Yug wrote: ↑Tue Aug 08, 2023 9:57 am
Jeremy Corbyn has accused Sir Keir Starmer of "political cowardice" after the party said it would continue to temporarily house asylum seekers on barges if it wins the next election.
The former Labour leader described the use of vessels as "morally indefensible"...
https://news.sky.com/story/amp/politica ... s-12935421
No-one in Labour is disagreeing with the "morally indefensible" statement. But, grown-ups know that there is no such thing as a magic wand which can be waved to make everything tickety-boo. No-one in Labour wants to house people on floating death-traps but that's the way it is right now, and it will take time to provide a better solution.
Mr Perfect doesn't understand this. Mr Perfect doesn't understand the word "temporarily". Mr Perfect is an unintelligent tool.
Here we have perhaps the perfect illustration of why Jeremy Corbyn was serially incapable of leading the Labour Party back to government, and also why Keir Starmer is about to do precisely that.
Pragmatic management of expectations , a rational assessment of the reality that Labour will face on taking office, and will be obliged immediately to manage.
Realpolitik. This versus rash, knee-jerk and undeliverable pledges from an embittered former Labour MP and leader with a 40 year track record of voting against every stripe of his party's leadership, based on holier-than-thou posturing and posing as principled and saintly. Pledges which, were they to emanate from Labour's actual leadership, would in absolute certainty condemn Labour to a
fifth successive election defeat, and the country to another 5 years of Tory corruption, grift. and incompetence.
"Political cowardice" is it? It's pretty clear who the real political coward is here, and it's not the one who had a shave this morning.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.