I disagree with the basic premise of your argument. You think they should move to where public opinion is. That is popularism, and Britain will never flourish under it, it brought us Brexit, and it is a poisonous and cowardly political strategy. Political leaders should have a vision and convince the electorate that their vision should be the future direction for our country.Digby wrote:If he moves left it needs to be on some specific policy areas that still have broad popular support among the electorate, and aren't merely popular talking points on the left of the official opposition. Moving left in general seems like a non starter with the electorate.Zhivago wrote:I think it's quite likely that he'll face a leadership challenge. If he wants to survive said challenge he needs to move more to the left, and that move will need to be sincere (or at least be perceived as such).Digby wrote:This sort of nonsense is part of the reason I wondered about Starmer wanting the leadership now, it would in many ways be easier to be the next cab off the rank in my estimation. And the action over Corbyn will cost Starmer, it might even cost him his role as leader, we'll have to see what happens in upcoming NEC elections and the like. But if Starmer can survive and build on this moment it's a positive because he was willing to do the right thing even if it costs him, and voters like that sort of example
I'm all set to vote Labour for the first time ever, but if you ditch Keir and go back to someone like RLB I'll stick with voting Lib Dem. I'd even at this point join the Labour Party but the parties are getting better at checking if you appear on the membership list of another party, and oddly they seem to think it's a bad thing to live in a plural society (even weirder it's not just the Tories and Labour against pluralism, the Lib Dems are in on it too)
I want an optimistic vision of the future, where we are much better in 10 years time than we are now, not just treading water from centre left to centre right. Man landed on the moon 50 years ago, enabling us to believe in a high tech future that was transformative. Instead, that high-tech future consists mostly of the ability to insult each other in 140 words or less, inflating our ego on social media platforms, or numbing ourselves by our media opiate of choice such as Netflix. This is not the future that we deserve, and it is a profound waste of the potential of our species.