politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The qualities LAB leadership voters are looking for – knowi
politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The qualities LAB leadership voters are looking for – knowing how to win elections ranks 6th
Follow @MSmithsonPB
0
Comments
2010 DAVID MILIBAND VOTERS
Burnham 32%
Cooper 29%
Kendall 21%
Corbyn 19%
2010 ED MILIBAND VOTERS
Corbyn 56%
Burnham 21%
Cooper 16%
Kendall 7%
These two elements can come into conflict; finding a suitable compromise position with the electorate whilst retaining sufficient of your ideological platform to make power meaningful is a difficult task to achieve and can be painful.
Sadly, both parties have too often seen this task and said "Bugger that, I abdicate." It took the Tories nearly a decade out of power before they bit the bullet. Labour look like following that well-trodden path at least as far, if not further.
It's arguably selfishly irresponsible.
If someone was (1) in touch with the electorate (2) provided effective opposition (3) was a strong leader of (4) a united party there would be a good chance that they also know what they need to do to win.
However, Mike is still right to highlight these figures as I suspect that they're not just what Labour leadership votes want from their new leader but also their personal priorities. And that demotes 'winning elections' well behind 'opposing the Tories': they're not particularly bothered about running the government; they just want to be seen to be making the right noises and 'winning the argument'.
And that's where the overlap stops because wanting to run a government means having to compromise with reality and with the electorate and that seems to be the precise opposite of what they want.
Yvette Cooper was weak, wouldn't hold an opinion on much. This won't play well.
Andy Burnham came across again as just flipping opinions that he thinks might suit voters. Bit weak.
Kendall rude and abrasive but held her own. Did well presenting an alternative.
Corbyn did well. Having his own views came across well again. Being partially Eurosceptic but from a different stance to Nigel Farage (when Farage phoned in) will go down well with some UKIP ex labour supporters. The rest were weak on Europe.
Whilst JC is by far the best speaker and the one with recognisable policies (even if they are not relevant to the 21st C ), would he really wish to revert to the days of the Daily Worker?
The problem is that his two main opponents have just nothing to say and really are policyless wafflers, and the third progressive one is being vilified by a party that closes its ears to the truth and just does not want to listen to reality.
Edited : Nasty sods! http://www.mercenary-wars.net/elite-units/spanish-legion.html
That said, since they stopped wearing their funny hats and carrying SMGs and rifle after dark has the Guarda still got the mojo for the paramilitary stuff?
1) HI HL hope ur OK
2) anyone recommend a travel agent specialising in Cuba?
George Osborne ruined my yoga retreat - There’s no escaping the budget – not even when you’re halfway up an Italian hill with a bunch of highly literate yogis
http://bit.ly/1gOV9yq
Plus, I assume the logic is that a leader who is in touch of with ordinary people, provides effective opposition to the Tories, is a Strong Leader and unites the party would actually stand a decent chance in an election. Crazy, I know?
La Guarda's loyalty is still questionable.
There's hope for me yet.
Shadsy says he'll have something by the morning.
www.quinnipiac.edu/images/polling/ps/ps07222015_Sg86de.pd
Interestingly there are people phoning in saying they don't tend to agree with Corbyn's politics but he is what British Politics needs and would not rule out voting for a man of conviction like him. So kind of goes in line with the statistics above.
The problem is not that Labour supporters want the party to stand for something. It's that many of the 'pure in opposition' types seem to think that standing for something is or should be a unique attribute of the party, when I'd say most politicians stand for something (certainly not coherent ideologies, but something), even the robotic ones, and so anyone who might claim that is the difference between the major parties immediately sets of my cynicism alarm that they are tending toward believing Labour=good, others=bad (rather than Labour=better), a moral judgement I personally find hard to swallow.
But then again I thought Ed M was ok and that Labour would win the GE (with a majority, up until Feb 2015, when I switched to Lab plurality!) so I am clearly not representative of the electorate as a whole - perhaps they will like being told only Labour stand for things, if they go down that route.
Donald Trump 22% [17%]
Jeb Bush 15% [19%]
Scott Walker 12% [7%]
Ben Carson 8% [5%]
Mike Huckabee 7% [6%]
Marco Rubio 6% [9%]
Rand Paul 5% [8%]
Chris Christie 4% [6%]
Ted Cruz 4% [6%]
http://morningconsult.com/2015/07/trump-leads-gop-field-no-slump-after-attacks-on-mccain/
Meanwhile Trump has said “I will only ever RUN as a Republican” on the Dana Loesh show on the Blaze last night, though given the number of times he has changed his mind take it with a pinch of salt
If winning elections and good media performer were the only important things, they may as well have David Cameron as the next Labour leader.
The real question is why Corbyn is doing so well from the evidence we see through a glass darkly. Potential answers:
Labour's 31 per cent fear being thrown under the bus, in policy terms, in the rush to get another 7 per cent.
The other candidates are not good enough to justify their inevitable concessions from traditional Labour policies. Labour people don't see them as PMs or election winners anyway so why sell out their values?
Lots of non-Labour people are supporting a perceived weak candidate insincerely (I don't believe this one much).
Labour voters feel an emotional attachment to their party and want to lash out at all the people who are talking it down, and five years is a long time anyway when you have a majority government, so the pay-off to self-sacrificial deeds and conscientious behaviour is far away.
And yet the elite class of MPs developed into professional, identikit automatons for some reason, and the two party system seems stronger than ever (apart from Scotland, where things are in flux). Political leaders do things because it works electorally - I keep expecting a larger backlash against the largely disliked party robots who by and large lead us, but so far it appears that, while we like it on individual MPs like Corbyn, we don't like it in our leaders.
Ed M was not, to me, a scary prospect as leader, rightly or wrongly. But to many people he was, particularly with the SNP behind him. Many people will really like the idea of a Corbyn style leader - but I suspect even more people would fear him than did Ed M, and a Cameron like opponent who is largely unthreatening (which I am increasingly coming to see as Cameron's key strength) would do very well in that situation.
The people in charge screwed the tax payers of the UK for billions, then still expected bonuses of many millions. Plus, they are still getting away with the lie.
https://twitter.com/journostephen/status/623959982917201921
Andy Burnham 6/5 (Ladbrokes)
Yvette Cooper 14/5 (Betfair)
Jeremy Corbyn 7/2 (Betfair)
Liz Kendall 25/1 (Bet365)
There's an underround, so there must be value there somewhere. Personally I'd write off Liz Kendall too.
http://www.heraldscotland.com/politics/13463776.Fears_over_infiltration_of_Tommy_Sheridan_supporters_in_SNP/
Surely we don't have licence to be as bad as our worst neighbour. When we are asked to pay our taxes, we don't protest that Starbucks and Amazon don't. And we don't look at a massive welfare fraudster and tell ourselves we can commit our own littler fraud.
It seems like a way of setting certain behaviours in the past and distancing ourselves from the past, when the truth is that long-term consequences exist and certain countries still behave that way in Africa (say) without being immune from criticism (nor should they be).
What about all those passionate Mary Creagh supporters, they have been denied the chance to vote for her because MPs didn't care for her.
As it is, if the system they have requires MP nominations, it would have been perfectly appropriate for Corbyn not to get on the ballot if he failed to get enough of those nominations, since clearly the idea behind the system is someone should have some measure of parliamentary support.
'Look, I’m just going to come right out and say it: I like Jeremy Corbyn. In a world full of sleekit, image-conscious politicians, he’s genuine. He didn’t enter Parliament for popularity or power or pelf. He lives frugally (I’ve only ever seen him arrive at meetings by bike or public transport) and has spent the past 30 years taking up all manner of unloved causes, from Irish republicanism to – well, to British republicanism.
Many of Corbyn’s Labour colleagues remark on his humourlessness; some call it sourness. But I don’t see why that should count against him. Earnestness, in politics, is often the flip-side of conviction. There has always been an honourable place in the HOUSE of Commons for Roundheads.
An honourable place, too, for the Bennite tradition which Corbyn represents – if not exactly a large place. If we had proportional representation, Corbyn might lead small socialist party along the lines of Germany’s Die Linke or Denmark’s Red-Green Alliance. First-past-the-post ensures that that tendency must instead find expression within a much wider Labour movement.
Fond as I am of the fellow, I am not one of the #ToriesForCorbyn who have sprung up across social media – and who, reportedly, include the Prime Minister. I can see the tactical attractions, obviously. A Corbyn-led Labour party would probably split. Even if it didn’t, it would sink to a 1983-style defeat. Against such a party, the Conservatives might be mediocre, pedestrian, self-serving and still stroll to victory.'
http://www.conservativehome.com/thecolumnists/2015/07/daniel-hannan-mep-a-corbyn-victory-would-be-bad-for-the-conservatives.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/ed-milibands-vanity-has-doomed-labour-for-a-generation-10408697.html
Oh come on, it's not that bad surely? I know this feels like the lowest ebb for Labour, and I know that pundits don't worry about looking silly with overly firm predictions that end up being completely wrong (Hell, I didn't let my abject failure in predicting an Ed M premiership with absolutely zero grace for alternate views slow me down, and professionals are even better at maintaining confidence in the face of such failure), but if Corbyn (or Burnham, or whoever) ends up winning in 2020 they are going to feel pretty darn silly for predicting 2025 losses this far in advance. Hedge your bets, man, at least only predict certain failure in 2020, even if the Tories are led by Peter Bone in a Thatcher wig.
I'm starting to wonder whether Labour electing Corbyn would be better for them than them electing Cooper or Burnham with Corbyn just a few percent behind. The first would probably result in him losing a few local elections before being replaced by the next election. The second scenario would cause the Labour left to feel robbed, and then when a mediocre Brownite didn't achieve much, would leave the "we weren't true enough lefties" idea alive for the next leadership election.
I'll repeat it:
The only thing that matters in life and in politics is the end.
Blair started as a saint but ended up as a devil.
It does not matter if he won 3 elections if he was one of the worst PM's in history.
Actually, I wouldn't wish that on Thatcher, or anyone else to that matter. We only live once. I doubt Osborne in his latter years will revel too much in making the poor poorer (or the rich richer as he has done), or Cameron will think back to trying to reverse a vote where foxes can be terrifyingly torn apart by a pack of dogs.
What about not dealing with climate change? Will this be what Cameron or Osborne think about when they see the world as it is in fifty years time or so? Will Cameron or Osborne dwell too much on EVEL, or trying to reverse the human rights act as their greatest act? What about the desperate migrants from Africa that Cameron closed the door to? Will this be his greatest act when Cameron contemplates the end of his life?
We live once. There are not too people around who at the end of their lives can think back and believe that they did something, anything particularly well.
The pre-game show is on one of the lowlier ESPN networks.
Or, "call no man happy until he is dead."
"I wouldn’t want to win on an old-fashioned leftist platform. Even if I thought it was the route to victory, I wouldn’t take it."
For all their claims, Blairites are just as ideological as the hard left.
It was also amusing when he claimed how laughable the idea that Labour could win back Tory voters by takng a stronger line against austerity would be, how it was 'insulting to the electorate' to tell them they were wrong about their views on the economy ..... before a minute later without a hint of irony he claimed UKIP voters were wrong about immigration and that the way to win them back was to make an unashamedly pro-immigration argument .
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CKjHUXoWEAEFeaH.jpg
Thatcher may be adored by Tories, the left still loathe her too