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Next Labour fall guy

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View chris123's Profile chris123 Flag hove actually 10 May 15 5.32pm Send a Private Message to chris123 Add chris123 as a friend

Quote Rubin at 10 May 2015 1.01pm

Tristram Hunt - the only one that isn't annoying.


He is annoying.

 

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View Rubin's Profile Rubin Flag 10 May 15 5.47pm Send a Private Message to Rubin Add Rubin as a friend

Quote chris123 at 10 May 2015 5.32pm

Quote Rubin at 10 May 2015 1.01pm

Tristram Hunt - the only one that isn't annoying.


He is annoying.


Perhaps, but no where near as bad as 'Chuka'.

 

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View chris123's Profile chris123 Flag hove actually 10 May 15 5.55pm Send a Private Message to chris123 Add chris123 as a friend

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 3.51pm

Quote Johnny Eagles at 10 May 2015 3.18pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 2.11pm

Labour need to decide on what their tack is and just hammer it home. Their failure in this election was that they didn't sufficiently set their stall out: while the Tories banged on about the deficit and jobs and the SNP, Labour switched from one thing to another.

Sadly I think this means they'll bring in some Blairite like Chukka Umunna and move to the right. I think arguing they can't win from the left is presumptuous as I still believe that there is a very convincing anti-austerity egalitarian argument to be made. They have 5 years, so plenty of time to alter public discourse.


The 'tack' is obvious. Blair won 3 elections by appealing to middle class aspirational types and business.

With the greatest of respect, appealing to people with your views is a route to defeat.

The same is incidentally true of me and the Tories. I would only vote for them if their leader was Norman Tebbitt, Mrs Peter Bone or Attila the Hun.


Appealing to people with my views would be to move to the left of any Labour leader ever. Digging up Lenin's corpse out and parading it round with a red rosette would still leave me unconvinced!

A slight shift to the left, which would involve strong arguments around a living wage, electoral reform, Keynesian economics and large-scale house building would not exactly be a leap to full Communism. Yes, the centre-left hasn't won an election for pushing on 40 years now but it still has the apparatus there to do so: a far larger membership base than the Tories, much greater numbers on the ground and union funding, which let's not forget still amounts to millions of pounds. Sure, all but 2 of the mainstream newspapers are right wing, but their power is waning really.


I think Ed Miliband is far more left wing in his thinking than he ever portrays.

 

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View chris123's Profile chris123 Flag hove actually 10 May 15 5.57pm Send a Private Message to chris123 Add chris123 as a friend

Quote Rubin at 10 May 2015 5.47pm

Quote chris123 at 10 May 2015 5.32pm

Quote Rubin at 10 May 2015 1.01pm

Tristram Hunt - the only one that isn't annoying.


He is annoying.


Perhaps, but no where near as bad as 'Chuka'.


Chukki is an Eagle.

 

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View Johnny Eagles's Profile Johnny Eagles Flag berlin 10 May 15 6.51pm Send a Private Message to Johnny Eagles Add Johnny Eagles as a friend

Quote nickgusset at 10 May 2015 4.51pm

Quote derben at 10 May 2015 4.37pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 3.51pm

Quote Johnny Eagles at 10 May 2015 3.18pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 2.11pm

Labour need to decide on what their tack is and just hammer it home. Their failure in this election was that they didn't sufficiently set their stall out: while the Tories banged on about the deficit and jobs and the SNP, Labour switched from one thing to another.

Sadly I think this means they'll bring in some Blairite like Chukka Umunna and move to the right. I think arguing they can't win from the left is presumptuous as I still believe that there is a very convincing anti-austerity egalitarian argument to be made. They have 5 years, so plenty of time to alter public discourse.


The 'tack' is obvious. Blair won 3 elections by appealing to middle class aspirational types and business.

With the greatest of respect, appealing to people with your views is a route to defeat.

The same is incidentally true of me and the Tories. I would only vote for them if their leader was Norman Tebbitt, Mrs Peter Bone or Attila the Hun.


Appealing to people with my views would be to move to the left of any Labour leader ever. Digging up Lenin's corpse out and parading it round with a red rosette would still leave me unconvinced!

A slight shift to the left, which would involve strong arguments around a living wage, electoral reform, Keynesian economics and large-scale house building would not exactly be a leap to full Communism. Yes, the centre-left hasn't won an election for pushing on 40 years now but it still has the apparatus there to do so: a far larger membership base than the Tories, much greater numbers on the ground and union funding, which let's not forget still amounts to millions of pounds. Sure, all but 2 of the mainstream newspapers are right wing, but their power is waning really.

So you think Labour lost because they were not far enough to the left? So I guess the electorate thought, hmmm, Labour is not far enough to the left for me, I know, I'll vote for the Tories, they are more to the left than Labour.

Labour lost in scotland against an anti austerity party...


Classic Gusset.

Just conveniently brush over the fact that Miliband performed worse than any leader since Kinnock in 1987.

If you think Labour can win from further left than they were under Miliband then you are very naive or just deluded.

 


...we must expand...get more pupils...so that the knowledge will spread...

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Flag 10 May 15 7.21pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

The only real chance is to elect David Miliband......But they aren't that sensible and he's probably still sore.

I quite like Lemmy but I don't think he's Labour's Obama.

Basically there is a talent vacuum at the top of Labour......It's the other brother or they are fecked.

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View Stuk's Profile Stuk Flag Top half 15 May 15 11.03am Send a Private Message to Stuk Add Stuk as a friend

Chuka Umanna has withdrawn. So he'll probably be the one after the next f***up.

 


Optimistic as ever

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View npn's Profile npn Flag Crowborough 15 May 15 11.16am Send a Private Message to npn Add npn as a friend

Quote Stuk at 15 May 2015 11.03am

Chuka Umanna has withdrawn. So he'll probably be the one after the next f***up.


That bloke's even slimey for a politician, and that's saying something!

 

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View Charlie Croker's Profile Charlie Croker Flag Hampshire 15 May 15 12.03pm Send a Private Message to Charlie Croker Add Charlie Croker as a friend

Quote Stuk at 15 May 2015 11.03am

Chuka Umanna has withdrawn. So he'll probably be the one after the next f***up.


Hmm - "didn't understand the level of scrutiny that he would be subjected to . . . "

Skeletons in the closet?

 


“My experience of life is that it is not divided up into genres; it’s a horrifying, romantic, tragic, comical, science-fiction cowboy detective novel. You know, with a bit of pornography if you’re lucky."

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View matt_himself's Profile matt_himself Flag Matataland 15 May 15 12.17pm Send a Private Message to matt_himself Add matt_himself as a friend

Quote Stuk at 15 May 2015 11.03am

Chuka Umanna has withdrawn. So he'll probably be the one after the next f***up.


Spineless. I really hope that Yvette Cooper wins. That would send Labour back years and the ghost of Ed Balls will continue to haunt Labour.

 


"That was fun and to round off the day, I am off to steal a charity collection box and then desecrate a place of worship.” - Smokey, The Selhurst Arms, 26/02/02

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nickgusset Flag Shizzlehurst 15 May 15 12.35pm

Quote Johnny Eagles at 10 May 2015 6.51pm

Quote nickgusset at 10 May 2015 4.51pm

Quote derben at 10 May 2015 4.37pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 3.51pm

Quote Johnny Eagles at 10 May 2015 3.18pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 2.11pm

Labour need to decide on what their tack is and just hammer it home. Their failure in this election was that they didn't sufficiently set their stall out: while the Tories banged on about the deficit and jobs and the SNP, Labour switched from one thing to another.

Sadly I think this means they'll bring in some Blairite like Chukka Umunna and move to the right. I think arguing they can't win from the left is presumptuous as I still believe that there is a very convincing anti-austerity egalitarian argument to be made. They have 5 years, so plenty of time to alter public discourse.


The 'tack' is obvious. Blair won 3 elections by appealing to middle class aspirational types and business.

With the greatest of respect, appealing to people with your views is a route to defeat.

The same is incidentally true of me and the Tories. I would only vote for them if their leader was Norman Tebbitt, Mrs Peter Bone or Attila the Hun.


Appealing to people with my views would be to move to the left of any Labour leader ever. Digging up Lenin's corpse out and parading it round with a red rosette would still leave me unconvinced!

A slight shift to the left, which would involve strong arguments around a living wage, electoral reform, Keynesian economics and large-scale house building would not exactly be a leap to full Communism. Yes, the centre-left hasn't won an election for pushing on 40 years now but it still has the apparatus there to do so: a far larger membership base than the Tories, much greater numbers on the ground and union funding, which let's not forget still amounts to millions of pounds. Sure, all but 2 of the mainstream newspapers are right wing, but their power is waning really.

So you think Labour lost because they were not far enough to the left? So I guess the electorate thought, hmmm, Labour is not far enough to the left for me, I know, I'll vote for the Tories, they are more to the left than Labour.

Labour lost in scotland against an anti austerity party...


Classic Gusset.

Just conveniently brush over the fact that Miliband performed worse than any leader since Kinnock in 1987.

If you think Labour can win from further left than they were under Miliband then you are very naive or just deluded.

Didn't labours vote go up?

Were the SNP using an anti austerity stance yes or no?


Edited by nickgusset (15 May 2015 12.37pm)

 

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derben Flag 15 May 15 12.50pm

Quote nickgusset at 15 May 2015 12.35pm

Quote Johnny Eagles at 10 May 2015 6.51pm

Quote nickgusset at 10 May 2015 4.51pm

Quote derben at 10 May 2015 4.37pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 3.51pm

Quote Johnny Eagles at 10 May 2015 3.18pm

Quote serial thriller at 10 May 2015 2.11pm

Labour need to decide on what their tack is and just hammer it home. Their failure in this election was that they didn't sufficiently set their stall out: while the Tories banged on about the deficit and jobs and the SNP, Labour switched from one thing to another.

Sadly I think this means they'll bring in some Blairite like Chukka Umunna and move to the right. I think arguing they can't win from the left is presumptuous as I still believe that there is a very convincing anti-austerity egalitarian argument to be made. They have 5 years, so plenty of time to alter public discourse.


The 'tack' is obvious. Blair won 3 elections by appealing to middle class aspirational types and business.

With the greatest of respect, appealing to people with your views is a route to defeat.

The same is incidentally true of me and the Tories. I would only vote for them if their leader was Norman Tebbitt, Mrs Peter Bone or Attila the Hun.


Appealing to people with my views would be to move to the left of any Labour leader ever. Digging up Lenin's corpse out and parading it round with a red rosette would still leave me unconvinced!

A slight shift to the left, which would involve strong arguments around a living wage, electoral reform, Keynesian economics and large-scale house building would not exactly be a leap to full Communism. Yes, the centre-left hasn't won an election for pushing on 40 years now but it still has the apparatus there to do so: a far larger membership base than the Tories, much greater numbers on the ground and union funding, which let's not forget still amounts to millions of pounds. Sure, all but 2 of the mainstream newspapers are right wing, but their power is waning really.

So you think Labour lost because they were not far enough to the left? So I guess the electorate thought, hmmm, Labour is not far enough to the left for me, I know, I'll vote for the Tories, they are more to the left than Labour.

Labour lost in scotland against an anti austerity party...


Classic Gusset.

Just conveniently brush over the fact that Miliband performed worse than any leader since Kinnock in 1987.

If you think Labour can win from further left than they were under Miliband then you are very naive or just deluded.

Didn't labours vote go up?

Were the SNP using an anti austerity stance yes or no?


Edited by nickgusset (15 May 2015 12.37pm)

The SNP tapped into the Scots' feeling of pride in their history and nationhood (as well as their hatred of England and especially London). The sort of pride that you ignore or deride in English people.

 

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