- Thu Jul 28, 2022 3:55 pm
#30273
For a time, I put it down to sheer ignorance of any kind of political strategy or tactics, rather than just malevolence. Now, I'm not so sure.It could be a combination of the two .Certainly in Tarry's case, it is entirely down to malevolence, or a shameless attempt to raise his profile with the Trots in his own CLP, where all ten branches have voted to trigger a full selection contest, and where in any case he was parachuted in by Corbyn ahead of a well-thought-of local candidate, to the chagrin of members. Starmer was absolutely correct to sack Tarry from the front bench. In fact he had no alternative.
James O' Brien, as ever, put his finger on it this morning when he pointed out that Keir Starmer is trying to get his party elected to government in a country in which a substantial part of the electorate has been conditioned and gaslit over decades to believe that that trades unions are inherently A Bad Thing, endlessly inflicting strikes and hardship on good honest hardworking folk. But Labour needs the votes of those electors to get back to government.
As ever, what the Trots etc. fail to understand is that unless Labour gets back to government, all the principles in the world are basically absolutely pointless.
Imagine if the entire Shadow Cabinet were out on the picket line at Euston station. Corbyn and his Trots would be delighted, but Labour's chances of returning to government would be completely fucked.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.