politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » How is history going to judge Mr. Corbyn?

With his party getting an absolute pasting in the local elections and all the pointers being to a CON landslide on June 8th I wonder quite how history is going to judge Labour’s leader, Mr. Corbyn.
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I think it was the Tory surge I underestimated - the increased turnout deeply surprises me.
A. I'm not sure it'll bother
Fantastic!
For what it's worth, some advice for the Labour Party from a former Tory spin doctor.
http://www.lifestuff.xyz/blog/labour-not-corbyn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WZLJpMOxS4
Cannot be right, I read Corbyn said they were closing the gap. Perhaps more kindly than the voters, perhaps not, but while the scale of the LD drop was worse than Lab's will be, the situations are not the same - Lab are the main opposition, LDs are a minor party. Nor would any equivalence distract from that one is happening now, that's why the question is coming up.
Won a few early battles against rubbish opponents, then received the mother of all shellackings that lost the war.
Good riddance, may an earthy, robust centre left alliance spring from the ashes
I am not sure what Unionists expect the SNP to do ? They have dominated Scottish politics for a decade and yet they are still the largest party by miles.
Yes, the Tories won a lot of seats. But the SNP has not lost from a very high base.
What do you expect them to do ? Win every seat ?
John Major once said 'The electorate are always right'
Maybe there still won't be as massive a majority as seems, but if not it will be down to Tory missteps somehow (or the overspending thing making more of an impact than I think), not Labour. Then I say to John: WTF are you doing? Do you believe the stuff you say?
My local Pound Shop is full of useful household items, at (generally) a good price.
Corbyn is no bargain....
They are the largest party in 17 Scottish councils including Glasgow.
To paraphrase, success equals reality minus expectations. The SNP failed to meet expectations, hence they're viewed as failing.
It actually makes me angry.
That the LDs are going nowhere doesn't help - I'm not opposed to Tories on principle, though I don't think big majorities lead to good governance nor am I a fan of May, and I want other parties to be strong right now.
Shortly there will be a future where Corbyn is forgotten.
Counterfactuals rarely add insight, just prejudice.
I am shocked
https://twitter.com/LibDems/status/860512449333735425
That only shows the vote share for local elections, not general elections.
But they knew that.
No, it wouldn't (because it wouldn't have happened).
Callaghan did not hand over to Thatcher after he lost the no-confidence vote in 1979 and nothing in the FTPA suggests, to me, there would be any difference.
Hubris was the greatest enemy ahead of June 8th, I don't know what iron self control will prevent it, but it should hardly matter.
"Comrades, our own Parliamentary Party don't know our full potential. They will do everything possible to test us; but they will only test their own embarrassment. We will leave our MPs behind, we will pass through the Conservative patrols, past their sonar nets, and lay off their largest constituency, and listen to their chortling and tittering... while we conduct Austerity Debates! Then, and when we are finished, the only sound they will hear is our laughter, while we sail to Liverpool, where the sun is warm, and so is the... Comradeship!
"A great day, Comrades! We sail into history!"
Agreement will last 99 years with the EU and will have an early exit fee of £3 trillion pounds.
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:UK_trade_union_membership.png
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/aug/20/self-employment-uk-highest-level
https://twitter.com/paulwaugh/status/860570790072397824
I do not think such a result would be remotely possible between the Tories and Labour. Stoke Field and Perkin Warbeck would be a teddy bears' picnic by comparison to what would follow. Henry VI founded seats of learning and was a faithful husband.
Margaret d'Anjou was vicious but sane and highly intelligent.
The Duke of Somerset was venal and as thick as two short planks but was brave and has a high sense of duty.
Your comments are grossly unfair to the Lancastrians.
Depending on the next few years maintaining Brexit will either be an ongoing battle or the settled mainstream view and part of the minimum offering for a party to be a credible government.