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The MP's coming out are making this frustrating and less likely for anything to get a majority.
I don't think Corbyn's necessarily an idiot: he's a solid campaigner for example who knows how to connect with voters without seeming like an utter weirdo, and that's often shown itself when he can be arsed, but at the same time I don't think he's a particularly brilliant strategist or a political mastermind. And I think a lot of his weaknesses inevitably show through when he's dealing with an issue that's undoubtedly important to the country, but which doesn't grab his own personal interest. Brexit qualifies in that regard: it's the biggest issue Britain's faced in generations, but Corbyn's not passionate enough for either side to have all that much of a stance on it. Hence he's fluctuated from position to position, with no real coherent strategy beyond what might be good electorally, the same style of politics his supporters lambasted Labour leaders for.
Corbyn is a euroskeptic his historical stance is well known.
You there or something? BBC Parliament is just shite 10-minute shorts at the momentDivision bells have rung, chaps. They'll be coming back now.
Yes, of course. Historically he was a Eurosceptic because back then it was quite common for a lot of the left to be opposed to the EU, even if such a perspective is incredibly outdated now. I think Corbyn's somewhere in the middle on the issue though: his Eurosceptic tendencies remain and he's incredibly dispassionate about the EU, but I also think (and hope) he's sensible enough to realise that most of the anti-EU sentiment comes not from leftist concerns about globalisation but anti-immigration sentiment and misguided, narrow-minded nationalism.
I'm going by the Guardian's live reporting. Maybe they were hearing things.You there or something? BBC Parliament is just shite 10-minute shorts at the moment![]()
You there or something? BBC Parliament is just shite 10-minute shorts at the moment![]()
Apparently at least one senior Labour shadow cabinet member broke the whip. Ffs.
Yes, of course. Historically he was a Eurosceptic because back then it was quite common for a lot of the left to be opposed to the EU, even if such a perspective is incredibly outdated now. I think Corbyn's somewhere in the middle on the issue though: his Eurosceptic tendencies remain and he's incredibly dispassionate about the EU, but I also think (and hope) he's sensible enough to realise that most of the anti-EU sentiment comes not from leftist concerns about globalisation but anti-immigration sentiment and misguided, narrow-minded nationalism.
I think that you are conflating your feelings with his.
Looks almost inevitable at this point.This is pathetic. We are leaving with no deal the way this is going.
I've got a horrible feeling he just does what McDonnell tells him to do.I admit I'm not privvy to Corbyn's inner psyche and I can't determine what he does/or doesn't think - nevertheless I don't think he's either particularly for or against Brexit. He's too much of a historical Bennite type stuck in the past to ever support it, but he's also not really a rabid Brexiteer either. He'd like to see the UK outside the EU but likely knows his ideal model died about 40 years ago.
Pick the best one and put it against May's deal.
I've got a horrible feeling he just does what McDonnell tells him to do.
I admit I'm not privvy to Corbyn's inner psyche and I can't determine what he does/or doesn't think - nevertheless I don't think he's either particularly for or against Brexit. He's too much of a historical Bennite type stuck in the past to ever support it, but he's also not really a rabid Brexiteer either. He'd like to see the UK outside the EU but likely knows his ideal model died about 40 years ago.
Any time Blackford speaks, totally shouted down