Crabcakes wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 4:59 pm
I think the issue has always been one of competence, quality and, in relation to that, arrogance and pettiness. For example if John McDonnell had been persuaded to stand instead of Corbyn we'd be having a different conversation right now. Not all rainbows I'm certain, but I suspect there would have been considerably fewer instances of complete indifference from the party leader on major topics because it isn't something he happens to be interested in.
Yes, I definitely agree with that. Embittered Trots are fond of citing a key part of their mythology that holds that there was concerted, widespread, and virulent opposition to Corbyn’s leadership from the very instant the leadership election result was declared. That isn’t true - or at any rate it may have been true of say, Peter Mandelson, but not me - or many other party members. I actually wanted Corbyn to succeed. Of course I did - I desperately wanted a Labour government, like every other Labour member or supporter. I took the view that although I certainly hadn’t voted for Corbyn as leader (I voted for Yvette Cooper), Corbyn had been legitimately elected with a very substantial majority of the party membership, and it was entirely reasonable to afford him the opportunity to prove that he could deliver what he promised.
Of course it didn’t take long for it to become apparent that he could not. I’d have been genuinely pleased if Corbyn had succeeded, but it was soon clear that he was just about the least suitable person imaginable to be Labour’s leader at that time - at any time, in fact. On grounds of competency, temperament, ability, and most definitely a long train of political baggage in the nature of dodgy associations with pseudo-terrorist organisations that must have had political hacks in the hostile right-wing news media rubbing their hands with glee at this manna from heaven, he really was the very last person Labour needed. This all crystallised, for me, around the catastrophic EU referendum result of 2016, and Corbyn’s highly significant portion of responsibility for that result.
So yes, McDonnell has demonstrated multiple times that he is more savvy, more media-friendly, more competent, more intelligent, more of a strategic thinker, and more pragmatic than Corbyn. A McDonnell leadership might well have succeeded where Corbyn’s was, in hindsight, doomed always to fail.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.