Enjoy the Bahn Mi Wander!
General Election
+15
Natasha Whittam
sunlight
okocha
observer
karlypants
Norpig
Cajunboy
wanderlust
Angry Dad
xmiles
Hipster_Nebula
gloswhite
boltonbonce
luckyPeterpiper
Bollotom2014
19 posters
382 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 09:58
wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
You should get yourself out here ASAP KP - apparently since the election you can get more dong for your poundkarlypants wrote:Enjoy the Bahn Mi Wander!
383 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 11:47
gloswhite
Guðni Bergsson
Welcome to the one-nation Conservative-run UK
Hopefully, the abuse will now stop.
Hopefully, the abuse will now stop.
384 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 11:58
boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Get stuffed.gloswhite wrote:Welcome to the one-nation Conservative-run UK
Hopefully, the abuse will now stop.
385 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 12:15
Guest
Guest
gloswhite wrote:Welcome to the one-nation Conservative-run UK
Hopefully, the abuse will now stop.
You’re the only one throwing abuse about.
386 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 12:34
karlypants
Nat Lofthouse
I was there a few months back.wanderlust wrote:You should get yourself out here ASAP KP - apparently since the election you can get more dong for your poundkarlypants wrote:Enjoy the Bahn Mi Wander!
387 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 12:35
karlypants
Nat Lofthouse
I will be celebrating tonight mate!gloswhite wrote:Welcome to the one-nation Conservative-run UK
Hopefully, the abuse will now stop.
388 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 12:54
xmiles
Jay Jay Okocha
T.R.O.Y wrote:gloswhite wrote:Welcome to the one-nation Conservative-run UK
Hopefully, the abuse will now stop.
You’re the only one throwing abuse about.
You have overlooked the abuse karly posts on a regular basis.
389 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 23:28
luckyPeterpiper
Ivan Campo
Personally I think Boris is a disaster as Prime Minister and Brexit a catastrophe BUT in all truth while I think the country as a whole is going to be much worse off now there is a small but hopefully highly significant silver lining in last night's meltdown.
I've always respected Jeremy Corbyn and admired the courage of his convictions but never agreed with him on most of his domestic policies. The "Momentum" group are, to my eyes at least a reborn "Militant" with an internet connection and nothing more. In fact the state my party is in today reminds me quite vividly of the Michael Foot days. Labour is just as out of touch with reality now as we were then and while I realise it's a very thin straw to clutch at I'm hoping that the thumping defeat we took last night will cause the sort of rebirth of moderate and centre left Labour policies begun by Neil Kinnock and the late, great John Smith.
In truth the party as a whole needs to take a very hard look at itself and ask if this lurch to the extreme left (eg Jeremy Corbyn's idea to re-nationalise all kinds of things and reinstitute Clause IV) was an appropriate response to the Tories lurch to the far right. Of course it wasn't in my opinion and I believe that we can't hide behind "Brexit caused it" because in Scotland the SNP who are firmly pro-remain made huge strides at both Tory and Labour's expense.
What mattered was the fact he made a bunch of idiot promises a 2 yr old wouldn't believe and then sat on the fence on the biggest single issue of the election. Despite losing her own seat Swinson can justifiably claim her party got a larger share of the vote than it did in 2017 when she openly said she would cancel Brexit. She didn't lose to a leaver either, she lost to an SNP remainer.
And that brings me to my final point. Last night's result is going to cause all kinds of problems between Edinburgh and London. Sturgeon can justifiably claim there is widespread support for a 2nd Independence referendum in Scotland. Boris says he won't allow it but how can he justify such hypocrisy? Surely he's spent the last three years arguing for Britain to be 'independent' so how can he demand it on one hand then deny others the right to pursue it for themselves?
With a majority of 78 he should be able to govern easily but given the fractured nature of British politics as a whole he might find himself struggling on a number of extremely important issues. Brexit is a temporary issue now, it'll be done in a month and then the negotiations for a trade deal with the EU will start but I predict it won't be long before he finds himself fighting on several fronts at once on other issues.
Sorry about the long post but I think it's worth thinking about where we as a nation will go from here. The road may well be a lot rockier than anyone currently imagines.
I've always respected Jeremy Corbyn and admired the courage of his convictions but never agreed with him on most of his domestic policies. The "Momentum" group are, to my eyes at least a reborn "Militant" with an internet connection and nothing more. In fact the state my party is in today reminds me quite vividly of the Michael Foot days. Labour is just as out of touch with reality now as we were then and while I realise it's a very thin straw to clutch at I'm hoping that the thumping defeat we took last night will cause the sort of rebirth of moderate and centre left Labour policies begun by Neil Kinnock and the late, great John Smith.
In truth the party as a whole needs to take a very hard look at itself and ask if this lurch to the extreme left (eg Jeremy Corbyn's idea to re-nationalise all kinds of things and reinstitute Clause IV) was an appropriate response to the Tories lurch to the far right. Of course it wasn't in my opinion and I believe that we can't hide behind "Brexit caused it" because in Scotland the SNP who are firmly pro-remain made huge strides at both Tory and Labour's expense.
What mattered was the fact he made a bunch of idiot promises a 2 yr old wouldn't believe and then sat on the fence on the biggest single issue of the election. Despite losing her own seat Swinson can justifiably claim her party got a larger share of the vote than it did in 2017 when she openly said she would cancel Brexit. She didn't lose to a leaver either, she lost to an SNP remainer.
And that brings me to my final point. Last night's result is going to cause all kinds of problems between Edinburgh and London. Sturgeon can justifiably claim there is widespread support for a 2nd Independence referendum in Scotland. Boris says he won't allow it but how can he justify such hypocrisy? Surely he's spent the last three years arguing for Britain to be 'independent' so how can he demand it on one hand then deny others the right to pursue it for themselves?
With a majority of 78 he should be able to govern easily but given the fractured nature of British politics as a whole he might find himself struggling on a number of extremely important issues. Brexit is a temporary issue now, it'll be done in a month and then the negotiations for a trade deal with the EU will start but I predict it won't be long before he finds himself fighting on several fronts at once on other issues.
Sorry about the long post but I think it's worth thinking about where we as a nation will go from here. The road may well be a lot rockier than anyone currently imagines.
390 Re: General Election Fri Dec 13 2019, 23:49
xmiles
Jay Jay Okocha
You make some good points lpp but one fundamental problem for Labour is Corbyn. He is the worst leader that Labour has ever had (with the possible exception of Foot). He has no leadership ability; he is a hypocrite; and he simply refuses to admit he is ever wrong.
I know the Tory press and media have never given him a chance but his ability to fuck up is astonishing. Just look at his total failure to deal with anti-semitism within the Labour party or even apologise for it.
It is a tragedy that we now have a serial liar with no morals or principles as prime minister and a large part of the blame for this rests with Corbyn for being so totally useless.
I know the Tory press and media have never given him a chance but his ability to fuck up is astonishing. Just look at his total failure to deal with anti-semitism within the Labour party or even apologise for it.
It is a tragedy that we now have a serial liar with no morals or principles as prime minister and a large part of the blame for this rests with Corbyn for being so totally useless.
391 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 01:45
Hip Priest
Andy Walker
A day of total despair. I'd like to think some important lessons have been learned but I don't hold out any great hopes. I get the distinct impression that the NEC has no intention of moving away from it's current hard line left wing policies. Corbyn was a truly embarrassingly awful leader and undoubtedly a major factor in the size of the thumping we took last night but no matter who the leader is no party will ever get voted into power in this country on an ultra left wing ticket. Just will never happen.
392 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 02:24
luckyPeterpiper
Ivan Campo
I totally agree Corbyn is a dreadful leader but one thing you can't really call him is a hypocrite. Basically he didn't know what to say about Brexit because his own instinct was for Remain but much of the party and of course the country were Leave voters. I think his main problem was he came into politics at a time when Militant were very strong and the unions still held real power in the country not just the Labour party. He was always on that fringe from his very first day as an MP. In fact you can see his early speeches and TV interviews on Youtube and in all of them he was espousing by and large the same policies he espoused in this campaign. The sad fact is while he's certainly a man of strong principle just as Foot was they're outdated principles that the British public simply don't share and haven't done for at least thirty and more likely fifty years.xmiles wrote:You make some good points lpp but one fundamental problem for Labour is Corbyn. He is the worst leader that Labour has ever had (with the possible exception of Foot). He has no leadership ability; he is a hypocrite; and he simply refuses to admit he is ever wrong.
I know the Tory press and media have never given him a chance but his ability to fuck up is astonishing. Just look at his total failure to deal with anti-semitism within the Labour party or even apologise for it.
It is a tragedy that we now have a serial liar with no morals or principles as prime minister and a large part of the blame for this rests with Corbyn for being so totally useless.
But worse than that is his blinkered belief that somehow the clock can be dialled back to the days of Clement Attlee and Harold Wilson. The truth is the British people, society and culture as a whole have changed and the economy has changed even more in that time. We're not a manufacturing nation any more and the days of the coal mines, ship yards and steel foundries are long gone but he and some idiots in the leadership think they aren't.
Sadly the extreme right has taken full advantage of Labour's myopia and we're now on course for both economic and social catastrophe in my opinion but the blame for that lies at least as much with the NEC and Corbyn as it does with the Tories, UKIP and Brexit party. I hope and pray we get a moderate in as our new leader but given how the election itself is now run I'm not at all confident that will happen.
393 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 07:59
xmiles
Jay Jay Okocha
luckyPeterpiper wrote:I totally agree Corbyn is a dreadful leader but one thing you can't really call him is a hypocrite. Basically he didn't know what to say about Brexit because his own instinct was for Remain but much of the party and of course the country were Leave voters. I think his main problem was he came into politics at a time when Militant were very strong and the unions still held real power in the country not just the Labour party. He was always on that fringe from his very first day as an MP. In fact you can see his early speeches and TV interviews on Youtube and in all of them he was espousing by and large the same policies he espoused in this campaign. The sad fact is while he's certainly a man of strong principle just as Foot was they're outdated principles that the British public simply don't share and haven't done for at least thirty and more likely fifty years.xmiles wrote:You make some good points lpp but one fundamental problem for Labour is Corbyn. He is the worst leader that Labour has ever had (with the possible exception of Foot). He has no leadership ability; he is a hypocrite; and he simply refuses to admit he is ever wrong.
I know the Tory press and media have never given him a chance but his ability to fuck up is astonishing. Just look at his total failure to deal with anti-semitism within the Labour party or even apologise for it.
It is a tragedy that we now have a serial liar with no morals or principles as prime minister and a large part of the blame for this rests with Corbyn for being so totally useless.
But worse than that is his blinkered belief that somehow the clock can be dialled back to the days of Clement Attlee and Harold Wilson. The truth is the British people, society and culture as a whole have changed and the economy has changed even more in that time. We're not a manufacturing nation any more and the days of the coal mines, ship yards and steel foundries are long gone but he and some idiots in the leadership think they aren't.
Sadly the extreme right has taken full advantage of Labour's myopia and we're now on course for both economic and social catastrophe in my opinion but the blame for that lies at least as much with the NEC and Corbyn as it does with the Tories, UKIP and Brexit party. I hope and pray we get a moderate in as our new leader but given how the election itself is now run I'm not at all confident that will happen.
I think Corbyn is a hypocrite over brexit. Corbyn was never a remainer. He has consistently opposed EU membership and he did nothing to support the Remain campaign. In fact he actively sabotaged it by refusing to cooperate with the campaign. The one time he gave a speech about it he obviously had no enthusiasm for it and looked like a hostage reading a message out aloud. He has never wanted a second referendum and again refused to work with other parties on this. I actually doubt whether he even voted remain.
Another example of him being a hypocrite is his failure to deal with or even apologise for the anti-semitism in the Labour party. I don't believe he personally is anti-semitic but to pretend that he has dealt with it when he so clearly has not is either dishonesty or hypocrisy.
394 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 10:51
okocha
El Hadji Diouf
Some really good posts on here in the last few hours. It's hard to come to terms with the fact that we are now living in a right-wing country, with the ERG poised to revitalise after their enforced hiatus.
One thing that strikes me as significant is how little the parties made of the recent groundswell of concern about the planet and the environment. It became the Brexit Election (or the anti-Corbyn Election, as the right wing press chose to make it). Green issues only really featured in Brighton Pavilion....and just look at what happened there in stark contrast to the rest of the country!
The Green Party's Caroline Lucas has been re-elected to her Brighton Pavilion seat with a greater majority.
The former party leader, who is its sole MP, defeated her closest Labour rival by almost 20,000 votes, increasing her majority by nearly 5%.
She gained 33,151 votes compared with 13,211 to Labour's candidate Adam Imanpour.
Ms Lucas said she was "incredibly proud" of the result but also "deeply angry" at a "broken" political system.
She said: "I feel incredibly proud that my majority has increased because it demonstrates that Brighton Pavilion continues to believe in compassion, justice and a bigger future."
Did the parties miss a trick by not taking advantage of the way Attenborough and Thornburg brought this issue into the consciousness of the general public and especially that of young people with massive voting potential?
The GE should have been about much more than Corbyn versus Johnson.
One thing that strikes me as significant is how little the parties made of the recent groundswell of concern about the planet and the environment. It became the Brexit Election (or the anti-Corbyn Election, as the right wing press chose to make it). Green issues only really featured in Brighton Pavilion....and just look at what happened there in stark contrast to the rest of the country!
The Green Party's Caroline Lucas has been re-elected to her Brighton Pavilion seat with a greater majority.
The former party leader, who is its sole MP, defeated her closest Labour rival by almost 20,000 votes, increasing her majority by nearly 5%.
She gained 33,151 votes compared with 13,211 to Labour's candidate Adam Imanpour.
Ms Lucas said she was "incredibly proud" of the result but also "deeply angry" at a "broken" political system.
She said: "I feel incredibly proud that my majority has increased because it demonstrates that Brighton Pavilion continues to believe in compassion, justice and a bigger future."
Did the parties miss a trick by not taking advantage of the way Attenborough and Thornburg brought this issue into the consciousness of the general public and especially that of young people with massive voting potential?
The GE should have been about much more than Corbyn versus Johnson.
395 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 11:00
boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
A few fast food outlets have banned straws. The planet is saved!
Until the climate crisis is confronted head on, we'll continue to sleepwalk into oblivion.
Until the climate crisis is confronted head on, we'll continue to sleepwalk into oblivion.
396 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 11:06
okocha
El Hadji Diouf
...and there'll come a time when there won't be a planet on which to promulgate conventional politican rhetoric, no matter whether left or right wing, so all the hot air, hatred and division will count for absolutely nothing!boltonbonce wrote:A few fast food outlets have banned straws. The planet is saved!
Until the climate crisis is confronted head on, we'll continue to sleepwalk into oblivion.
397 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 11:40
wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
Crikey! Grown up analysis on nuts - whatever next?
398 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 11:40
wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
I cant see Labour getting an electable leader for two terms unless Borat really f**** it up - but there’s every possibility of that when reality bites.
399 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 11:51
boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Depends on who puts up.wanderlust wrote:I cant see Labour getting an electable leader for two terms unless Borat really f**** it up - but there’s every possibility of that when reality bites.
The fact is, the party membership are pretty much left leaning, and will probably vote along those lines.
Rebecca Long-Bailey will be getting my vote. If she's on the ballot.
400 Re: General Election Sat Dec 14 2019, 14:47
Sluffy
Admin
boltonbonce wrote:Depends on who puts up.wanderlust wrote:I cant see Labour getting an electable leader for two terms unless Borat really f**** it up - but there’s every possibility of that when reality bites.
The fact is, the party membership are pretty much left leaning, and will probably vote along those lines.
Rebecca Long-Bailey will be getting my vote. If she's on the ballot.
To my way of thinking there is a big difference between idealism and reality.
Corbyn was unelectable to a great many traditional voters.
His stance on Brexit was ambiguous to say the least. He didn't seem to want to lead the party on a Remain ticket, whilst at the same time didn't want to get behind the 'get it done' philosophy that won the election for Johnson, as most people had got heartily sick of Brexit by now.
Leadership is about leading - he didn't lead.
His ideology about achieving a social utopia was all well and good but only the first time voter generation and dyed in the wool left wing socialist believed that to be attainable - how would it be founded - and probably more pertinent, who would fund it and how could it ever be paid back?
The first time voter generation and the 'dyed in the wools' seem to live in their own 'bubble' and their views and opinions are reinforced by others inhabiting the same bubble they are in. They can't accept/understand/relate to any views not consistent with their own and reject them out of hand as people being to dumb/stupid/vacuous to 'do the right thing'.
The reality is though that hard left socialism as propagated under the Corbyn/McDonnell/Momentum banner is not palatable to the large majority as can be evidenced long before this election with the waves of scores of moderate Labour MP's giving up and walking away rather than be part of the parliamentary party under the current regime. Is it any wonder then that moderate Labour voters rejected the party at the election too?
It's been clear from many Labour canvassers for some considerable time that 'Corbyn' as been an issue on the door steps of many - yet nothing was done about it.
It was clear to that Brexit 'burn out' was an issue and people wanted it to be resolved - and fast - yet no clear message came from Labour - nor it's leader!
There was a clear and obvious disconnect from the party to those who are natural supporters of it. The ideological cabal which had taken leadership of the party went along the 'Longest suicide note in history' route by rejecting the feedback they were receiving (and which was contrary to their rhetoric) and again ended up with the same outcome as before. It wasn't rocket science to see what was coming on the day - apparently they saw it themselves towards the end but even their own worst predictions were surpassed with the scale of defeat.
Brexit isn't going to be anywhere near as bad as the multitude of social media nutjobs predict. The reality is life will go on pretty much as now for many years to come and the changes that will probably result in us being worse off than had we stayed, will come gradually and accepted by most as 'normal' at the time.
It's not in anyone's interest (the EU, the ruling party, the population as a whole) for things to turn out significantly bad for going down the Brexit road, trade will continue, movement of people to and from the country will still happen, life won't be any different that what is normal now.
For what it is worth I write this as someone who is a naturally leaning Labour voter and would have much preferred to have remained in the EU.
Labour/Corbyn should have led a strong and clear Remain campaign at the time of the referendum but were conspicuous by the absence of such - they probably thought as many did that Brexit wouldn't happen anyway. Corbyn should have put country before party under May's administration, instead they went along the route of wanting Brexit to happen, then winning an election of the back of peoples dissatisfaction resulting from it, and finally when it had dragged on for so long and May was forced out, should have bit the bullet and accepted Brexit was going to happen and not wimped out of taking a lead - had they done they wouldn't have lost so many of their heartland seats.
To vote in Corbynistas like Rebecca Long-Bailey won't heal the divide and could well continue the toxicity that Brexit has caused and it's time for the party to become more in tune with the electorate again by moving more to the centre ground as the Conservatives have seemingly moved more to the political right.
Conservatives have won, Brexit will happen, we have to accept it and move on and not live in the past and cling to ideology that was rejected under Foot by the electorate in 1983 and again now in 2019.
Momentum/Corbyn is the Militant/Foot of this age and has produced exactly the same result as it did.
Do we never learn?
Power to the People eh?
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