- Sun Oct 29, 2023 6:57 pm
#56405
That's what the marches are about. But if you mean the media focus hasn't been on Sunak, I agree.
ceasefire (whatever that is)
Youngian wrote: ↑Mon Oct 30, 2023 11:59 amOr, indeed, similarly expecting Hamas not to use the "ceasefire" period to re-build and renew their resources with the next terrorist assault on Israelis in mind.ceasefire (whatever that is)
A fairly meaningless holding position that’s doing a lot of work. A cessation of war is a good thing but expecting Israel not to spend the time thinking up fresh plans to wipe out Hamas’s military capabilities is for the birds.
davidjay wrote: ↑Sun Oct 29, 2023 7:00 pmJohnson? Dorries? But you're right, it's probably not on the same scale.Oboogie wrote: ↑Sun Oct 29, 2023 6:30 pm But that's just it, I don't think I've seen anybody demanding that Sunak calls for ceasefire.Sunak doesn't have Tories whose every waking moment is devoted to hoping he loses the election.
Andy McDandy wrote: ↑Mon Oct 30, 2023 4:42 pm Johnson etc want Sunak out before the election so they can retake control and turn the Tories fortunes around.I think it's still about Corbyn. Starmer winning when Corbyn failed (twice) is rubbing salt in their wound, if Starmer fails they can have another five years of saying Corbyn would have won a landslide.
Momentum etc want Starmer to lose the election so they can play at being martyrs for another 5 years.
Andy McDandy wrote: ↑Mon Oct 30, 2023 4:42 pm Johnson etc want Sunak out before the election so they can retake control and turn the Tories fortunes around.I've said it before and I'll say it again. Starmer & his shadow cabinet, for their strengths & faults that they have, are presenting the Labour party right now as a potential party of government and clearly aspire to be one.
Momentum etc want Starmer to lose the election so they can play at being martyrs for another 5 years.
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Tue Oct 31, 2023 4:58 pm Judging by that angry mob outside I'd say not.I suspect they would have been there, and been angry, regardless of what he said or did.
Anyway, Starmer's statement today (and it's all there on video, we know what he said no matter how much his supporters try to fudge it like with the water and electricity statement) makes him a hostage to the forthcoming Israeli atrocity. When we see the next images of screaming Palestinian children with limbs blown off, he's acquiesced to that outcome when he had the choice to explicitly call for something else. On his own head be it.
Good morning. Yesterday, Keir Starmer used a speech to set out his stance on the Israel-Hamas conflict – you can read the full text here. Starmer doubled down on resisting calls for a ceasefire, warning it could “embolden” Hamas, and the leader said politicians making snap judgments on international law was “unwise”. But he also warned Israel it didn’t have a “blank cheque” and should stop settlements, and stressed Labour’s commitment to a two-state solution. And his ceasefire stance even left open the door to a change in stance – saying only it was not correct “at this stage”.
The speech was praised by many in the party, including veteran MP Margaret Hodge (who argued that while "calling for [a ceasefire] may make us feel better, but it will not help those on the ground right now") and the Jewish Labour Movement (JLM), which praised Starmer's "clear leadership". The Guardian was more ambivalent, praising some elements of the speech but describing his intervention as "far from convincing" in an editorial. One figure on the left of the party called it a “green light” for continued Israeli bombardment, and this morning more than 330 councillors have written to the party asking for a ceasefire. We have the story here.
Overnight in Gaza the damage to a refugee camp following an Israeli airstrike is still being assessed, with reports of dozens of casualties. The Israeli military said the strike had targeted a key Hamas commander. Rosena Allin-Khan, until recently a shadow cabinet minister, posted an image of the destroyed camp to X yesterday evening and appeared to send a warning to the leadership: "I respect some believe a ceasefire is not plausible, but they should stand up and explain what they'll do to avoid more devastating bloodshed like this."
Starmer also stressed the importance of “collective responsibility” yesterday, though it will raise eyebrows given levels of dissent recently. The key question now is whether his new position and implicit warning to frontbenchers will be enough to stop further voices speaking out or even quitting their posts. Meanwhile Labour has this morning called for a coordinated disasters emergency committee (DEC) fund appeal, to be matched with government funding, to provide essential humanitarian aid in Gaza.
Labour poster MP Shabana Mahmood has emerged as the unofficial leader of the party’s 14 Muslim MPs who are critical of Keir Starmer’s response to the Israel-Hamas war. One of the group whispered that if the shadow justice secretary – who, after telling the leader he’d caused offence to the Muslim community, wrote to her constituents suggesting Israel may be guilty of “collective punishment” – resigns, the six others in the group with front-bench posts would quit in solidarity. The 13 members of Starmer’s team who have broken the party line by calling for a ceasefire include Imran Hussain. The shadow minister added his name to a motion (95 signatures last time I looked) tabled by Corbynista Richard Burgon. Starmer’s leadership is being tested.
Party number crunchers calculate as many as 20 seats could be jeopardised in the backlash over Starmer’s pro-Israel position, screamed a snout. That could wipe out all anticipated Scottish gains. Every crisis is an opportunity – this one for Rishi Sunak. Some in Labour mutter a May election might be back on the cards.
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Fri Nov 03, 2023 12:51 am The shadow minister added his name to a motion (95 signatures last time I looked) tabled by Corbynista Richard Burgon.Man's a cunt.
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