Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Wed Jul 27, 2022 6:00 pm
Starmer does have a serious problem with having chucked away promises.
So the Trots would have you believe. But it’s completely absurd if you stop to think about it. I do not take the view that the leader of the Labour Party is elected rigidly to stick to policies that he talked about when seeking election. No, I want a leader to be trusted to exercise his strategic and tactical political know-how and judgement, in a changing political landscape, in the service of Labour’s principal objective of getting rid of the Tories , avoiding a fifth successive election defeat, and returning the party to government where it can actually begin to re-build things and improve people’s lives made utterly miserable by 12+ years of Tory government. If that means eschewing, at least for Labour’s first term, any commitment to public ownership of the utilities, I’m completely relaxed about that. It does not mean ruling it out for all time. I’ve taken to reminding the Trots that when running his campaign for leader, Jeremy Corbyn also made his own “ten pledges”, not a single one of which Corbyn stuck to, admittedly, and typically, because they were all contingent on him winning an election, something he proved to be totally incapable of doing.But you never hear the Trots whining about those ten broken pledges, do you?
Many of the promises were silly ones to make, but that's not quite the point. There's a strong case for getting new approval for a very different programme, I think.
Labour has a long-established mechanism for developing and adopting policy(and it doesn’t solely involve the whims of Keir Starmer), right up to the clause V meeting that finalises the content of the manifesto just before each election, and involves representatives from every part of the party. Keeping the manifesto which led to Labour’s worst election defeat since 1935 would be absurd, as well as unprecedented(but is seemingly what the Trots want to do).
If I had my way, I'd have MPs choose a new leader (Lisa Nandy), but I suppose it doesn't quite work like that.
There is no vacancy. And besides, I really don’t think Labour needs a change of leader right now, though I agree with the idea of the leadership being predominantly chosen by the PLP, and I also think that Nandy will be a brilliant Labour leader - just not yet. Starmer is doing a fine job, and is well on track.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.