incarnate. Who of the likely runners would make a good replacement? I've been doing my best to ignore politics for a little while now ..
From 2015
Labour's Andy Burnham suggests he might back further welfare cuts
Labour leadership favourite Andy Burnham has indicated he would support further welfare cuts, including government plans for a £23,000 cap on benefits if it has adequate safeguards.
At a speech in London, the shadow health secretary said he wanted to counter the perception his party wants to give “an easy ride” to people who do not want to help themselves.
“Labour does need to win back those people who have that feeling about us,” he told business leaders at the headquarters of EY (previously Ernst & Young) on Friday. He added that the party would not be re-elected unless it showed people it was on the side of those who wanted to “get on” and succeed.
Asked after the speech about his views on welfare, he said: “I was talking about an impression on the doorstep and there is that feeling, some people say, that Labour want to be soft on people who want something for nothing. We’ve got to be honest about that. That is a feeling that’s out there, that was still being replayed at this election.”
Burnham is trying to dispel the idea that he is the candidate of the party’s left and trade unions, arguing that he is the experienced and loyal choice who can appeal to all sections of the party.
He said Labour was right to challenge indiscriminate welfare cuts, including the bedroom tax. But he suggested there should be further cuts at some level below the Tory proposal for £12bn of savings.
“There are real worries about what £12bn of benefit cuts will mean in terms of effects on carer’s allowance or tax credits,” he said. “This indiscriminate thing where all benefits are lumped together – there is a more sophisticated argument about in- and out-of-work benefits.”
Burnham said he backed the shadow cabinet position on welfare revealed by the acting Labour leader, ******* Harman, who said the party may be sympathetic to the idea of the government’s plans to lower the cap on benefits to £23,000 a year.
“There are questions about discretionary housing support. I don’t know what plans the government has in respect of that. It hits London disproportionately. So those are what we’re going to look at before we make a final decision [on the cap],” he said.
In his wide-ranging speech, Burnham urged the government to get on with the process of getting more airport runway capacity built in the south-east of England and holding the EU referendum by autumn 2016. He also outlined an ambition to bring in a university-style system for allocating and financing apprenticeships, arguing that the last Labour government let down some young people who did not wish to go down an academic path.
https://www.theguardian.com/politic...y-burham-further-welfare-cuts-leader-business
Cause Burnham's Northern accent >>> Starmer's weak nasally voiceCan anyone tell me why Burham isn't just Starmer with a northern accent ?
I might be in the minority but I feel like a general raising of standard in disclosure of opinions / a chance to explain themselves GENUINELY would be an incredible thing for British politics.That almost sounds satirical. He started writing it to organise his thoughts, and then realised there was some good quality stuff.
Cause Burnham's Northern accent >>> Starmer's weak nasally voice
It's very funny to Boris argument against the Romans, is that they were nasty to people in the colosseum.See his discussion of Rome Vs Greece if you don't believe me.
his persona was calculated to score points with nationalist types. all he was doing was to mirror what he thought the public looked like. and going by his success it's hard to argue he was wrong. did the majority of brexit types, the ones who voted against the establishment, want a classical scholar or a comedian who seemed scholarly beneath it all? half the parliament engage in classical scholarship because it's the public school legacy of holding the dead languages higher than the living. and then the political history you get in university when you do politics and economics or political economy. his success on the personal level was entirely because he seemed dishonest. same as trump. people know the system is rigged and they grow tired of watching politicians pretend it isn't. when you see politicians mirroring your own convictions, by playing underhanded, you think "he knows where it's at" or "he's one of us" or at least "he's not one of them". it's a pr conjuring trick.Boris Johnson was an intelligent guy but we never saw his real brain working - only the lying, public facade. See his discussion of Rome Vs Greece if you don't believe me. And that public clown persona is everything wrong with politics. We want to see intellect and truth, not some dumbed down and misleading version of it.
Yet it was a strange kind of socialism, which imposed a bloody partition on India, pursued colonial war in Malaya, and played a pivotal role in creating NATO. Indeed, Labour’s nationalisations of key sectors of Britain’s ailing post-war economy took place without any semblance of workers’ control. And when it came to industrial unrest, Attlee and his government proved yet again that Labour’s priority was maintaining social order and capitalism in Britain, and sided with the employers against working people.
It is notable that the Attlee government had declined to overturn Order 1305 – an official ban on strike action introduced during the Second World War – upon coming to power. This meant that any industrial action taken under Attlee’s government was ‘unofficial,’ which made it far more difficult to conduct negotiations, but much easier for the government to use extraordinary means to put down strikes. Not only this, but Attlee and Ernest Bevin had organised the reestablishment of the strike-breaking Supply and Transport Organisation, which was first employed to break the 1926 General Strike.
Within its very first week of existence, the Attlee government had already sent up to 4,000 troops to break up a strike by port workers at London’s Surrey Commercial Docks, who had been calling for a basic pay rise in one of the lowest paid industries. Not long after, in September 1945, a strike broke out at the docks in Birkenhead. The minister for Labour refused to meet the strikers and the government proceeded to send 21,000 troops to break the strike.
These were not exceptional cases. Attlee’s government routinely employed troops to break strikes across various industries in the years that followed – totalling no fewer than eleven occasions by 1950 – and had declared state of emergencies to deal with strikes in 1948 and 1949. In contrast, where employers had used lock-outs against workers–where employers would temporarily close factories to force wage cuts on workers–the government had effectively adopted a policy of non-intervention. The Attlee government had made itself abundantly clear whose side it was on.
For anyone hoping for a day modern Attlee.
I think by far the most important thing here is Order 1305, and the clear implication that George Lucas based the Galactic Empire on the Labour Party.
True. Starmer is so devoid of ideas he just regurgitates Tory lines.Gordon Brown seems to have no trouble making the news today, talking of social justice with passion and logic as ever. Saying what Starmer should be saying of course.
Sometimes the obvious answer can be the right one. This may just be a shining example of the Peter Principle.Starmer is controlled opposition. It’ll come out in time I reckon.
Wouldn't surprise me.Starmer is controlled opposition. It’ll come out in time I reckon.
but what was the price of milk the last time that happened?
AlsoSupermarket inflation is expected to reach the highest level since at least 2008 in August after rising to almost 10% this month, amid the worst squeeze on household budgets on record. Families are facing a £454 increase in average annual grocery bills, adding pressure amid the cost of living crisis, with butter, milk and pet food among the biggest risers over the past year, according to figures from Kantar.Wider consumer price inflation (CPI) for June is expected on Wednesday to hit 9.3%, up from 9.1% in May, underlining the impact of Britain’s cost of living crisis on households and businesses.
https://theguardian.com/business/20...rises-grocery-inflation-prices-cost-of-living
Blair flew to Australia and knelt before Murdoch. That was the key to his success.Labour have already been in opposition for a long time. Only one Labour leader has won an election in the best part of 50 years, and did so by appealing to the middle ground/soft Tory support.
You'd think the was a lesson in that somewhere, but apparently not.
Trying to pretend that winning elections in a predominantly (C)conservative country by socialist policies is possible is an admirable self-delusion, but what was the price of milk the last time that happened?
It’s a phone video filmed by most likely a scared pensioner of some lads having fun with bikes.Nice and effective messaging.
It’s a phone video filmed by most likely a scared pensioner of some lads having fun with bikes.
It’s something you would expect to see on Brass Eye.
Tbh You’ll likely be right that it will be effective messaging, personally I’ve always hated this type of political communication. It’s a very British thing of here’s a group of people having fun, now let me tell you, how we can stop this immediately.I think we will disagree on this as this messaging is still effective though. Especially using the MP's own words against him.
Considering Labour needs to win Redcar too. Honestly I would have had no problem with Corbyn's Labour doing this either.
Tbh You’ll likely be right that it will be effective messaging, personally I’ve always hated this type of political communication. It’s a very British thing of here’s a group of people having fun, now let me tell you, how we can stop this immediately.
Sure but how long do new storage facilities take to build... how long do new extraction sites in places that aren't Russia take to set up
- Finding urgent new supplies of gas and storage
Sure but how long do new storage facilities take to build... how long do new extraction sites in places that aren't Russia take to set up
I suspect the timelines for both and the investment needed is signifigant
For this winter and next it's buy Russian gas or accept anything else costs a lot more ... if the government thinks that's a price worth paying then probably they have to find a way to financially contribute to that.
Gut feel a new pm (probably truss I guess) will do something as a flagship policy to try to get people onside in September or an emergency budget ij October... probably won't be enough ij most people's eyes
But finding new gas supplies and having better storage are very much longer term options
Tory MPs are out here sexually assaulting women and children but let's focus on the real problem of lads popping wheelies.
Labour Is Finally Preparing To Unveil Cost-Of-Living Policy Proposals As Energy Crisis Escalates
https://www.politicshome.com/news/article/labour-to-make-series-of-cost-of-living-interventions
Exclusive: Labour is preparing to make several policy announcements on the worsening cost-of-living crisis, with the first set to be detailed in a speech by Keir Starmer as soon as early next week.
With inflation running at a 40-year high, continuing low growth and the Bank of England warning that the United Kingdom faces a 15-month recession, the opposition party has been under growing pressure to set out its policies for addressing the myriad challenges facing the country.
PoliticsHome has learned that Labour is poised to make several significant interventions on the economy between now and the next general election, with the party preparing to escalate its policy to crisis mode.
The first intervention, which party insiders say will reflect "the scale" of the crisis facing households and industry, is expected to be a speech by Starmer, which could take place as soon as Monday.
Starmer's office has been working closely with Reeves and shadow climate change secretary Ed Miliband’s team on the new policy – which has been tested with external experts – for several months, PoliticsHome understands.
A Labour source said the party had always been planning to wait for yesterday's forecasts before announcing its plans, so that its proposals were up-to-date.