A fun bit of polling from Youtube: what should we do now?
28% think we should abandon Brexit and remain in the EU
19% think we should abandon the deal and just leave the EU with no deal at all
16% think we should accept Theresa May's deal
11% think we should just negotiate a different deal
8% think we should have a referendum on whether to accept the offered deal
2% think we should do 'something else'
16% admit that they aren't sure what we should do.
So: people are very opinionated, but no possible action could have the support of public as a whole.
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In completely unrelated polling news: 40% of people find playing with lego relaxing (22% don't, and 23% pretend they've never played with lego), and 7% believe people have a right to identify as whatever age they wish and to have the government legally recognise that age-identity. (none of the main parties are campaigning on that yet, though)
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dewrad wrote: ↑Sun Nov 18, 2018 5:22 pm
Now, I'm an old-fashioned socialist who likes "Corbynista" policies, but find the man utterly frustrating: today's admission during that Sophy Ridge interview that he doesn't see the point in a second referendum and doesn't know how he would vote even were it to happen just seem utterly tone-deaf to the mood within his party. I'm aware of his reasons, but my god I find it maddening. The Labour party is 3 points ahead in the polls. Given the current omnishambles that is the Tory government, they should be 15+ points ahead, ffs, and I blame Corbyn.
Therefore, my question is: what do you reckon the likelihood of Corbyn being ousted is, and what impact on the entire shitshow would it have?
The big question here is whether the Labour party actually exists or not. Most of the parliamentary party won't support their leader, and the semblance of an opposition he's managed to cobbled together from the far left, the party loyalists, and the willing to do anything for a job, is shambolic. They are astonishing ineffectual, and that might be what's allowed them to survive. I have a suspicion that they're in a sort of schroedinger's collapse: inside the briefcase, they've either they've fallen apart or they've banded together and overcome their crisis, but nobody has any interest in opening that briefcase. Corbyn's electoral strategy seems just to be "you can't see me! you can't see me! you can't tell if I'm a credible leader or not because you can't see me!"
What will happen once, as eventually it must do, the spotlight turns back toward them? I wouldn't rule out immediate collapse. I wouldn't rule out success. But I think the more likely option is that the rebels wait him out, and hope that the party base gradually loses their fondness for him in a haze of disappointment. And he's doing his best to help that, particularly if the Labour base may be shifting more toward Remain.
But of course, if he does go, then Labour are really in trouble, because then they'll have an ideological fight that can't be phrased just in personality differences. In fact, they've got two fights: are they a moderate party that wants to be in power, or are they an extremist party that wants to be a pressure group?; and are they a liberal, internationalist and cosmopolitan party, or are they a party of the working class and economic justice?
It would be nice if they could be both. But strategically, pushing hard on the socialist side of their policies while still competing for power will mean having to appeal to core 'Old Labour' voters, particularly in places like Newcastle. And that means they can't be liberal, internationalist and cosmopolitan, because Old Labour Up North is socially conservative, Leaver, parochial, and bigoted. Whereas aiming for the cosmopolitan Remainer vote will lose them a lot of votes up north, but would open up other opportunities in areas like London and the southeast, where there a scads of moderate Tories alienated by the hard-brexit direction their party's headed.
Given a choice between Labour and Tory, a lot of both types of potential labour voter feel they need to vote Labour. But if and when Labour has an open and public debate about its ideological future, that's going to alienate a lot of people on either one side or the other.
And how will this affect things? In the short term, it won't - the Tories occupy all the public's attention right now. Assuming there's no snap election, May's council elections could be a trigger for action: if Labour make sweeping gains, the media will briefly note it and move back to pressurising Theresa May, but if Labour fail to make ground, particularly if third parties do make ground, Labour rebels will agitate against Corbyn in some way, and that might move attention back to them.
The worst case scenario for Labour might be winning a general election - I don't know what happens then. I don't think Corbyn has anything like the votes within his own party that he'd need to actually push most of his agenda through, particularly if there's (as is likely) a very small majority. We could be looking at a scenario in which the leader of the party with a majority has the solid backing of his grassroots so can't be removed internally, and yet can't actually personally command a majority in Parliament, which would be a constitutional crisis.