I did a speech and Q&A last night that looked at a number of issues including social capital.UndercoverElephant wrote:I have no idea what this statement is supposed to mean.
http://johnhemming.blogspot.co.uk/2015/ ... itish.html
Moderator: Peak Moderation
I did a speech and Q&A last night that looked at a number of issues including social capital.UndercoverElephant wrote:I have no idea what this statement is supposed to mean.
Yes.adam2 wrote:Does it really matter who leads the Labour party at present ?
Not neccesarily. If a Corbyn-led Labour party does well in the polls and wins by-elections then he might well still be there in 2020.It is most unlikely that Labour will win power for nearly 5 years, by which time it is likely that the leadership will have changed again.
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/steerpike/ ... -rejected/clv101 wrote: I'd also be very interested to hear if the Labour Party has actually identified any new 'supporter' they deam unworthy of a ballot paper.
Today Jeremy has issued a statement on the overriding need for unity, coinciding with the close of supporting nominations.
Jeremy has received the highest number of constituency party nominations. He has also won the support of the most trade unions and affiliates.
Jeremy Corbyn’s unity appeal says:
“We have now completed the formal nomination phase of Labour’s leadership election, and as we move closer to the ballot itself our watchword must be unity, with a debate embracing all members from all parts of the party.
“The leadership election should be conducted with one thought in mind: our objective is to be a united party focused on winning the general election and campaigning across the country, day in day out. Everywhere, from a local council election, to the Scottish, Welsh and London elections, we will need unity to win.
“Everything that everyone says and does in this leadership election should be about unity, not division. There is no place for personal animosity, negative campaigning, and saying or doing anything now that will damage our ability to work together as one party.
“Whoever wins the leadership must work tirelessly every day to forge Labour into a united and successful party.
“Let us do policy and politics, not personal criticism. Supporters of all candidates must put this positive spirit first, in the interests of our party.
“When the dust has settled, we will still all be Labour. Let’s conduct our debate on the basis of comradeship and unity in action against the damaging agenda of the Tory party.”
So the author is soberly warning people that Corbyn is dangerous even though he "certainly won't become PM in 2020?It is no longer beyond the bounds of possibility that he might win.
True, he probably won’t. And if he does he certainly won’t become prime minister in 2020. But that doesn’t mean we can relax about Corbyn, and what we may soon have to describe as ‘Corbynomics’. From a position of influence, a figure such as Corbyn can drag the whole political debate to the far left...
"I mean...how can one afford a private education for one's children on £50,000?"He has suggested a 7% rise in national insurance contributions for those earning more than £50,000 a year and a 2% rise in corporation tax. That would be a huge tax rise on people on relatively modest incomes – if you have a family to support, £50,000 hardly makes you Roman Abramovich.
Err....it's crystal clear. It was for the banks, and those who own plenty of property and shares.Next, he has proposed a “People’s QE” (who the last round of quantitative easing was for exactly, if not the “people”, is not quite clear).
"You mean...we are actually going to have to defend our right wing policies in an actual debate that people actually take notice of? Oh F--k!"The government, and business, must patiently take the time to explain why the ideas pushed out by the likes of Corbyn are dangerous. Otherwise they will end up part of the mainstream debate...
So says a signed up member of the centre-right establishment who yesterday told me it was hard to predict the results of general elections.johnhemming2 wrote:If Corbyn wins then Labour will lose more seats in the next General Election.