wanderlust wrote:The thing is Corbyn hasn't got a deal to discuss and can only guess at what deal he might get given the opportunity.T.R.O.Y wrote:What? Why would you want Boris’s over a softer, less damaging deal negotiated by Labour without the right wing constraints placed by the ERG?
On your first question - I don’t care what he thinks, personally I think we should leave but with a better deal than what’s on offer. Corbyn will do what the people decide, that’s a position I’ll vote for. Who will you vote for X?
And talking of opportunities, Corbyn put his own political ambitions ahead of looking for a solution to defeat the Tories as an alliance with the numerous pro-Remain parties wherein they agreed to only field candidates in the winnable marginals would have done the job - but he chose to attempt to further his deluded ambitions instead.
A smarter person would have realised there are more ways to skin a cat and unfortunately his actions will probably give the Tories a shoo-in.
In my constituency, if Labour, the Libdems and Greens (whose policies are broadly similar) put up just one coalition candidate they would win a seat that has been held by the Tories for over 100 years.
Naive of Corbyn to think that he could gain power by splitting the vote.
Your entire premise seems to be based around a notion that Labour is a remain party - but 60% of its constituencies voted leave - so why should Labour ignore half it’s voters to keep you happy?
Im afraid you’re talking rubbish.
The Lib Dem’s could have backed a no confidence vote months ago - the best opportunity to stop a hard Brexit - but refused because of the delusion Swinson could become PM.
Last edited by T.R.O.Y on Thu Nov 21 2019, 07:16; edited 1 time in total