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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » If Corbyn continues he’ll be remembered as the selfish bed-blocker who put himself ahead of LAB’s survival
Front cover of latest edition of Prospect
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Corbyn is going to destroy Labour, but will still refuse to accept the blame. His supporters will still blame tbe "Blairites". We have a one party state, albeit one where the PM lets her cabinet members swing in the wind.
The Lib Dems must be delighted. Corbyn presents them an easy way to make gains regardless of whether they can lay a glove on the Government.
There is an anti-Tory vote out there - shame on the other parties for their inability to harness it.
- UKIP has just lost its official raison d'etre, and is even more faction-ridden than Labour
- the Greens - well, if you think Corbyn is unelectable...
- the LibDems are still polling a third of what they won six years ago in the GE.
It took 40 years for the SNP to build a brand and infrastructure and achieve its spectacular successes of the last few years.
There's also no obvious single-issue cause for an alternative opposition to coalesce around, with the possible exception of anti-Brexit. But that poses huge problems as it is time-limited and has just lost a referendum. If the NHS collapses spectacularly, that might substitute, but that is still a big IF.
So I imagine Labour will limp on for a few years yet, even under Jezza.
‘The honest thing to do for Hammond, and knowing him it is what I suspect he would like to do, is to dump on his predecessors and say Osborne and Cameron were wrong,’ said the Sheffield Hallam MP, arguing the Chancellor was constrained by Mr Cameron and George Osborne’s Election manifesto ruling out tax rises.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4305250/Dump-blame-National-Insurance-rises-Cameron.html
Maybe Andy Street beating Sion Simon in the West Mids might get what's left of Labour outside Islington to wake up to the GE annihilation that's coming? Or maybe not.
Long read from Prospect on Labour:
http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/labour-party-crisis-red-sag-jeremy-corbyn
Don't have a dog in the Dutch election, but thought it worth mentioning.
HMRC have released a list of the most outlandish items which have been claimed as expenses. These include:
Holiday flights to the Caribbean
Luxury watches as Christmas gifts for staff - from a company with no employees
International flights for dental treatment ahead of business meetings
Pet food for a Shih Tzu 'guard dog'
Armani jeans as protective clothing for painter and decorator
Cost of regular Friday night 'bonding sessions' - running into thousands of pounds.
Underwear - for personal use
A garden shed for private use - plus the costs of the space it takes up in the garden
Betting slips
Caravan rental for the Easter weekend.
Ruth Owen, HMRC Director General of Customer Services, said:
'Year after year we receive a number of ludicrous expense claims, ranging from international holiday flights to expensive designer clothing, which we would never uphold. Why should the honest taxpayer pick up the bill for others? HMRC will only accept those claims which are genuine, such as legitimate travel expenses or the cost of tools for the job.'
https://www.bidwellsaccounts.co.uk/news/latest-news-for-business/archive/news-article/2017/March/self-assessment-expense-claims
Let's say it just is (10). That'd still double the size of the PLDP.
Mr. D, I wonder if the cantankerous gnome still favours electronic voting, given warnings (think it was on the front page of one of the papers) about Russian hackers.
The Canadian Conservatives went from 152 seats to 2 in the Federal Election in 1993. Just over a decade later, they were the largest party again & supplied the Premier, who then ran Canada for a decade.
In 2011, the NDP pushed the Liberals into third place for the first time. The talk was of the Death of the Liberals. Look what happened after a dusty, bumbling academic (Ignatieff) was replaced by a personable, charismatic young leader (Trudeau).
And, in this time, Quebec went from complete domination by the Bloc Quebecois (54 seats, every French- majority speaking riding in 1993) to just 4 in 2011.
Conclusions: (i) Labour will not die. (ii) Labour could recover very quickly with the party coalescing around the right leader. (iii) The SNP probably have a decade or two at the top of Scottish politics before -- as always -- the pendulum back-swings.
However, getting rid of him will not be an instant palliative, Labour's problems are greatly compounded by the centre and right of the party having no clear direction or conviction. Corbyn is but a symptom of this.
(Dates edited).
As for parties dying - how about NSDAP?
I tried to make sympathetic noises. I really tried.....
This captures it well
http://m.torontosun.com/2017/03/11/the-truth-about-populism-in-canada?token=efded96b6274b977581676cc68d3b0ec
The Liberals evolved. As did, to be fair, the Canadian Conservatives in my example as they merged with the Reform Party.
Or they can continue to fanny about, trying to be all things to all voters.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/mar/12/bad-blood-flows-neighbours-downing-street-philip-hammond-theresa-may-budget
Your presence has inspired me to post a thought provoking Atlantic article on Plato:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/04/making-athens-great-again/517791/
They should find a way to retire Farron and promote Lamb.
Interesting article
Mr. Timmo, that's a good point.
Mr. Jonathan, I partly agree. I always would've gone for Lamb, but Farron (as a lefty) is utterly outflanked by Captain Communism.
Mr. D, stopped clocks...
I think you were one of those who commented on my recent trip to North Cyprus. I sent a pic to TSE to upload (no idea if he did) but I did get to see the donkeys at the end of the panhandle. and they liked the carrots we fed them, but there was not a hint of getting a red rosette on them!!
N Cyprus is largely unspoilt and a very pleasant holiday destination. Everyone was polite kind and happy to help. The ruins as Salamis are amazing.
It may paper over the cracks for a while but as soon as real decisions need to be made... But hey, it's not like there are any massive issues to deal with at the moment.
But he's pretty. Urgh.
Another point to consider is that Mercedes didn't seem to arrive at a perfect setup during testing (and I think the drivers commented on this), whereas the Ferrari was, by all accounts, absolutely planted around the track.
Is the Ferrari a fundamentally better balanced package, or will Merc turn up in Australia, dial the car in, and be a second clear of the rest again ? At this stage, anyone's guess.
Mr. B, maybe, the Ferraris have interesting developments in both the aerodynamic and engine departments, though, and Vettel's dominant period had higher downforce than the last few years (ie more like the new regulations).
I agree very much with your comments on balance. Bottas said on the last day, I think, that not all the new parts Mercedes tried worked or getting the balance right was tricky.
Looking more broadly, the polls suggest a wider range of stories. The fact the Lib Dems are stuck despite Labour's woes deserves some examination.
https://twitter.com/Telegraph/status/840846077469253632
http://www.motorsportmagazine.com/opinion/f1/testing-times
I fear that Farron get, and will continue to get a bad press because he’s not a ‘metropolitan’; Northerner, went to a Northern, unfashionable, university and so on.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salamis,_Cyprus
https://twitter.com/rcolvile/status/840849309356691456
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-33127323
John Mann got it right. "So to demonstrate our desire never to win again, Islington's Jeremy Corbyn is now a Labour leadership candidate."
Simplest explanation seems best, and given you could stagger reforms, the simple answer is they decided, since they won, that voting reform could wait or be shelved.
What were the education announcements made before the budget? I think I missed those.
They simultaneously want to eclipse labour and be labour. Scoff af a progressive alliance but automatically repulsed by the idea of airing the Tories unintentionally, as would happen if they do their own thing, at least in the short term.
Either way I can't think of a political story that was good for the Government this week.
On duplicate sea battles: Naupactus, Actium and Lepanto were geographically all within a trebuchet-throw of one another.
Edited extra bit: Mr. Penkridge, has shades of the slow police response to the London looting in 2011.