sullydnl
Ross Kemp's caf ID
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2012
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Distribution is part of it, but the bigger problem is that the Tories are 12 points higher than they were in 2005, and the Lib Dems 12 points lower.
This is also very true.
Distribution is part of it, but the bigger problem is that the Tories are 12 points higher than they were in 2005, and the Lib Dems 12 points lower.
I don't think you can really blame Blairism for 'last night'. Corbyn ran on a radically different manifesto and lost two successive elections. And in his 2017 defeat he won more seats than he did last night - their historic fall is his fault. And he was deeply unpopular as well. This seems to be getting used by some people as a vague footnote but it's central to his defeat. People didn't like him. For a brief period in 2017 they were neutral on him. But aside from that they thought he was shit.
But you're absolutely correct in saying Blair's premiership was one which saw a profound disconnect between the party itself and a lot of their traditional voters. Indeed, the voting decline for the party itself between 1997 and 2005 demonstrates that to an extent - by the end New Labour were riding on apathy and a poor opposition more than anything else, and the new voters they'd gained would flock back to the Tories at the first possible opportunity, with the added caveat that Labour were also alienating their leftist working-class voters in the meantime.
So yeah, a straight return to Blairism won't work. His entire approach may have worked for a while but was built on dodgy foundations where you could simultaneously boost the public sector without really increasing taxation at all. A lot of the more leftist policies and ideals can be kept, in that regard. Many of them poll well. But the approach has to change. The ideas need to be marketed better. I'd argue they probably need to be simplified - in a sense Labour could probably done down the ideological rhetoric and just convey their nationalisation and redistributive agenda in a way which shows it'll benefit working people and empower them.
Distribution is part of it, but the bigger problem is that the Tories are 12 points higher than they were in 2005, and the Lib Dems 12 points lower.
On a similar note - what it does even mean to be working class these days? You’ve got blue collar labourers earning more than teachers and highly educated Russel group graduates working at Starbucks for minimum wage.I think a lot of people who think they are middle-class really aren't. They may not be mining coal or working in a factory, but they aren't where they think they are in society.
One major centre left party would imo probably be the natural party of government in the UK... But momentum etcWith this in mind, it’s probably a good time for Labour and Lib Dem to stop cannibalising each other. It may seem like they need to compete for Tory scraps but in reality they would both get a far better go at the prime cut if they didn’t spend so much energy competing to sit at the dining table.
Remember, I'm not British. I don't give a feck about Corbyn, I don't even know a lot about him. If he is out on his arse tomorrow, so be it. I have about as much attachment to him as to the president of, I don't know, Germany. And I don't even remember who that is right now.
My point is that the left is facing similar issues and difficulties everywhere and it would be a mistake to conclude that this election turned on nothing but Corbyn. You pointed out several times in this thread that the 2017 election result for Labour wasn't a success - I'm saying that in the current environment, that's the best they could have hoped for on Thursday. And that it's not worth giving up leftist ideals for that. And again, I do not equate Corbyn with leftist ideals. Labour can kick Corbyn to the curb and represent actual leftist values at the same time, no problem. Just, you know, it shouldn't become a second Lib Dem party. The first is pointless enough on its own.
Basically, I believe Labour lost the election because it's not on the right. And they can't change that. If by getting rid of Corbyn they can position themselves as a more credible and serious leftist party then they should do that, absolutely. Just don't expect miracles from it, and don't expect that there is some magical centrist idea that can rally the nation.
I think a lot of people who think they are middle-class really aren't. They may not be mining coal or working in a factory, but they aren't where they think they are in society.
I think we need a new broader re-examination of the idea of being working class. Millennials working in the service economy renting in London are currently so politically different to a baby boomer electrician in an ex-mining town in Durham, or a 45 year old civil servant in Bristol, but we need a labour movement that represents all of them to stand against a party who serves the interests of a tiny minority.
We're a service economy with virtually no industry left so job type clearly doesn't work. Wages and cost of living vary dramatically in different parts of the country, so income doesn't work either.
My preferred framework would be people who depend on wages to live rather than assets. Bring these diverse groups together by representing the people who need to work to live rather than the people who own everything. How you appeal to such a broad church is difficult though.
do we need to label people into classes anymore?
However, if you use your criteria, I expect that will cover the vast vast majority of people in the uk? Most people need a wage do they not? You could be earning £2-300k pa and this would be the case would it not?
If this point has been discussed then I apologise for missing it but I wanted to ask the question.
The Leeds photo about the child - if you look at it the bag is on the floor and no Nurse would ever forget that it needs gravity to actually work.
Just wanted to ask the question - if this has already been disproven then fair enough I've missed it.
Dr Yvette Oade, Chief Medical Officer at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust said:
“Our hospitals are extremely busy at the moment and we are very sorry that Jack’s family had a long wait in our Emergency Department. Our Chief Executive Julian Hartley has spoken to Jack’s mum and offered a personal apology. We have seen a significant increase in the number of people visiting our Paediatric Emergency Department, and this week we saw the highest attendances we have seen since April 2016. Despite this, our staff are working tirelessly to provide the best possible care under these extreme pressures.
“Jack was quickly assessed upon arrival and seen in two different clinical treatment rooms in the Paediatric Emergency Department.Within four hours a decision was made to admit Jack to our Children’s Assessment and Treatment (CAT) Unit for further monitoring overnight. Unfortunately, the unit was also experiencing exceptionally high levels of demand which meant that Jack was required to wait in the clinical treatment room in the Paediatric Emergency Department until a bed became available. Jack was admitted to the CAT Unit later that evening and was discharged home the following morning after a medical review.
“We are extremely sorry that there were only chairs available in the treatment room, and no bed. This falls below our usual high standards, and for this we would like to sincerely apologise to Jack and his family.”
do we need to label people into classes anymore?
I think a lot of people who think they are middle-class really aren't. They may not be mining coal or working in a factory, but they aren't where they think they are in society.
Logically speaking I'd say a media friendly, business friendly, middle class friendly party with a liberal left leaning agenda would do well.
Labour MPs should have voted for Theresa May’s Brexit deal – then the party wouldn’t be in this mess
Not sure if anyone posted this yet, but it’s not surprising that the majority of conservative voters were in the older age brackets.
Labour need to find a way to get more votes, but they need to be careful not to lose the young majority they have.
Yeah I agree completely, if possible they really need to get young people more interested.They're never going to win those older voters and tbh they need to play the long game.
Their time would be better spent mobilising the £15m who didn't vote.
As @finneh pointed out above, many of the older 'working class' aren't what they used to be anymore.
Not sure if anyone posted this yet, but it’s not surprising that the majority of conservative voters were in the older age brackets.
Labour need to find a way to get more votes, but they need to be careful not to lose the young majority they have.
I'd say they've spent a lot of time and energy on young people and they don't seem to have changed the number voting that much. I'd question the pragmatism of campaigning to them.Yeah I agree completely, if possible they really need to get young people more interested.
The takeaway from this election, I feel, is that Labour decided to give people what they thought they wanted. And the lying, racist, homophobic prick that is Boris de feckin Pfeffel Johnson said that he would get Brexit done. 80 million times. That was what they wanted to hear. And that was enough.
Can anyone enlighten me, in a summary, why Jeremy Corbyn was considered so absolutely loathable?
I'm no politics fan or follower so explain it to me like a complete novice, which I am really. I honestly dont get it. Labour is supposed to be the party of the 'everyman' and Corbyn looks and acts, for the most part, far more regularly than any politician I've ever seen. Tony Blair was a public school boy representing the working class, for example, even just to look at the bloke. Corbyn looks like a bloke you might work with, and surely that should be a major appeal?
The anti-Semitism stuff etc isn't something I need explaining here, because it appears that he was considered completely unelectable from way back when. I never understood it and I still don't.
Libdems pretty consistent across the board there.
Not sure if anyone posted this yet, but it’s not surprising that the majority of conservative voters were in the older age brackets.
Labour need to find a way to get more votes, but they need to be careful not to lose the young majority they have.
Thank you.
He spent his entire political career up to 2015 on the far-left periphery of the Labour Party, engaged in the causes associated with it which inevitably regularly positioned him in direct opposition to the mainstream or ‘establishment’, and by extension broader public opinion (e.g. the Falklands, the IRA, NATO, etc.). This meant that when, on assuming leadership of the party, he was forced to moderate his past positions in an attempt to establish a broader cross-party appeal and consensus, he was vulnerable to charges of dishonesty, insincerity, and hypocrisy - case in point, his inability to clarify his own views on the biggest issue of the day, Brexit.
This obviously isn’t the entire story, since Johnson has his own credibility issues. But it seems to have served as the basis for the multi-pronged attacks on his character throughout the last four years.
Other than their vote falling as you go through the nrs social gradesLibdems pretty consistent across the board there.
His autobiography will be one of the most amazing life stories written in recent times!Gotcha, cheers mate. Makes a bit more sense now, I guess. Had a history of being too much of a lefty which will repulse the right-slanting voters and even concern left-leaning voters.
Gotcha, cheers mate. Makes a bit more sense now, I guess. Had a history of being too much of a lefty which will repulse the right-slanting voters and even concern left-leaning voters.