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Probably the most successful Lynton Crosby message in the run-up to May 7th was the warning of “confusion and chaos” if Labour was returned.
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Probably the most successful Lynton Crosby message in the run-up to May 7th was the warning of “confusion and chaos” if Labour was returned.
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Posted this at the end of the last thread, would others agree with the description of this Labour leadership election as essentially a voodoo poll now? I don't think Corbyn's changed it, I think that the Labour leadership being a glorified voodoo poll has changed it. Cooper may be least objectionable to Labour members but this isn't a poll of Labour members its a poll of Labour members, plus whoever the union's get to sign up, plus whoever else wants to vote.
This is a glorified voodoo poll and Labour will get the result it deserves.
What could the Conservatives possibly add to Labour's current 'conversation' with the public this summer? Much better to watch them tear themselves apart and then end up with either Mr Mid Staffs or Mr Marx as the new leader seven weeks down the line.
Only 48 days to go of this contest, coming up to the half way point since nominations opened.
Fell below 50% for murderers in general a while ago. But well above that for child/mass/terrorist murderers still.
Possibly the only subject where parliamentary and public opinion have been so divided for so long.
Hoist with his own petard,
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/lord-sewel/house-of-lords_b_7808916.html
As for mid-Staffs: if Burnham becomes leader, it should hang over him like a curse. He's scum.
ABIS
Edit: which was made as a point already...
http://labourlist.org/2015/05/harman-says-public-will-play-a-crucial-role-in-labour-leadership-election/
Hamlet:
There's letters seal'd, and my two schoolfellows,
Whom I will trust as I will adders fang'd—
They bear the mandate, they must sweep my way
And marshal me to knavery. Let it work;
For 'tis the sport to have the enginer
Hoist with his own petard, an't shall go hard
But I will delve one yard below their mines
And blow them at the moon.
The generous open voting contest without a cut off date was asking for trolls to sign up.
By the way, does the Tory party allow its members and councillors to be members of another party?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-33675760
The autumn will be very interesting.
It includes:
- An opt-out on the core EU aim of "ever closer union"
- The sovereignty of national parliaments to be boosted, so groups of them can block proposed EU legislation
- Safeguard the City of London and other financial centres outside the eurozone
- Curb EU immigration by cutting benefits
- Make the EU more streamlined and competitive
I really do think this has become a very paltry list. I note the word "include", however, so let's hope they are going for something rather more substantive. Cutting benefits for three years for EU immigrants will not make much effect on immigration. Protections for the non-Eurozone need to cover much more than just the financial sector, after the worrying new development of bloc votes for the Eurozone spending EU money. Plus, what happened to repatriations? We've previously heard suggestions about opting out of CAP or the Social Chapter. We really need more opt-outs, if only to set more precedents that we can opt-out from more in future.
It is the union sign-ups and £3 fellow travellers who are the recent additions and predominantly there to back JC.
If we had used the membership register as of GE day to set the electorate for the leadership election, it would have been fairer, and delivered a result reflecting the views of the membership.
You should know better.
On-topic: is this better or worse than IDS versus Ken Clarke?
Just finishing up a chapter for a book being published by Imperial on wmd around the world. Not surprisingly, my chapter is on Iraq's BW programme. I address such issues as why it the programme's success was limited, and why, although the presumption that they had BW did impact the strategy of the coalition in 1991 and again in 2003, it did not (as intended by Saddam) affect in any way the strategic outcomes of either Gulf war or the war with Iran.
Then it's on to a major book on all Iraq's wmd programmes, looking at it from all perspectives - the West's, the inspectors/UN, Iraq's and Russia's. Although Iraq had a strategy for gaming the Security Council's decisions through NAM and China (and later Russia and France), the NAM/China positions were really immaterial to any developments, so we won't really treat that. The book will, inter alia, look at why the entire intelligence community (including Russia, France and Germany, not just the Anglosphere) got it wrong on Iraq. We are helped in making better assessments now as we have access to the Saddam Tapes (like Nixon, he recorded key meetings with his top advisors) and the Duelfer Report (Charlie lead the Iraq Action Group which interviewed all the key Iraqi wmd players in the years after the fall of Baghdad. Alas his efforts were curtailed when his convoy was hit by an IED and several of his protection unit were killed.
In my view, Blair did get ahead of the intelligence. He was doing what politicians do - simplifying things to make better sound bites, and using the arguments most likely to persuade key constituencies to his proposed plan of action, rather than the soundest arguments. He lost me with the 40 minutes claim, but I don't fault him anywhere near as much as his detractors on the rest.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3174922/NHS-boob-job-scrounger-Josie-Cunningham-says-game-George-Osborne-slashed-benefits.html
Frustrating but effective.
Maybe it is at the moment, but things always go wobbly when any party is out of sorts with the electorate.
Edited extra bit: views have been largely settled on, I think.
I understand that "Labour Party rules prohibit members from campaigning for other parties or candidates in any elections."
What about the Tories? I'd be surprised if a political party openly condoned membership of a rival party.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/labour-party-expels-members-who-tweeted-support-for-scottish-nationalist-party-during-general-election-10286638.html
The first Blair government is perhaps another example...??
I don't need to tell you that what you're up against is that plenty of people have already reached their own conclusions about what happened here, and won't take kindly to any facts or evidence to the contrary.
Given the assumption that Labour don't have membership lists for other parties (how would they?) they will struggle to identify the genuine supporters from the opponents. It should be easy to weed out opposition councillors and obviously rightwing journalists (Toby Young, Harry Cole and associated troublemakers) and there may be notes from canvass returns about certain addresses displaying posters from opposing parties etc. - but if they have a couple of hundred thousand applications to trawl through at the last minute...
To take up OGH's contention in the header, it does currently look like a misjudgement from Burnham - on the assumption that Corbyn makes the final two, he could (a) beat Burnham in the run-off, or (b) allow Cooper to beat Burnham at the 2nd elimination.
But, should the Corbyn polling be wrong, the Corbyn second preferences [from new entrants into the electorate] might prove decisive in a Burnham-Cooper run-off.
Or Burnham might persuade Corbyn to pull out.
http://www.itv.com/news/2015-07-27/man-shot-dead-in-targeted-attack-in-salford/
http://dailycaller.com/2015/07/26/3-reasons-why-joe-biden-will-run-for-president/
And all Councillors must be party members.
Allowing themselves to be de facto on the side of the 'me toos' of the welfare system has been one of the gravest mistakes labour have made.
If they truly stand for the most vulnerable in society should they not be angrier at these people than anybody else?
I did think about signing up to vote but can't be bothered now, as the party is going away from the direction that would appeal to me - towards Corbyn and away from the centre.
Not so sure when 3 million families find out next April that they are going to be losing a sizeable chunk out of their family income in tax credit cuts
http://publicpolicypast.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/how-on-earth-did-labour-sink-so-low.html
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/03387/ADAMS20150727_3387990k.jpg
'As for mid-Staffs: if Burnham becomes leader, it should hang over him like a curse. He's scum.'
Not just Mid-Staffs but also Hinchingbrooke and not forgetting when he was Undersecretary for Health he privatized the entire NHS logistics.
....and do better if they increase their work beyond 16 hours - not forgetting the tax allowance rise - it's all about reducing welfare dependency and rewarding work.
And the people already working full time?
Also weren't we told something about 3m unemployed and the end of the NHS at the start of the coalition years? All these dire predictions it's astonishing really .... and yet the Conservatives just won an election.
The more of this sort of thing I read the more I think a Corbyn led Labour party could genuinely disintegrate.
They get the full benefit of the tax cuts and the increase in free childcare - do keep up
My own criticism of Blair centred not only on the issue of WMD's but how he handled the actual invasion of Iraq (I formed this view while reading Andrew Rawnsley's The End of the Party).
There's never a good time for reform like this, and some people will undoubtedly lose out - but structural govt spending is way more than tax receipts and has to come down somehow. Unemployment is low and falling, growth is rising and the hope politically will be that general economic improvement will be able to make up the majority of the withdrawn benefits.
Just wow. In what world is it acceptable to heavily subsidise (nay, encourage) such poor work ethic. I frequently work 16hr days....and more to the point, so do a lot of labour voters...Or should I say future Con/Ukip voters
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/in-iraq-i-raided-insurgents-in-virginia-the-police-raided-me/2015/07/24/2e114e54-2b02-11e5-bd33-395c05608059_story.html
http://thebighoot.co.uk/
I can see three from the window where I'm sitting right now.
There's never a good time for reform like this, and some people will undoubtedly lose out - but structural govt spending is way more than tax receipts and has to come down somehow. Unemployment is low and falling, growth is rising and the hope politically is that general economic improvement will be able to make up the majority of the withdrawn benefits.
Absolutely - the faux outrage that spending cuts mean people lose out would be bearable if the left had ever, just once actually supported any cuts of any kind...that was and remains one of their biggest errors of judgement.
Writing off a Labour led by Corbyn could be a mistake, he has plenty of scope for populist policies e.g. he could announce he would cancel all student debt and slash tuition fees paid for by cancelling Trident etc.
http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN01079/SN01079.pdf
You are so wrong...it's embarassing. Those receiving tax credits are going to be losing up to 79% of everything they earn. A couple earning £32,000 with three kids will lose £1,981 (after income tax reductions).
If that wasn't bad enough for every pound that they work to make up that £1,981 they will lose 79 pence. An effective marginal rate of tax of 79%
. How the hell does that reward work. If you don't believe me here is conformation from the IFS who emailed me this morning
"Your calculation of the effective marginal tax rate is correct: this results from the basic income tax rate of 20% plus the main National Insurance Contribution rate of 12% plus the tax credit taper rate of 48%."
You have no idea what a time-bomb Osborne has planted - next April it will go off.
Edited extra bit: ahem, sorry, missed it the first time.
Income tax and National Insurance apply to everyone.
Presumably tax credit taper is related to getting less from the state in benefits as more is earned?
I feel proud of the British police by comparison, they still patrol and raid pretty much armed only with a baton and the occasional can of Mace.
At one contest there were just 25 ballots: nine for Jeremy Corbyn, eight for Andy Burnham, four for Yvette Cooper, and one simply reading “Fuck Kendall”.
http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/07/im-more-convinced-ever-jeremy-corbyn-going-win
Jeremy Corbyn (112)
Andy Burnham (101)
Yvette Cooper (87)
Liz Kendall (14)
http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/07/which-clps-are-nominating-who-labour-leadership-contest