The Independent Group for Change | Have decided to disband after ten months

Brings it up when it suits him? Where's the evidence that he didn't think someone quitting a party should trigger a by-election before? You've called him a hypocrite as if he has changed his mind... but there is no evidence that he has. A tweet where he explains to someone how the voting system actually works doesn't mean he had a different opinion back then at all.



It is not hypocrisy at all. In our electoral system, as individuals we cast a vote at the ballot box and that vote is actually for our local MP rather than the party/leader. That's just how our system works. The vast majority of the electorate vote because of a particular party or leader, rather than their local MP... this is also true. How is pointing that out hypocritical?

By the nature of that tweet, as I explained in my earlier post; the MPs who have resigned the whip have been elected by their constituencies and not solely by the Labour party within their constituencies. Therefore each TIG MP has decided they are best serving their constituents' interests by leaving the Labour Party and going independent. If the constituents do not think they have acted in their best interests come the next General Election, they will be voted out. It's really that simple, if you don't see how saying they have to force a by-election because the constituents voted for Labour and not that specific MP then you are saying what Corbyn said is wrong. He knows how the electoral system works, therefore he is being hypocritical by demanding by-elections.
 
Does Jez really use that kind of txt spk?
That was nine years ago (in the mid to late 2000s it was common for text speak to be used on phones and social media) and the character limit on twitter at the time was 140. Put the text in a character counter and it says 137 so might have used selective text speak to get it to all fit in one tweet.

He/his social media team don't use text speak anymore.
 
They have not yet formed an official party ... Upon doing so then yes convention is they should then call one

Agree with this. If TIG go on to form a party, the honourable thing to do would actually be resign to force by-elections.
 
That was nine years ago (in the mid to late 2000s it was common for text speak to be used on phones and social media) and the character limit on twitter at the time was 140. Put the text in a character counter and it says 137 so might have used selective text speak to get it to all fit in one tweet.

He/his social media team don't use text speak anymore.

Don't be silly, he was going for the grime vote.
 
By the nature of that tweet, as I explained in my earlier post; the MPs who have resigned the whip have been elected by their constituencies and not solely by the Labour party within their constituencies. Therefore each TIG MP has decided they are best serving their constituents' interests by leaving the Labour Party and going independent. If the constituents do not think they have acted in their best interests come the next General Election, they will be voted out. It's really that simple, if you don't see how saying they have to force a by-election because the constituents voted for Labour and not that specific MP then you are saying what Corbyn said is wrong. He knows how the electoral system works, therefore he is being hypocritical by demanding by-elections.

It's a complete feck you to all the people who fundraised and campaigned for them which is what I don't like. Most of these MPs would have not got their deposit back as independents as they were parachuted in to the area they stood in - why would anyone have voted for them? They owe a lot to people who volunteered their time and money to help them but more importantly Labour to win - often despite (proven to be correct) misgivings about their personal positions. What they have done here is stick two fingers up at those people. Convention or not it's not very nice is it.
 
By the nature of that tweet, as I explained in my earlier post; the MPs who have resigned the whip have been elected by their constituencies and not solely by the Labour party within their constituencies. Therefore each TIG MP has decided they are best serving their constituents' interests by leaving the Labour Party and going independent. If the constituents do not think they have acted in their best interests come the next General Election, they will be voted out. It's really that simple, if you don't see how saying they have to force a by-election because the constituents voted for Labour and not that specific MP then you are saying what Corbyn said is wrong. He knows how the electoral system works, therefore he is being hypocritical by demanding by-elections.

Not at all. You are talking nonsense.

1. You can understand that in our electoral system you vote for MP rather than party/leader.
2. You can also believe that because the electorate largely vote for party/leader rather then because of the local MP - any MP quitting their party should trigger a by-election.

These are not mutually exclusive and understanding point 1 whilst believing point 2 is absolutely not hypocritical at all. When someone kicks the ball out because their teammate is injured... the other team tend to throw them the ball back because it's the honest thing to do. Nothing in the rules says you have to do that and knowing that the rules don't say that but still believing you should throw it back is not hypocritical either.
 
It's a complete feck you to all the people who fundraised and campaigned for them which is what I don't like. Most of these MPs would have not got their deposit back as independents as they were parachuted in to the area they stood in - why would anyone have voted for them? They owe a lot to people who volunteered their time and money to help them but more importantly Labour to win - often despite (proven to be correct) misgivings about their personal positions. What they have done here is stick two fingers up at those people. Convention or not it's not very nice is it.

I agree, however I think that actually says more about the practice of parachuting random people who have no prior knowledge or link to a constituency simply so that they can be safely elected into the House of Commons. Furthermore, it's kind of irrelevant that Labour Party members campaigned for them because as previously stated, the MP represents those people who didn't vote for them as much as the people who did. You can't pick and choose who you listen to based upon what is easiest for you.
 
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That was nine years ago (in the mid to late 2000s it was common for text speak to be used on phones and social media) and the character limit on twitter at the time was 140. Put the text in a character counter and it says 137 so might have used selective text speak to get it to all fit in one tweet.

He/his social media team don't use text speak anymore.
Thanks - makes sense.
 
They have not yet formed an official party ... Upon doing so then yes convention is they should then call one
There's no such convention, out of all the defections to the SDP only one called a by election (and lost).
 
Nothing in the rules says you have to do that and knowing that the rules don't say that but still believing you should throw it back is not hypocritical either.

To take that analogy though it's like a manager kicking off in the press because the opposition didn't throw the ball back... Only there is a tweet from a few years ago saying there is no obligation on the opposition to throw the ball back... Said manager would look like a hypocritical idiot wouldn't they
 
To take that analogy though it's like a manager kicking off in the press because the opposition didn't throw the ball back... Only there is a tweet from a few years ago saying there is no obligation on the opposition to throw the ball back... Said manager would look like a hypocritical idiot wouldn't they

It depends? It's only hypocritical if that is his opinion and he doesn't believe the honourable thing is to throw the ball back...

There is nothing in that Corbyn tweet to suggest that he agrees with the system. He almost in fact seems apologetic about it.
 
:lol:

The reaction Corbyn generates with the libs on here is really something else. You think people were talking about Leon Trotsky.

Madness.
 
It depends? It's only hypocritical if that is his opinion and he doesn't believe the honourable thing is to throw the ball back...

There is nothing in that Corbyn tweet to suggest that he agrees with the system. He almost in fact seems apologetic about it.
It's a shame the original tweet is deleted as it would shed light on the context. I'm sure I remember seeing it before and it was about wanting to vote for Corbyn in Islington but not wanting to support New Labour (hence the "you can cast your vote feeling comfortable" part.)
 
It's a shame the original tweet is deleted as it would she'd light on the context. I'm sure I remember seeing it before and it was about wanting to vote for Corbyn in Islington but not wanting to support New Labour (hence the "you can cast your vote feeling comfortable" part.)

Yeah, it would be good to know the context behind it which would shed some light...

I just don't think it's fair to say from that tweet alone sans context... that he is stating it as his opinion. To me it looks like he is just explaining how the system works.
 
Soubry is a clown, but she also receives 3/4 death threats a week. It's ballsy of her to do this.
 
How would them resigning help stop Brexit?
 
Is there any recall petitions happening for any of the people who have joined t.i.g. as far as I'm aware that's the correct and legal route to force a by election if the m.p. is seen to no longer represent the constituients

I think only 10% of the population have to sign it... Which you would think if it's true that loads of people who voted for them feel betrayed would be relatively easy to achieve and would trigger the by election that these people feel is appropriate.
 
Is there any recall petitions happening for any of the people who have joined t.i.g. as far as I'm aware that's the correct and legal route to force a by election if the m.p. is seen to no longer represent the constituients

I think only 10% of the population have to sign it... Which you would think if it's true that loads of people who voted for them feel betrayed would be relatively easy to achieve and would trigger the by election that these people feel is appropriate.

For chukka I think it's about 80k population
So they need 8k people...
12k voted conservative and about 1k ukip
Even without that they had 38k labour votes
So if 20% of labour voters alone signed the petition there would be a by election

Seems the logical and legal route to take... I'm surprised it does not seem to be getting much attention
 
:lol:

The reaction Corbyn generates with the libs on here is really something else. You think people were talking about Leon Trotsky.

Madness.

I reckon that’s because he made - and continues to make - such a shambolic mess of preventing the Tories from wrecking the country to appease fecking UKIP. That’s a monumental blot on any Labour leader’s copybook, so is bound to cause strong feelings.
 
It's not though, is it? What he has said in that tweet is a statement of fact. We all know that is how the electoral system in this country works... if it wasn't the case, we would have by-elections without an MP resigning to force one.

The tweet says nothing about whether he agrees with the system, or whether he believes that an MP quitting a party should to the honourable thing and resign to force a by-election. All his tweet does is explain the reality of what a vote is in our current electoral system.

The reality of the situation though is the vast majority of voters will cast their vote to a particular party rather than specifically because of an individual MP in their constituency. A lot of people vote without even knowing the name of their local MP until they arrive at the ballot box.

When the guy resigned from Labour yesterday he was asked the question about standing down for re-election on the BBC. He stated that in Birmingham this had happened to Labours advantage in that control of the council had changed positively for Labour when a councilor had switched parties. He said Corbyn never asked the councilor to stand for re-election then so why should he do so now?

I don't know if this is bullshit or not but if the gist is correct then it answers your point. If he went along with party switching without standing down for re-election when it suited but argues against when it doesn't then...
 
When the guy resigned from Labour yesterday he was asked the question about standing down for re-election on the BBC. He stated that in Birmingham this had happened to Labours advantage in that control of the council had changed positively for Labour when a councilor had switched parties. He said Corbyn never asked the councilor to stand for re-election then so why should he do so now?

I don't know if this is bullshit or not but if the gist is correct then it answers your point. If he went along with party switching without standing down for re-election when it suited but argues against when it doesn't then...

It'd be interesting to see if standing down when switching parties is a common and expected thing. I've never paid any attention to it, but perhaps it's simply a case that most Politicans don't need to ask because its an expected part of the deal (of switching parties).
 
They're starting a pro-EU political movement. My guess is that they're hedging their bets against an economically and politically chaotic post-Brexit landscape where they will campaign on a platform of rejoining the EU.
Gut feel that going to be a very hard battle... Unless the EU would be prepared To offer us terms of no euro same rebates and vetos...

I doubt the EU will agree that so it will be very difficult to win a referendum to rejoin...
 
I reckon that’s because he made - and continues to make - such a shambolic mess of preventing the Tories from wrecking the country to appease fecking UKIP. That’s a monumental blot on any Labour leader’s copybook, so is bound to cause strong feelings.

Basically this. I consider him complicit to this shambolic situation that in. I reckon history will judge him very harshly for failing to provide opposition at a time when it is most needed.

He’s not even in government and he’s losing MPs faster than the Tories. His ratings are at rock bottom. Well fecking done Jezza
 
When the guy resigned from Labour yesterday he was asked the question about standing down for re-election on the BBC. He stated that in Birmingham this had happened to Labours advantage in that control of the council had changed positively for Labour when a councilor had switched parties. He said Corbyn never asked the councilor to stand for re-election then so why should he do so now?

I don't know if this is bullshit or not but if the gist is correct then it answers your point. If he went along with party switching without standing down for re-election when it suited but argues against when it doesn't then...

I'm not really sure how council politics works in this country tbh so can't comment too much on that but parliament works in a specific way. Yes technically you elect your MP, not party (and I have met people who vote differently at general elections than you'd expect because their local MP, while of an opposing party, did such good work for their constituency, but that is not the standard. Most people don't vote for personalities or individuals, they vote for the party. So Umunna did not get elected, especially initially because he's Umunna, neither did Soubry. They were elected because they were put forward by the labour party.
 
I reckon history will judge him very harshly for failing to provide opposition at a time when it is most needed.

History will look back at this point and tell us that nobody seriously wanted the job to deliver Brexit, it's very much a poisoned chalice and no matter which party took it on would get a significant amount of blame thrust their way when it goes to shit. This is why May is always backed, everyone wants her to take the fall as being the PM that ruined the country.
 
Gut feel that going to be a very hard battle... Unless the EU would be prepared To offer us terms of no euro same rebates and vetos...

I doubt the EU will agree that so it will be very difficult to win a referendum to rejoin...

I've been thinking about this and whether it may be the ultimate outcome of this but even if it is, I don't think it would be for a long long time, would likely require quite a bit of pain in the UK and ultimately an entire paradigm shift in how the majority of our population views the EU and Europe (and potentially our place in the world).
 
When the guy resigned from Labour yesterday he was asked the question about standing down for re-election on the BBC. He stated that in Birmingham this had happened to Labours advantage in that control of the council had changed positively for Labour when a councilor had switched parties. He said Corbyn never asked the councilor to stand for re-election then so why should he do so now?

I don't know if this is bullshit or not but if the gist is correct then it answers your point. If he went along with party switching without standing down for re-election when it suited but argues against when it doesn't then...

The obvious difference there is that Labour MPs are subject to the whip and run on a manifesto whilst Labour councillors aren't and don't. When a Labour MP is voted in they are by and large expected to vote with the manifesto they ran under, as decided by the party. Councillors generally run on a far more individual platform which isn't imposed by the party and when elected they aren't subject to a whip. Which makes sense because as local representatives councillors have to mould their campaign and the decisions they make in office around local issues of which the central party authority wouldn't have knowledge. Whether that's a good or bad thing overall is up for debate, as a lot of Labour councils end up doing stuff that directly contradicts the rhetoric coming from the top, but that's how it is.
 
Gut feel that going to be a very hard battle... Unless the EU would be prepared To offer us terms of no euro same rebates and vetos...

I doubt the EU will agree that so it will be very difficult to win a referendum to rejoin...

I agree but the post Brexit landscape is such an unknown unknown, I think its worth a gamble that they could prevail, from their point of view.

I think in the case of a no deal scenario, if the Tories are offering a low tax & low regulation economy to voters, Corbyn's Labour a 'lets pray to the magic money tree' solution and the centrists to rejoin the EU, I think the voters will go for the magic money tree.
 
How would them resigning help stop Brexit?

If the government loses its majority through MP defections they’ll have to postpone/get extension and go for GE surely? The majority of MPs (and I’m pretty sure the people too) don’t want a no-deal Brexit because it’s economically catastrophic.

The government currently holds out to getting ERG to back a deal, so they are basically surrendering to them. If they lose their majority try to appease them would be inconsequential as they would still not be able to pass that deal through parliament

History will look back at this point and tell us that nobody seriously wanted the job to deliver Brexit, it's very much a poisoned chalice and no matter which party took it on would get a significant amount of blame thrust their way when it goes to shit. This is why May is always backed, everyone wants her to take the fall as being the PM that ruined the country.

Looking at people, yes. Looking at parties, no. The Tories wanted to deliver Brexit, unlike Labour who’s voter are more pro European. The whole thing was a Tory brainchild to prevent losing votes to UKIP. So they are leading this.

In theory delivering Brexit should tar the party that drives it in the same way it will do with the politician/leader. That’s what Jezza is backing on, to get elected. But he’s so unpopular and doing such a shitty job at it, that Tories could well deliver no-deal Brexit and win the next GE with some twat like JRM or Boris in charge, that how feckless he has been at managing this..

PS. I’m typing on the phone, excuse my typos
 
I agree but the post Brexit landscape is such an unknown unknown, I think its worth a gamble that they could prevail, from their point of view.

I think in the case of a no deal scenario, if the Tories are offering a low tax & low regulation economy to voters, Corbyn's Labour a 'lets pray to the magic money tree' solution and the centrists to rejoin the EU, I think the voters will go for the magic money tree.
I think Corbyn is so useless he would ask for a magic money tree and use it to hang Jews rather than collect the money
He's toxic and simply unelectable
Joking...well half joking... He is unelectable
 
There's no such convention, out of all the defections to the SDP only one called a by election (and lost).

Parliament can only lawfully sit when a magic stick is present. My point being, the conventions and laws of British democracy say very little about how things should be.

I reckon that’s because he made - and continues to make - such a shambolic mess of preventing the Tories from wrecking the country to appease fecking UKIP. That’s a monumental blot on any Labour leader’s copybook, so is bound to cause strong feelings.

Remind me how well a non-Corbyn labour did at opposing the Tories and UKIP in 2015, which directly caused the EU ref?

Basically this. I consider him complicit to this shambolic situation that in. I reckon history will judge him very harshly for failing to provide opposition at a time when it is most needed.

He’s not even in government and he’s losing MPs faster than the Tories. His ratings are at rock bottom. Well fecking done Jezza

History will judge the entire country harshly for spending >5 years obsessed with its relationship to a neoliberal trading bloc whilst the last chance to prevent planetary ecological collapse flies by.

I think Corbyn is so useless he would ask for a magic money tree and use it to hang Jews rather than collect the money

He's toxic and simply unelectable

Joking...well half joking... He is unelectable

It wasn’t funny, so it wasn’t even half joking
 
Of course Corbyn has messed things up but these fly by night MPs call for a second referendum but refuse to contest their seats in a by election.
People would respect them much more if they do so. That would show that the constituents voted for them personally and not because of the Labour party.