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The General Election - June 8th 2017

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Comments

  • You've moved from being ironic to being nieve.

    I will admit to one element of naivety - I have always seen Corbyn as a principled politician and expected him to remain so since he became leader.

    I am aware that leaders have to change and adjust, that is what leaders have to do, fair enough.

    But he cannot be described as a man of principle if he does not carry principles through. And just to clarify, I am only talking about EU/Brexit issues here.

    Anyway, I can't add any more so will leave it there.
  • I think that's entirely reasonable but as @seriously_red has posted the major concern for Corbyn is to see Labour win the next general election. At present that aim is best served by watching and waiting. The outcome of Brexit will be just as divisive as Brexit itself. 50% of the country at least will be disapointed. They will look for someone to blame. In the box seat for that blame are the Conservative party. It's a mess entirely of their own making and the only way I see them mitigating any of the mess they've made is to let May trundle on and replace her just before negotiations conclude. She takes the major flak and the Tories hope whoever replaces her can get a clean slate. That imho is their only plan. I also believe it's not going to work.

    The conservatives actually could have a small chink of light should they have the foresight to use it but they won't because like all governments they are drunk on power and ego. They could invite Corbyn into the negotiations and let him take some of the flak when it enevitably all goes wrong. Corbyn could hardly be seen to refuse the offer.



    I've said all along this should be cross-party and cannot believe that it is not so.
  • Cross party?
    I can see why people want this, especially the Tories, but it smacks me as a cry for help.
    It is entirely the fault of the Tory party that we had the referendum. It may even be that the influence of only a couple of dozen Tory politicians brought this whole mess about.
    The election was fought by the Tories on the Brexit issue, they are the ones holding the baby, but now they want some others to change the nappies.
    It is for the nutters in the DUP to be cross party with the Tories, not for Labour or anybody else. It isn't even about putting the country above politics because despite the referendum the intention of the country is a mystery. Didn't Hammond say recently that the country didn't vote to be poorer? Yet another politician putting his own interpretation on things.
    As a man of principle I expect Corbyn to stay clear of this Tory Brexit, the best the Tories can hope for is to believe that in this cliffhanger something might turn up and with one leap they will be free.
  • Sometimes things have to be done cross-party for the national interest, where an issue transcends party politics. The national government during World War 2 is an example of that.

    Brexit, however, is nakedly political and as such the Tories ought to face frustration as every turn from all quarters for their distrastrous handling of it. If they cannot handle it, and they can't, then it ought to be halted and they should step aside and allow another party to take control, even if that means that party decides to not enact what a third of the electorate voted for.
  • Like it or not, Brexit is happening, therefore it should be cross-party so that no one is left out and everyone is represented.

    I thought you all supported everyone in society having a voice?

    Anyway, we should stop here because we have a separate Brexit thread and we should not hijack this one as well.
  • stonemuse said:
    Corbyn discussed this on the Marr show.
    There is no UTurn and nothing to apologise for.
  • seth plum said:

    Corbyn discussed this on the Marr show.
    There is no UTurn and nothing to apologise for.
    Communists and socialists like rewriting history.

    So what did he allegedly say then?
  • Below is *exactly* what he said. Framing it as a u-turn is disgraceful.

  • Labour's promise: scrap tuition fees for future students.

    Labour also said they would ideally like to look at ways of reducing the debt burden on those who had already paid fees but did not make any promises on that.
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  • He said that there was a manifesto commitment to abolish tuition fees going forward, and there would be an effort made to see if anything can be done in the future about the mountain of graduate debt. There was never any promise or assurance and nothing to U-turn from or to apologise for.
    No re=writing of history going on.
  • edited July 2017
    It's all very cynical by the Tories...

    The last thing they want is for young people to be voting so let's try to frame it as Labour ditching their promises to students and oh look they're all the same again and there's no reason to bother voting next time.

    Meanwhile the Tories continue to pander to their core demographic and get away with ignoring us.

    ...and breathe.
  • Fiiish said:

    Don't order tea in coffee shops because they don't boil the water, they use the heated water from the coffee machine which is lower than boiling point, which fails to activate the tea properly.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DWFWyz9f2w
  • The Tories have no policies that people want. Their recent manifesto proved that. The Brexit negotiations have so far been exactly what critics of Brexit said it would be. A British government with no idea what Brexit actually looks like. They have a lame duck leader and from a position of being significantly ahead in the polls just weeks ago they now find themselves behind. All they have at the moment is to attack Labour and Corbyn. I fully expect this to be ramped up over the coming months both by Conservative party HQ and the Tory press.
  • edited July 2017
    Believe me, at the next election, Labour will have some sort of offer for ex students with debts.
  • Believe me,

    Glad that's sorted :wink:
  • edited July 2017
    Labour/Corbyn never committed to wiping the debt completely, however Corbyn in particular gave indications that he would do 'something about it'.

    “Yes, there is a block of those that currently have a massive debt, and I’m looking at ways that we could reduce that, ameliorate that, lengthen the period of paying it off, or some other means of reducing that debt burden.”

    “And I don’t see why those that had the historical misfortune to be at university during the £9,000 period should be burdened excessively compared to those that went before or those that come after. I will deal with it.”

    So it was quite clear he was making noises that he would do something about it or more specifically he would 'deal with it' if not be exact as to what that meant,

    So don't see it as a u turn,
  • The Tories have no policies that people want. Their recent manifesto proved that.

    Did their increase in votes not show that maybe they do have, at least some, policies people want?

  • Did their increase in votes not show that maybe they do have, at least some, policies people want?

    I can't remember them offering up many policies to be honest.

    I think their vote share was more people voting against Corbyn rather than for the Conservatives.

    Might be wrong though.
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  • I can't remember them offering up many policies to be honest.

    I think their vote share was more people voting against Corbyn rather than for the Conservatives.

    Might be wrong though.
    I still believe there's a large proportion of the country (I don't have numbers but just a gut feel) who will vote for the same party almost regardless and all through their lives.

    It's the floating majority who sway the result to red or blue winners.

    No doubt people voted conservative so as to not to vote for Corbyn and vice versa with May.

    On fees and wiping debt although Corbyn didn't state this and therefore the conservatives were wrong he strongly indicated he would do something about it and cleverly let the voters make up their own minds as to what that may mean.
  • Corbyn has been given an enormous leg up by the Tories this year.
    Hardly his fault.
This discussion has been closed.

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