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Corbyn sacks Hilary Benn, Half Shadow cabinet expected to resign today (Labour)

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Maledict

Member
Possibly it'd be to gain seats against a fucked Labour - also motivations could be to have a new manifesto from BoJo to set his own agenda rather than Cameron's. But quite right they have a square peg and a round hole with the sovereignty/immigration concerns that is the big problem...

That's one of the reasons Labour are trying to change their leader right now - every piece of evidence the party has says it's going to be obliterated if an election were called right now. They need a fresh face to put up a fight against Johnson / May.
 
Just read that Diane Abbott was asked on the Today programme this morning if Corbyn could win a general election, and she said the question was "Westminster centric"

IF YOU'RE NOT THINKING OF HOW TO WIN ELECTIONS THEN WHAT'S THE CHUFFING POINT

To be fair she did go on to say yes, but if you're considering the idea of elections as Westminster centric than what the fuck.
 

Chinner

Banned
Just read that Diane Abbott was asked on the Today programme this morning if Corbyn could win a general election, and she said the question was "Westminster centric"


IF YOU'RE NOT THINKING OF HOW TO WIN ELECTIONS THEN WHAT'S THE CHUFFING POINT
Come on, you know that is a totally biased line of thinking. What do you expect Corbyn to do, lead his party to victory? That is very binary lime of thinking.
 
Come on, you know that is a totally biased line of thinking. What do you expect Corbyn to do, lead his party to victory? That is very binary lime of thinking.
That is he true, he has his mandate from a totally non representative sample of the population, that proves he can win all over. It's not like his office has been shown to be incompetent and no idea how politics and the media works. That just puts you in the Westminster bubble.
 
Just read that Diane Abbott was asked on the Today programme this morning if Corbyn could win a general election, and she said the question was "Westminster centric"

IF YOU'RE NOT THINKING OF HOW TO WIN ELECTIONS THEN WHAT'S THE CHUFFING POINT

To be fair she did go on to say yes, but if you're considering the idea of elections as Westminster centric than what the fuck.

Isn't there a vetting process for these clowns?
 

Orbis

Member
They aren't even Labour Party members ffs. It's the socialist worker crowd and the stupid affiliates (thanks Ed!). This is the 80s and entryism over again. Cannot believe he didn't even mention the Europe vote once.


He absolutely needs to go. Now.
For the sake of British politics and the people it serves, he absolutely needs to go. We cannot allow the only Left opposition to the Tories to be turned into an unelectable fantasy party by the out of touch SWP and others. You have your own fucking party, now fuck off and take Corbyn with you else we are heading for an increasingly right wing political landscape.
 
For the sake of British politics and the people it serves, he absolutely needs to go. We cannot allow the only Left opposition to the Tories to be turned into an unelectable fantasy party by the out of touch SWP and others. You have your own fucking party, now fuck off and take Corbyn with you else we are heading for an increasingly right wing political landscape.

Your line of thinking is why the party is fucked and rightfully so. In my opinion, the party should have got behind Corbyn from the start, since it was the mandate of the member ship, shown unity and given it a real go, and if it failed they should get rid of him. By they, in complicity with the media, undermined him from the start, and now this open rebellion is making he party seem even more torn. Unity? It is not Corbyn per se who has a lot of support, though some people respect him since he seems more honest than the rest of the bunch, but it is what he represents, with more emphasis on social justice, sustainability, than the alternatives. I wouldn't be surprised if anyone who emerges following Corbyn as leader will be equally tainted in the eyes of the public and the media. And in this case, rightfully so.
 

Maledict

Member
Your line of thinking is why the party is fucked and rightfully so. In my opinion, the party should have got behind Corbyn from the start, since it was the mandate of the member ship, shown unity and given it a real go, and if it failed they should get rid of him. By they, in complicity with the media, undermined him from the start, and now this open rebellion is making he party seem even more torn. Unity? It is not Corbyn per se who has a lot of support, though some people respect him since he seems more honest than the rest of the bunch, but it is what he represents, with more emphasis on social justice, sustainability, than the alternatives. I wouldn't be surprised if anyone who emerges following Corbyn as leader will be equally tainted in the eyes of the public and the media. And in this case, rightfully so.

No.

The reason they are moving is because party polling is showing an utter disaster if a general election were called in the next few months, and following the Remain campaign Labour MPs have been hearing time and time again on the doorstep that Corbyn will never be leader. Party supporters have turned against him, constituency parties have turned against him, and he's unable to form a shadow cabinet. A mandate of less than 500K counts for absolutely nothing when the millions of people who vote in general elections won't touch you with a barge pole.

He has been the worse opposition leader of the last 50 years - IDS has looked good by comparison. Stop trying to blame other people for the sheer fact that Jeremy Corbyn is a protest politician completely unable to lead a political party, and he doesn't even seem to want to try. Sabotaging the Remain campaign was the last straw for the party - he has to go. This isn't a plot by the centre left MPs - the left wing of the party is doing this as well. When people like Seema Malhotra, and the eagle sisters, are pushing you out it means the entire party is trying to get rid of you. It is done.
 
Your line of thinking is why the party is fucked and rightfully so. In my opinion, the party should have got behind Corbyn from the start, since it was the mandate of the member ship, shown unity and given it a real go, and if it failed they should get rid of him. By they, in complicity with the media, undermined him from the start, and now this open rebellion is making he party seem even more torn. Unity? It is not Corbyn per se who has a lot of support, though some people respect him since he seems more honest than the rest of the bunch, but it is what he represents, with more emphasis on social justice, sustainability, than the alternatives. I wouldn't be surprised if anyone who emerges following Corbyn as leader will be equally tainted in the eyes of the public and the media. And in this case, rightfully so.

It is incumbent upon him to command the confidence of the party. It is he who has lost it. The membership mandate did not hand him a dictatorship, nor are his supporters the clear voice of the membership. Things are turning against him.

Young Labour North refused to vote for a statement backing him yesterday. The ranks are closing and it'll end up being Corbyn and perhaps a small majority of the members against everyone else. If he doesn't resign he's going to destroy us.
 
This is the statement that Young Labour North rejected. Our representative said that it was demanded upon him to come to the facebook group for a poll on this, he had about an hour for the time limit to take the poll. It's a total mess.

Hi all, Just consulting members in the region on if I should I vote for this to be a statement on young labours national committee. Can you answer with a simple yes or no.
This is what I have been asked to vote on
"Young Labour Supports Jeremy Corbyn
Jeremy Corbyn is here to stay. This is an incontestable fact, displayed by the breadth and depth of his support across the party. However, in the last few days, a vocal wrecking minority has come to fore, calling for Corbyn to step down, and resigning themselves from their positions. In doing so, they are attempting to override the democratic will of members and union affiliates and ride roughshod over the idea of a party that is made by members and linked with the trade union movement. Those attempting to establish political leadership through the medium of backroom deals as opposed to democratic processes should be ashamed of themselves, as these actions illustrate a contempt for the rest of the party’s voices.
The calls for Corbyn to go have been vastly over-exaggerated by a hostile media, and by a minority within our party. Antagonism to Corbyn is largely concentrated within the PLP, who do not compose the entirety of our movement. At a grassroots level, the largest petition calling for Corbyn to go has only managed to gather 400 signatures, in comparison to the ‪#‎KeepCorbyn‬ petition which as acquired more than 200,000, making it vastly more popular by a factor of about 500. Moreover, leading trade union heads of Labour’s affiliated unions have collectively written a letter calling for Corbyn to stay. Young Labour National Committee has written a statement in a similar vein. What this highlights is that the elected representatives of millions of working people, as well as of thousands of young members, believe Corbyn is best placed to meet the challenges that the Labour Party faces. Moreover hundreds of thousands of ordinary people have agreed with this perspective. Those manoeuvring against Corbyn are therefore openly disregarding the wishes of the majority of the membership.
Young Labour National Committee has written a formal statement declaring our support for Jeremy Corbyn as the leader best placed to regain the trust of the British electorate. We have not taken this decision detached from our membership, but rather by listening to them. Many of the 200,000 signatories on the petition were young members, eager to keep the leadership which inspired them to join in the first place. Tellingly, our statement received more ‘likes’ on Facebook for the brief time it was online, than the main resignation petition has gathered to date. Young members overwhelming support Corbyn’s leadership, it is those who are against Corbyn who are the anomalies in this situation. This is why the majority of Young Labour National Committee continues to be proud to support Jeremy Corbyn as Leader of the Labour Party and will resist any attempts to remove him by a PLP that has lost touch with Labour’s membership base.
It is highly disappointing that the media has given an undue focus on fringe petitions and statements, whilst choosing not to cover the statements of representative bodies of the youth movement. The LYL statement had not even been discussed on a committee level, in comparison to our statement which was. What this indicates is that the media, far from representing debate across all wings of the party, has chosen to propagate a certain political position: Jeremy must go. The elected Young Labour National Committee must and should have all Labour mediums available to them to communicate the views of young members: that is the only way we can fulfil our duty to represent and fight for young members. This is not the situation currently, where despite being the highest elected body of Young Labour, we are met with obstruction at every attempt to get our message out.
The bulk of the Labour youth movement is fully behind Jeremy Corbyn and is willing to fight to ensure that the democratic mandate he has been given is respected. Those who would spit in the face of the democratic will of ordinary members should be prepared to be faced with ordinary Labour members’ opposition to their brazen shenanigans."
 
Tbh the actual *reason* for his failure is basically irrelevant (though useful to avoid it happening again). The fact he has lost the support of his colleagues is enough.

Edit: lol, "more Facebook likes"
 
Wasn't there meant to be proof that Corbyn voted Leave in the papers today? What happened with that?

That was clearly bullshit. No matter how secretly pro-Brexit Corbyn might be, he's not going to actually cast his vote to leave, and if he did, he certainly wouldn't tell anyone about it.
 

f0rk

Member
That was clearly bullshit. No matter how secretly pro-Brexit Corbyn might be, he's not going to actually cast his vote to leave, and if he did, he certainly wouldn't tell anyone about it.
You're right, but it doesn't matter what he actually voted. It's a problem that it's very believable he would vote leave.
 

Sensationalist

Neo Member
Why? Every single piece of evidence we have suggests this.

I apologize in advance but WTF is this history revisionist BS?

Socialism does not work? You mean things like the New Deal, Universal Healthcare and Free tuition fee? I hope you have at least learned about these because they are the heights of most developed nations in the world and nothing comes close. Did I just left GAF and go to a mental gym somewhere?

You mean that awful, awful time when some dirty Welsh socialist scumbag started the NHS? Did that improve things for anybody?

Thank you and since I do not know this, thank you again.
 

8bit

Knows the Score
CmCdAZdXEAA4kjh.jpg


(I have no idea of the specific context, but Sky overheard Corbyn's mic.)
 

Hazzuh

Member
CmCdAZdXEAA4kjh.jpg


(I have no idea of the specific context, but Sky overheard Corbyn's mic.)

The whole thing was a farce. He let the cameras in to film and then panicked and tried to get them to leave. When they came back later he'd moved everyone around so Tom Watson wasn't sat next to him anymore. Legitimately like something from the thick of it.
 
I apologize in advance but WTF is this history revisionist BS?

Socialism does not work? You mean things like the New Deal, Universal Healthcare and Free tuition fee? I hope you have at least learned about these because they are the heights of most developed nations in the world and nothing comes close. Did I just left GAF and go to a mental gym somewhere?



Thank you and since I do not know this, thank you again.

darkace is an ignorant and uneducated undergrad with a economics 101 textbook.
He loves talking shite and I encourage people to call him out on his ideologically driven bullshit.
Here he is claiming he loves Medicare in Australia:

...

I personally love Medicare, and want it available for all low income Australians for the majority of needs, but I still think a copayment or the like would be good policy provided protections are in place for the most vulnerable. All about those long term outcomes.

Obviously oblivious to the fact that it was a scheme for universal health care started in 1983 by ...
<gasp>
<horror>
that dastardly socialist Bob Hawke.
Medicare started as Medibank in 1975 by ...
<gasp>
<horror>
that dastardly socialist Gough Whitlam. Gough Whitlam is notorious for making access to tertiary education equitable and cheap for all Australians, withdrawing troops from Vietnam and being one of the first western leaders to open up relations with those damn communists in China!! Arrrrgh!

The conservatives were so mad they had him sacked scrapped medibank, changed the anthem to that lovely Franco German tune God Save the Queen and drove our country to recession.

Then Bob Hawke came along and gave us Medicare, reformed the labor market, got inflation under control, reformed the financial markets and held the yardglass drinking record at Oxford for a very long time.
Bu hey, someone has a textbook that says they're all shit eh?
Goddamn socialists. What have they ever done for us.
 

darkace

Banned
I apologize in advance but WTF is this history revisionist BS?

Socialism does not work? You mean things like the New Deal, Universal Healthcare and Free tuition fee? I hope you have at least learned about these because they are the heights of most developed nations in the world and nothing comes close. Did I just left GAF and go to a mental gym somewhere?

These aren't socialism. Maybe you should google the word. Socialism is if the government provides the care, not just the funding. The NHS in its original form is socialised healthcare, single-payer universal healthcare isn't. The New Deal and free university aren't socialism. Also bad policy, but not socialism.


Damn dude. Why are you so salty lmao. Is this because I schooled you multiple times?

Stop letting your ideological wants blind you to reality.
 

4444244

Member
Why on earth are Labour choosing now as the time to get a new leader.

Surely the issue of the moment is the whole Brexit nightmare. It doesn't matter who leads them.

Can't there even be should be some sort of cross-party get-together to try and sort out a way to get out of this mess? There must be enough remain MP's to get a majority consensus for something.

You might sort out getting new leaders for both parties and it will be of 0 use because they wasted the time they should be using to sort out the mess.
 

Condom

Member
These aren't socialism. Maybe you should google the word. Socialism is if the government provides the care, not just the funding. The NHS in its original form is socialised healthcare, single-payer universal healthcare isn't. The New Deal and free university aren't socialism. Also bad policy, but not socialism.
Who the heck do you think pushed for those policies in Europe? It were the socialists (then called social-democrats or Democratic socialists). If you mean socialism as in Soviet socialism then I don't even understand why you brought it up here when we're talking about Corbyn who is a social Democrat, not a Bolshevik.
Even then Bolshevik socialism did improve lives of many workers.

If you like revisionism then you have the Chinese socialism with markets which is successful in industrialising China right now. Why not take China as an example of how socialism works? Oh no now China is capitalist because they are doing well at the moment. Next time their economy crashes it is because of socialism. It's only socialist when it's doing badly.

Then some come and mention fucking Venezuela like it's anything more than a country with a social Democratic system. Also ignoring how those policies there did improve the life's of working class people there. It's only that the government is incompetent in dealing with the current troubles, that it's a prime example of 'socialism failing' for rabbit neoliberals.

I think the notion that socialism does not help working people is a grave insult to all those activists that have been locked up, killed and shamed just for standing up for their class. Those that struggled to get the 8 hour workday, decent pay and all the other privileges we enjoy today and are now again stripped from us by neoliberals like you. Absolutely disgusting.
 
Ownership of utilities is irrelevant provided legislation is intact to prevent rent-seeking.

Social housing is bad policy. It doesn't solve the issues facing the users and it heavily drives down the housing prices of those nearby.

Generally good policy. Less regulated markets increase investment, which increases productivity, which increases wages. Obviously some regulation should exist, but most currently existing regulation is unnecessary and counterproductive.

Good policy. The UK and Australia have the two best tuition systems in the world by rate of return publicly and privately. Both of them have small income-based repayment plans.
Free tuition is regressive, a large transferal of wealth from the poor to the middle class:

http://www.docs.hss.ed.ac.uk/educati..._ESRCF_WP3.pdf

and doesn't solve the issue facing underprivileged households looking to enter university, which isn't credit constraints but improper K-12 preparation (yes I'm aware this is from the US. It's still usable for the UK):

https://research.collegeboard.org/si...erformance.pdf

Not really.

Wages in the UK aren't stagnant.

http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/dp1246.pdf

The government introduced more flexible workplace negotiations to increase worker productivity. These aren't bad, and they didn't attack the unions like Thatcher did. The single driver of aggregate wealth in a country is the productivity of its workers, not what its unions can barter for.

Yea this was dumb.

That's kind of why capitalism works.

Blair Labour helped the working class, and the aspirational class, and the middle class. He built a broad coalition driving everybody upwards. The hard left wont ever build a coalition capable of providing a credible opposition, let alone winning governance in its own right. It needs to compromise its ideological wants for the realities of the electoral system and governance, and if it wont do that then it will be irrelevant, and incapable of putting any of its wishes into action.

Blairs' focus on education and health was monumental, he doubled spending in both of these areas. These are the most important areas for anybody seeking to better themselves and for the long-term wealth of a country, and his dedication to education funding enabled many working class members of society to drive upwards.

You can shrug them off but those are the issues for the working classes. People who can't pay electricity bills, or families who are on waiting lists voted for Blair in '97, but subsequent elections he received less of the working class vote ... I think it dropped by 25%? and he won later elections based on the middle class vote. And those working-class just stopped voting.

His policies in education are well documented as failures to help the working class, like most policies only helping lower middle class. You actually believe the true working class financed a university education after fees were bought in? Oh right, capitalism always the saviour of the working classes. The representation of "common" people in high positions is low now, just give it 10-15 years and I don't think they'll be any one from a state school in a notable position of power (private or public).

Jeremy Corbyn has the charisma of a wet rag but at least he's travelling to working class heartlands and speaking to people who are affected by the issues I mentioned.
 

darkace

Banned
Who the heck do you think pushed for those policies in Europe? It were the socialists (then called social-democrats or Democratic socialists). If you mean socialism as in Soviet socialism then I don't even understand why you brought it up here when we're talking about Corbyn who is a social Democrat, not a Bolshevik.

Social democracy is a political, social and economic ideology that supports economic and social interventions to promote social justice within the framework of a capitalist economy

So... not a socialist? Gotcha.
Even then Bolshevik socialism did improve lives of many workers.
Yea, sure. Nowhere near as well as the West did, but the glorious revolution just needed more time comrade.
If you like revisionism then you have the Chinese socialism with markets which is successful in industrialising China right now. Why not take China as an example of how socialism works? Oh no now China is capitalist because they are doing well at the moment. Next time their economy crashes it is because of socialism. It's only socialist when it's doing badly.
China did as well as the USSR did in the early stages. It ran into problems once all the easy productivity gains are over (like mobilising the female workforce, increasing literature rates, universal K-12, tertiary education access), just like the USSR did. This is where the wonders of the capitalist economy come into play through refining inputs and increasing productivity through investment.

This is why China is opening its economy. Because command can't get them any further. They're outcome-based, not ideologues.
Then some come and mention fucking Venezuela like it's anything more than a country with a social Democratic system.
Yea Venezuela is openly socialist. It nationalised the economy. If you don't think it's socialist then you don't know what socialism means. It's the dictionary definition of socialism.
Also ignoring how those policies there did improve the life's of working class people there.
I guess if not being able to afford toilet paper is improving lives, then yea it worked wonders.
It's only that the government is incompetent in dealing with the current troubles, that it's a prime example of 'socialism failing' for rabbit neoliberals.
It kinda failed because of its socialist policies. You know, as literally any sort of reasonable commentator would tell you.
I think the notion that socialism does not help working people is a grave insult to all those activists that have been locked up, killed and shamed just for standing up for their class.
Anybody who sees us as locked in a class struggle has no idea what they're talking about.
Those that struggled to get the 8 hour workday, decent pay and all the other privileges we enjoy today and are now again stripped from us by neoliberals like you. Absolutely disgusting.
Yea these things came about because the productivity of workers improved to the point where it became viable to offer them, not because of worker power or any such nonsense. The greatest gains in the working standards of labour came prior to unions even existing.

Even leaving aside the above, you still haven't answered whether or not Corbyn should stand down for a Blairite if it allows Labour to gain power again. Are you for outcomes, or are you for ideological posturing?

You actually believe the true working class financed a university education after fees were bought in?
Do you believe free uni is better for the working class, given I've shown multiple peer-reviewed studies stating the opposite?
Jeremy Corbyn has the charisma of a wet rag but at least he's travelling to working class heartlands and speaking to people who are affected by the issues I mentioned.
Who cares. That doesn't achieve anything. Get people in power who can legislate for them. I don't give a shit if somebody listens to my struggles if they don't and can't do anything about them. It's the ultimate example of moral signalling rather than actually trying to achieve anything.
 

Condom

Member
Improvements for workers came automagically after productivity increased and not because of mass struggle.

Yeah that historic revisionism is so heavily revisionist that it's no use talking to you. Ignore list it is.

And to answer your question I do not a Blairite is enough for Labour to gain back power, I think they need something new. Radical but recognizable and respectable.
 
Is he going to leave then? It's actually annoying me, how stubborn he's being. Surely he can't seriously think he's electable. Most of his cabinet has resigned, thousands are saying he's unelectable, Labour is losing support left and right and yet he continues to bury his head in the sand.
 

Jezbollah

Member
Is he going to leave then? It's actually annoying me, how stubborn he's being. Surely he can't seriously think he's electable. Most of his cabinet has resigned, thousands are saying he's unelectable, Labour is losing support left and right and yet he continues to bury his head in the sand.

So, the motion is non-binding - but Corbyn's only hope is that he manages to get enough votes to get onto the ballot for a leadership challenge and to allow the Labour members (those same members who voted him in) to win the challenge for him.

Corbyn's major issue after this though is filling up the shadow cabinet. He simply cannot do that with the amount of support (19% of Labour MPs) he currently has.
 
So Watson and Angela Eagle meeting to decide which runs.

Any preferences? I like Tom Watson, but think he might have a bit much baggage to last. Dunno.
 
Did Dan Jarvis die or is there another reason nobody's bringing him up?

He hasn't really pushed himself forwards. HOWEVER - he is canvassing for support.


But basically - one candidate is needed with the 50ish MP backing to trigger the contest. So everyone backs say, Eagle, as it likely. She'll then run, and potentially, others might too.
 

darkace

Banned
Improvements for workers came automagically after productivity increased and not because of mass struggle.

Yeah that historic revisionism is so heavily revisionist that it's no use talking to you. Ignore list it is.

And to answer your question I do not a Blairite is enough for Labour to gain back power, I think they need something new. Radical but recognizable and respectable.

Anything to keep the bubble intact comrade. I too ignore what I can't argue against.
 
D

Deleted member 231381

Unconfirmed Member
He hasn't really pushed himself forwards. HOWEVER - he is canvassing for support.


But basically - one candidate is needed with the 50ish MP backing to trigger the contest. So everyone backs say, Eagle, as it likely. She'll then run, and potentially, others might too.

You need 35 iirc.
 
Labour going crazy trying to sack Corbyn before that damning Chilcott report releases in a couple weeks. Seems Blair is behind this based on what Craig Murray is saying - he's been going HAM on this here and here.
 
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