Sweet Square
ˈkämyənəst
One man's opinion but damning all the same.
He did like Varoufakis, however.

Sorry wait what, a man just called Varoufakis daddy and Corbyn the one who comes out looking bad ?
One man's opinion but damning all the same.
He did like Varoufakis, however.
Sorry wait what, a man just called Varoufakis daddy and it's Corbyn who comes out looking bad ?
One man's opinion but damning all the same.
He did like Varoufakis, however.
If someone describe me as charismatic, warm and engaging and then said to one my mates I was a like dad on stage then that person is 1)wanting me as father figure 2)Into some kink stuff. nokinkshamingThe daddy-toddler relationship was Varoufakis-Corby.
He seemed to be annoyed Corbyn wasn't clear on Brexit, well..............welcome to the club. Also the book quote made me laugh as I'm sad enough to remember people losing their shit online when Corbyn said he favourite book was Ulysses(The criticism being how could you do in touch with the common if like a book like UlyssesThe thread beneath the original tweet goes into a bit more detail about why he found Corbyn so disappointing. Despite going to the gig hoping to be impressed.
I think this is true. It isn't a surprise that the the liberal who went along to hear about Brexit was most annoyed by Corbyn being more into talking about socialist Chile in the 70's which I image wouldn't be the same for the membership(It is interesting as this is likely indicative of the wider electorate's view. The 'authenticity' of Corbyn involves him speaking from the heart but sadly without media training. The long answers he gives often appeal to the membership but sit less comfortably amongst the electorate.
I think this is true. It isn't a surprise that the the liberal who went along to hear about Brexit was most annoyed by Corbyn being more into talking about socialist Chile in the 70's which I image wouldn't be the same for the membership(Corbyn actually really interesting to why it comes to foreign history in particular)
It is interesting as this is likely indicative of the wider electorate's view. The 'authenticity' of Corbyn involves him speaking from the heart but sadly without media training. The long answers he gives often appeal to the membership but sit less comfortably amongst the electorate.
Everything else aside he simply isn't a strong communicator. And this is where it's problematic when the echo chamber cheer and whoop absolutely anything not because they're particularly inspired to by anything he says but because of obligation to what they see as their duty to cheer him on.
I suspect that although they may cite Iraq the people you speak of left the party well before Iraq, during Kinnock's time or the early Blair years. The sooner voters have a choice between them and a centre-left party the better, whether those parties are old or new. It might actually be in the far left's own interest, I agree they won't win a general election on their own, but could still achieve some of their aims in coalition.As a Party member I can say that it is quite incredible how many of the strong Corbyn supporters are middle-aged, former Militant, TUSC or Green members, and who fell out of the Party over Iraq and have now returned. A great many of them appear strong supporters of the Palestinians and consider foreign policy to be a key reason why they support the leader.
Now the make up of the membership isn't the main issue. Nor is the fact that Corbyn's position is secure for as long as he wants and therefore no matter how many wreaths he lays he will remain in power.
The issue I have is that the membership (historically this has been the case for both left and right) seem to be of the view that the electorate believes the same thing as they do. As the left is dominant in the Party at the moment, we are spending insane amounts of time (locally in our CLP at least) discussing mandatory reselection, the IHRA definition and how to support the Palestinians. That won't win Labour elections.
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This kind of stuff doesn't help the image of the membership of course.
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This kind of stuff doesn't help the image of the membership of course.
And this.
I suspect that although they may cite Iraq the people you speak of left the party well before Iraq, during Kinnock's time or the early Blair years. The sooner voters have a choice between them and a centre-left party the better, whether those parties are old or new. It might actually be in the far left's own interest, I agree they won't win a general election on their own, but could still achieve some of their aims in coalition.
I would disagree slightly on one point - quite a large proportion of the echo chamber absolutely gets inspired by what he says and does defend it because they believe in him and his values. I think a lot of it is due also to the fear of the right of the Party taking over and undermining him, even though the right of the Party is clearly not in the ascendency and is in retreat.
I think you're probably right in reality, it's just my own preference. Although it depends how loony the loony left get, I suppose.I don't think the party will split though. It would be 1983 all over again. The centre-left vote will split and the Tories will win. There are members of Parliament, and the Shadow Cabinet who are trying to bide their time and 'wait for it all to blow over'.
Maybe but I don't see anything that inspiring. He's never made a keynote speech or ever really set out his vision for the party, let alone country. He got elected to a job he didn't really want and since then has just been increasingly annoyed by the fact the job requirements involve actually doing stuff. He's ran the Labour party as if he's still a backbench MP making infrequent appearances but generally keeping himself to himself, plodding along. Which maybe explains some of the organisational chaos and amateurish handling of the media.
Get the impression if it were up to him he'd pop along once a week on a Tuesday afternoon for a coffee with the people in the office, brief meeting then home again for a few days where he can work on that replica model of the Lusitania someone bought him for Christmas.
There simply isn't that radical vision there other than in the minds of people who fear they'll lose face if they ever admitted it. He's a middle-aged, middle-of-the-road leftie happy to do a part-time job and just plod along. I can see how a firebrand socialist bursting with radical and refreshing ideas would inspire people, but he isn't that. The only thing he has are supporters that desperately need to pretend that's what he is. He's a leader who in 3 years has achieved a football chant and he didn't even do that himself.
I am not in any way dismissing your views here. In fact I wish many Party members would step out of the echo chamber to see what the electorate think more broadly.
Corbyn is the result of a number of factors. First, the slow death and toxicity of New Labour, mostly due to Iraq, which has led to a generally held view that the war in Iraq overrode any of the positive achievements of the 1997-2010 Government (which, I should note, was the longest period of non-Tory rule since 1763). This can be contrasted to Tory members - Thatcher's ministries are generally seen positively, despite issues like the Poll Tax. The left have to be more pious than the right.
Second, there was a feeling in the membership (who were sidelined during the Blair and Brown years), that the Party lost its way and that we needed to 'return' to be properly left-wing. Even Miliband wasn't left wing enough. Without this groundswell of opinion, Corbyn would not have been elected. There was a desire to 'lose authentically' than compromise. (See also Wenger, Arsene).
Third, since 2015 the membership has got more and more left wing. Moderates have left. Those who attend meetings are predominantly Corbyn supporters, but also predominantly white, middle aged and of middle income. To be cruel, you could accuse them of being able to afford Labour losing elections, as they would benefit from a Tory Government. They see in Corbyn all of their hopes and dreams for what a Labour Party should be, and what they also think (incorrectly) the Labour Party was from 1945-1951 under Attlee. Rhetoric has trumped reality.
Fourth, there has been a clear movement of power away from the PLP to the NEC and Conference, and in turn the membership. This has reinforced Corbyn's position, but also more broadly the position of the Left throughout the Party. We are engaged in a civil war (not widely reported) involving the deselection of councillors and (in time) MPs. We risk, as a Party, becoming even more polarised and not communicating our messages and vision to the electorate at large. The result of that will be more Tory Governments.
The membership wasn't really sidelined during the Blair/Brown years if we're talking about those who share Corbyn's ideology. They've been in self-imposed exile for the best party of 70 years, opposing every Labour leader with the possible exception of Michael Foot. The myth that New Labour was some kind of removal of 'true' Labour ignores the reality that pretty much since 1945 the party has always been led from its centre/right and has always faced opposition from within from the left. Blair was far more in-keeping with the natural evolution of where Labour had moved post-war than Corbyn is. Just look at the fact the only leader Corbyn has felt any loyalty to since being elected MP has been himself.
And as unsuccessful as Foot was he was a genuine intellectual giant. Fantastic orator. Not someone who got nominated as it was his 'go' from a group of people who'd stand routinely with no expectation of winning. So even with that comparison, Corbyn pales.
Everyone remembers how Nye Bevan deregulated the financial markets and kept privatising things. Proper moderate that boy.
Everyone remembers how Nye Bevan deregulated the financial markets and kept privatising things. Proper moderate that boy.
They were sidelined in the sense that policy decisions were made from No. 10 and the PM and his SPADs and not through Conference or the NEC (which was closely controlled by the leadership). The Campaign for Labour Party Democracy and their ilk made a lot of noise from the sidelines and Corbyn is responding, although in doing so he will undercut his own ability to shape Party policy.
You are right about the mythologising of past Governments but that level of myth-making is rife throughout the membership. Attlee is reified and the realities of his Ministry ignored.
You are right about New Labour too but unfortunately it is seen as an evil and not to be repeated. Unless and until the rank and file realise compromise is needed to govern we won't gain power.
And again I cannot disagree with you on Corbyn and Foot. I'm more saying that unless and until 'Corbynism' gets a kicking at the ballot box the Left will remain dominant in the Party. Even if 'Corbynism' loses heavily I suspect the Left will blame it on the Labour Right and get more entrenched in their views.
He was also a radical and responsible for some of the biggest, lasting, changes to the British state.Bevan was a divisive figure. His model of the NHS failed within a few years and cost the Exchequer dear, and supported the nuclear deterrent.
Bevan was a divisive figure. His model of the NHS failed within a few years and cost the Exchequer dear, and supported the nuclear deterrent.
He was also a radical and responsible for some of the biggest, lasting, changes to the British state.
Really? I didn't know that about the NHS.
He told the cabinet in 1945 that the cost of the NHS might be £145m a year, then admitted that it was costing £330m in 1949-50, its second year of operation. He didn't make any attempt to assess the likely demand for the free NHS services either.
He resigned in 1951 as Labour introduced charges for dentures and glasses to try and balance the books.
but soon resigned in protest at Hugh Gaitskell's introduction of prescription charges for dental care and spectacles—created to meet the financial demands imposed by the Korean War.
He told the cabinet in 1945 that the cost of the NHS might be £145m a year, then admitted that it was costing £330m in 1949-50, its second year of operation. He didn't make any attempt to assess the likely demand for the free NHS services either.
He resigned in 1951 as Labour introduced charges for dentures and glasses to try and balance the books.
Most importantly he made it extremely difficult to privatise the new health service. It could easily have been dismantled at a later date had he not nationalised the hospitals and centralised the whole structure. The spending worries are neither here or there IMO because this the the central requirement for a good national health service and can seen in the effects from this:He was certainly a radical. He was within one vote of being expelled from the Labour Party in 1955.
And it is important to remember the background of the 1945 election. All three main parties accepted the main recommendations of the Beveridge Report and all three parties were committed in their manifestos to creating a National Health Service. This gave the Labour Government, and Bevan at the Ministry of Health, leeway to enact the pillars of the Welfare State, knowing that they did so from the political centre. And with masses of American money. Personally, Attlee and Cripps will take precedence over Bevan for me given their central roles in enacting the Welfare State whilst dealing with huge Government debt. Bevan's plan for the NHS nearly sunk the spending plans of the Government.
where dentists and opticians regularly give subpar service and goods to NHS subsidised patientsHe resigned in 1951 as Labour introduced charges for dentures and glasses to try and balance the books.
He prevailed against persistent opposition from doctors and others to the NHS - probably any non-ideologue would have buckled. No one person creates history but the existence of the NHS is in a huge part down to him and his dogmatism.
That's fascinating. Is the consensus that he pitched the £145m a year figure knowing that it was untrue but believing it'd gain support if that's what the cabinet thought it would cost?
Most importantly he made it extremely difficult to privatise the new health service. It could easily have been dismantled at a later date had he not nationalised the hospitals and centralised the whole structure. The spending worries are neither here or there IMO because this the the central requirement for a good national health service and can seen in the effects from this:
where dentists and opticians regularly give subpar to service and goods to NHS subsidised patients
But you can see the effects these policies have right? Him going over budget in the early days means people today won't have to choose between eating food and paying for an appointment. The government will go over budget on health because you can't tell someone who's sick and needs medical attention we can't afford it. That the choices made in dentistry and optometry last to this day is a testament to that. If you have to go into debt for these policies, go into debt.The spending worries are absolutely crucial. As they are today. With the state of the Exchequer's finances and the national debt even before Brexit bites any Labour Government must ensure all measures are clearly costed. That holds then as much as now. And again, all three main parties supported an NHS (but differed on the details). There simply wasn't the money in 1951 to pay for free opticians and dentists given the state of the UK's finances and our commitment to the Korean War.
But you can see the effects these policies have right? Him going over budget in the early days means people today won't have to choose between eating food and paying for an appointment. The government will go over budget on health because you can't tell someone who's sick and needs medical attention we can't afford it. That the choices made in dentistry and optometry last to this day is a testament to that. If you have to go into debt for these policies, go into debt.
Bevan's vision for the NHS was far more extensive than that conceived of by the Liberals, Tories or even other Labour MPs. The Labour Party's Welfare State addressed a number of the Beveridge Report's modern day evils. However my point was that Bevan's vision of the NHS was unaffordable from the very moment of inception, leading to the necessary cost cutting measures. The reality of the public finances was dire in 1945. We had effectively spent the wealth of an Empire on prosecuting a war, and we could not simply go on spending as if money was no object. Not whilst the Gold Standard held and the US had over 90% of the world's gold reserves.
I would also note that the NHS tells people all the time that they cannot afford to treat them. NICE guidelines and evidence-led treatment means some treatments just are not funded which does affect peoples lives and their morbidity and mortality: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/published?type=csg,cg,mpg,ph,sg,sc
The other issue is that even today, the Government has gone over budget on health. Sadly, throwing money at the health service will not fix issues related to demography, as well as the advance of modern medicine. Scientific advances cost the NHS at least £10bn a year alone. Our population is growing and the tax base diminishing. We will need 17,000 more hospital beds by 2022.
Adjusted for inflation, we spend 10 times the amount on the NHS that we did 60 years ago. Going into debt is simply not a valid response. Why? Because (just like in 2010), what is to stop the next Government from reversing spending in health? The Labour Party needs a serious conversation about how it will fund health services, beyond the simple tax-and-spend approach of the past (and yes, even from 1997-2010).
http://nhsproviders.org/a-better-future-for-the-nhs-workforce
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-42572110
https://www.themedicportal.com/application-guide/the-nhs/challenges-facing-the-nhs/
https://www.redcafe.net/threads/the-nhs.433205/page-2#post-22945867
The UK spends less, both as a total and counting only govt expenditure, than most similar countries in northern Europe.
Having free-at-the-point-of-use coverage, with no extra insurance requirement, was part of what Bevan pushed for, and has lasted for 70 years. It went against not just the doctors' association and Conservatives, but also well beyond the recommendations of the Beveridge report.
You cannot say that Labour benefited from going to the centre by holding up one of their most radical acts as an example.
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It doesn't seem like Labour's leftist economic policies are holding them back among the general public.
Oscie voted Lib Dem last election(Even Blair didn't go that far). And yeah why wouldn't your boss vote for a socialist leader who wants to improve the workers rights and strength trade unions must be because of Corbyn dress sense.