I am hesitant to delve back into this thread. Especially as the Left are so adept at eating their young (the Spanish Civil War is the best example but by no means the only one).
But to be honest I am worried about the future of Labour.
In my CLP I have seen the positive and negative impacts of Corbyn winning the leadership. After Miliband, it was clear that the membership felt that the Party was not left enough. And Corbyn's leadership has coincided with a shift to the left in UK politics (And a shift against austerity which is welcome).
What disturbs me about Labour is first, the reification of Corbyn. He is seen as a messiah figure which is both wrong and self defeating ( Corbynism as a movement cannot think beyond Corbyn).
Second, in my CLP, as well as many others, Corbyn's leadership has enabled mass entryism from the hard left. Middle aged, middle class members who were in TUSC or Militant or the AWL have dominated branch meetings and have pushed far left shibboleths (deselection, party "democracy" and in my CLP endless motions denouncing Blairites).
Third, this entryism and defending of Corbyn has meant that very real problems with the left (such as anti-Semitism) have been turned into left vs right issues. You either defend Corbyn and deny there is a problem or somehow support the undermining of the leader. These issues haven't been helped by anti-corbyn MPs jumping on them and using them to criticise the leader. Gordon Brown showed the way to deal with these issues whilst not trying to bring down the leader.
Fourth I worry about the changes that will be made to the Party to ensure the left retain power for the foreseeable. Many moderate members have left my CLP in the past few months over the tactics of the left locally. The party needs to remain a broad church. That was how we have won majorities in the past and in my opinion will do so in the future. There simply aren't enough votes on the Left to win an election.
That being said, I want a Labour Government. I have huge concerns about the ability of Corbyn's ability to effect his plan for Government, especially given his principles stances in the past (I actually wonder whether this would be a hindrance in Government- can he make the necessary compromises? Will he not deal with issues such as defence and national security?)
I also think that the anti-corbyn movement (if it can be called that) is made up of many disparate elements and is not coherent. If Corbyn is removed, it could lead to a mass exodus of members. The vast vast vast majority of these members are not entryists and have been inspired to engage in politics by Corbyn and the Party in its current state.
Given my experiences at General Elections, the mass membership made such a huge difference in 2017. If we lose this as a Party we are in trouble. There were not the numbers in 2015 and that cost us in many constituencies. There is no alternative to Corbyn's leadership or to his policies. Another leadership election or forcing him out would be damaging to the Party. As damaging as a split in my view. And it would have the impact of turning very many people off of politics.
I always considered myself on the Left of the Party but since 2015 I find myself on the centre right. I'm not going to leave. I'll keep making my arguments and of making the point that we need to be a broad church. I'm just very sceptical about whether we will win the next Election.