Given the array of forces against his leadership, I'd count that as a win. And the momentum within the party membership is very new and not organised as yet.Stones of granite wrote:But the inconvenient reality is that Labour have no momentum. In the local authority elections they had zero gain of council control, and lost council seats, while in the Scottish Parliament they were relegated to third behind the Tories.UGagain wrote:Not appeasing Tory economic lunacy is Corbyn's raison d'etre. Playing Milliband's game would see his suport plummet and Labour lose the momentum that his election has created.Sandydragon wrote:
Aye, the Tories could completely implode. Otherwise, there is still a mountain to climb. Labour need to convert Tory supporters, or at least make them think that a labour government wouldn't be that bad. At the moment they aren't. there is a while to go, but that work needs to start form them sooner rather than later, but to listen to Corbyn, he isn't interested in reaching out to those who support other parties. As EW points out, the new boundaries will be making life even harder for labour, without effectively not trying to appeal to large portions of the electorate.
The electorate has a problem with the neoliberals in the Labour right more than it does with the left.
That may not fit with the media narrative but it is the reality.
That is, at the most optimistic, just about holding position.
Quite how they'll get their message out to the electorate I don't know, because the media is part of the establishment who loathe democracy and are happy with the status quo, but the general population is well to the left of the media and political establishment. More so than ever at the moment.
But he has to stop arguing within the neoliberal framework and talk about job creation and wage growth. Not the fucking deficit nonsense. And he'll have to do a deal with the SNP.