jeff_goldblum
Full Member
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2011
- Messages
- 3,917
Agree with you in both those replies to my posts @Frosty. The frustrations about meetings are ones I share, in the 3 years since I moved back to my hometown and it's CLP I've not been able to attend meetings because then were on Saturdays, when I work, and now they're on weekday evenings, which I work in my new job. I don't do a job which has shiftwork, but a lot of the people my age who have joined Labour since 2015 do and that basically precludes them from being able to attend meetings regularly. I definitely agree all voting should be available online or by post, because at the moment most of the people with the time to attend meetings are retired middle class folks who are still arguing New Labour/Old Labour after 30 years.
This is the only bit I'd argue with. The attacks on the incoming left-wing membership were pretty blanket from the start, they weren't pointing at the aggressive minority of new members and saying 'these are a few bad eggs', they were saying 'this is what they're all like'. The idea that basically all the new members were entryists was an early line from centrist MPs and it was used as a pretext to bar thousands of people from voting in the leadership election.
I'm especially glad to hear this. The mass membership is a huge boon and will be key in future elections if we can all pull in the same vague direction. In my local party the MP doesn't really engage with the members outside her core group, I've leafleted for her on many occasions (dab hand at it as an ex-postie) and the only time she's ever spoken to me outside of the context of me picking up leaflets from HQ was to call me to ask me to vote for Owen Smith in 2016.
The tension comes when MPs and their supporters feel threatened and then 'hit back', but this ends up looking like a broad attack on the left and enthusiastic members rather than a targeted attack on the very few entryists and hard left members that are causing friction. I have seen many MPs fall into this trap.
This is the only bit I'd argue with. The attacks on the incoming left-wing membership were pretty blanket from the start, they weren't pointing at the aggressive minority of new members and saying 'these are a few bad eggs', they were saying 'this is what they're all like'. The idea that basically all the new members were entryists was an early line from centrist MPs and it was used as a pretext to bar thousands of people from voting in the leadership election.
I have also seen other MPs genuinely reach out to the membership and build bridges. Quite a few have done this in London. This magnanimity (and shutting up about Corbyn) has helped their CLPs become effective campaigning tools and has also marginalised the few trouble-makers, if we put it that way.
I'm especially glad to hear this. The mass membership is a huge boon and will be key in future elections if we can all pull in the same vague direction. In my local party the MP doesn't really engage with the members outside her core group, I've leafleted for her on many occasions (dab hand at it as an ex-postie) and the only time she's ever spoken to me outside of the context of me picking up leaflets from HQ was to call me to ask me to vote for Owen Smith in 2016.