davidjay wrote: ↑Sun Nov 26, 2023 10:27 pm
it was down to him that we ended up with Corbyn. Judge him against that first
Obviously this was a well-intended but disastrous decision. But you also have to wonder how things would have turned out without it. We’d potentially have had Burnham or (ideally) Cooper as leader. A more enthusiastic leader may have prevented Brexit - but only just and that wound could still be lingering.
What I’m basically saying is, the one silver lining from all this is that the right had their own way for years and utterly, utterly fucked everything. They destroyed themselves, proved Brexit was and is a disaster (and set the wheels in motion for a rejoining where we as a nation will have to be more cooperative and less veto-happy), and turned the husk of their party into a crankfest. They innoculated us all for a generation against bullshit and bullshitters of the likes of the now disgraced Boris. Farage is eating kangaroo anus for coins. Cummings is a widely-mocked joke.
It’s a lost decade, and the damage may take as long again to undo. But it can still be undone - the NHS and BBC saved, the UK’s reputation salvaged, projects renationalised. And it has potentially destroyed the Conservative Party as we know it for decades, and Labour is re-galvanised against the infiltration of the trots. Given the far right drifting in in places in Europe and elsewhere, I just wonder if the crash and burn will - in the long term - have saved us from a slower, less obvious, more malignant and harder to reverse descent.