jeff_goldblum
Full Member
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2011
- Messages
- 3,917
Whilst I supported Corbyn at both elections the situation is incredibly worrying. He clearly isn't popular and although I'd argue that a lot of that isn't his fault (disproportionate and disingenuous media attacks on him and his positions put a lot of voters (as well as the non-voters who he was aiming to lure to Labour's side) off from the start and was hugely exacerbated by how inexperienced his team was), that doesn't change the fact that it's a problem.
But the more worrying thing for Labour in the long-term, and something that can't be fixed by simply getting rid of Corbyn, is that the electoral coalition that made up Labour's core support throughout their last period of success no longer exists. Floating voters were lost in the New Labour-era through scandals, wars and the financial crash and both 'traditional' working class and liberal metropolitan support which was decaying throughout the Blair/Brown years has been split down the middle by the EU issue. Corbyn gets a lot of stick for his input on Brexit but frankly I'm not sure if there was a way to play it that wouldn't alienate the working classes by being too pro-EU or the metropolitan/young crowd by being too-Brexit. In that respect as strange as it sounds the quicker we leave the EU (or do a complete u-turn and decide to stay) the better for Labour, only when it's resolved will it stop being such a divisive issue.
But the more worrying thing for Labour in the long-term, and something that can't be fixed by simply getting rid of Corbyn, is that the electoral coalition that made up Labour's core support throughout their last period of success no longer exists. Floating voters were lost in the New Labour-era through scandals, wars and the financial crash and both 'traditional' working class and liberal metropolitan support which was decaying throughout the Blair/Brown years has been split down the middle by the EU issue. Corbyn gets a lot of stick for his input on Brexit but frankly I'm not sure if there was a way to play it that wouldn't alienate the working classes by being too pro-EU or the metropolitan/young crowd by being too-Brexit. In that respect as strange as it sounds the quicker we leave the EU (or do a complete u-turn and decide to stay) the better for Labour, only when it's resolved will it stop being such a divisive issue.