- Thu Sep 09, 2021 4:55 pm
#9683
Labour was doomed the moment Johnson got his deal. It was then an absolutely stupid decision verging on reckless to then give him an election when they did not need to. There was no way Johnson could have called an election at the end of 2019 (other than whipping a vote of no confidence in himself, which would have been such a mad thing to do and he'd never have done it with his ego) without tacit support from Labour and the Lib Dems, but both Corbyn and Swinson were mad enough to think such a move actually benefitted them in some way and thus here we are. Of course much of Corbyn's assumption was that what happened in 2017 would happen again, which was patently absurd to anyone who wasn't blinded by their red-tinted spectacles.
Which is part 1 of my occasional new series "Why the 2017 General Election was the worst thing to happen to this country in many years".
Boiler wrote: ↑Thu Sep 09, 2021 1:08 pmBut if Labour had adopted the approach that Corbyn apparently wanted, which was to support Brexit (and not appease its Home Counties middle-class Remainer element), would those Red Wall seats have been lost?So Labour should instead have sacrificed that middle-class urban element and lost seats by the bucketload in places like London, Bristol, Manchester, Brighton, Liverpool etc. instead? Do they somehow count less?
I am sadly of the belief that whilst Starmer remains in post, the "Red Wall" seats will not return to Labour as he's seen as "the Brexit Traitor" by them.
Labour was doomed the moment Johnson got his deal. It was then an absolutely stupid decision verging on reckless to then give him an election when they did not need to. There was no way Johnson could have called an election at the end of 2019 (other than whipping a vote of no confidence in himself, which would have been such a mad thing to do and he'd never have done it with his ego) without tacit support from Labour and the Lib Dems, but both Corbyn and Swinson were mad enough to think such a move actually benefitted them in some way and thus here we are. Of course much of Corbyn's assumption was that what happened in 2017 would happen again, which was patently absurd to anyone who wasn't blinded by their red-tinted spectacles.
Which is part 1 of my occasional new series "Why the 2017 General Election was the worst thing to happen to this country in many years".
Things can only get better