Miliband was seen as more centrist and failed badly in the polls.
In the original leadership election, centrists were exposed by Corbyn for having literally no ideas and failing to oppose austerity. He repeated this with Owen Smith.
It’s remarkable how quickly people have forgotten these things and believe that a Labour Party running on a centrist platform would do well.
It wouldn’t necessarily. What has changed is that many centrist, so called ‘Blairites’ have seized on Brexit as an opportunity. Corbyn has been, in my view unfairly, blamed entirely for it and Umuna and Woodcock et al are positioning themselves to run as anti-Brexit campaigners.
It will be interesting to see how this all ends. Momentum are now opposing Brexit and this may force Corbyn to find a new position on it.
Whoever is the leader of the Labour Party has the massive problem of keeping their pro and anti Brexit factions happy.
Brexit, along with so much else, has been weaponised against Corbyn by the likes of Jess Philips who, I fear, underestimate the fact that many traditional labour voters would vote Leave again.
Boris is clearly positioning himself to challenge May and sell himself as the hard Brexit leader.
Regardless of who their leader is, if Labour called for a second referendum they’d lose voters to UKIP and possibly even the Conservatives.
I find it infuriating that this still leaves the likes of Umuna and Jess Philips able to attack Corbyn relentlessly over Brexit. What could anyone do differently and continue to hold Labour’s position in the polls?