Gilzeantoscore
Justin Edinburgh
No, but being Corbyn or McDonnell does.
If you're remotely attracted to the snake oil that is neo liberalism, go the whole hog and vote for your local Tory candidate.
No, but being Corbyn or McDonnell does.
According to your data if Italy had a referendum on the EU, they would remain in the EU (what is that website!?). Yes you've really swayed me, the EU is about to crumble.
If you're remotely attracted to the snake oil that is neo liberalism, go the whole hog and vote for your local Tory candidate.
The 1997-2010 Labour administration brought in Sure Start and the minimum wage, targeted redistributive benefits and tax credits, expanded access to universities, slashed NHS waiting lists and did a whole host of other good things. Can you really look at that record, sneer at the people who achieved it for being "neo-liberal", and claim that there is no difference between them and the Tories?
My local Tory candidate is Theresa Villiers, who is the hardest of Brexiteers despite having been Northern Ireland secretary and knowing exactly what a physical border would do to the peace process, so the suggestion you make is particularly horrific.
Blair's Labour did a lot of good for the country (although the expense and subsequent financial issues don't nearly show his time in such a good light). The expanded access to universities was not one of them though. Degrees are now virtually worthless in the workplace as they no longer separate the intellectual elite from the rest.The 1997-2010 Labour administration brought in Sure Start and the minimum wage, targeted redistributive benefits and tax credits, expanded access to universities, slashed NHS waiting lists and did a whole host of other good things. Can you really look at that record, sneer at the people who achieved it for being "neo-liberal", and claim that there is no difference between them and the Tories?
My local Tory candidate is Theresa Villiers, who is the hardest of Brexiteers despite having been Northern Ireland secretary and knowing exactly what a physical border would do to the peace process, so the suggestion you make is particularly horrific.
Slashed NHS waiting lists... bravo who would expect a Labour administration to do that? They were neo liberal, they were free marketeers, just check Blair's public comments.
Blair's Labour did a lot of good for the country (although the expense and subsequent financial issues don't nearly show his time in such a good light). The expanded access to universities was not one of them though. Degrees are now virtually worthless in the workplace as they no longer separate the intellectual elite from the rest.
I don't think we're ever going to come to an agreement on definitions. Or anything else.
And yet we would both, presumably, vote for a Labour party led by - say - Emily Thornberry. Perhaps you'd even go as far as Stella Creasy. Funny things, big tents.
I don't think we're ever going to come to an agreement on definitions. Or anything else.
And yet we would both, presumably, vote for a Labour party led by - say - Emily Thornberry. Perhaps you'd even go as far as Stella Creasy. Funny things, big tents.
I quite like Barry Gardiner, I'd choose him over either of those, though I expect the party will try to put forward women candidates to get the first female Labour leader. Not a fan of Creasy, she seems a bit false to me, though I'd vote for her over any Tory, assuming I agreed with the policies put forward.
The 1997-2010 Labour administration brought in Sure Start and the minimum wage, targeted redistributive benefits and tax credits, expanded access to universities, slashed NHS waiting lists and did a whole host of other good things. Can you really look at that record, sneer at the people who achieved it for being "neo-liberal", and claim that there is no difference between them and the Tories?
My local Tory candidate is Theresa Villiers, who is the hardest of Brexiteers despite having been Northern Ireland secretary and knowing exactly what a physical border would do to the peace process, so the suggestion you make is particularly horrific.
Working tax credits are a dumb idea. It supports big corporations in paying insufficient wages. I'm all for universal basic income. But working tax credits was just a specifically cynical attempt by Brown to tie people in precarious positions into dependency on a future Labour government. It was an pact with the evil corporations to try and cling onto power.
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Yeah, a woman is nailed on I think.
Bit harsh, given that it went hand-in-hand with the minimum wage.
You don't realise the misogyny that exists in the Labour party and Momentum if you think that's remotely possible.
You mention Stella Creasy, look at the kind of crap she has to deal with: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/squawkbox-stella-creasy_uk_5a44a3f5e4b025f99e19a10e and http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/skylar-bakerjordan/why-jared-omaras-misogyny_b_18371578.html
Misogyny and anti-Semitism are the two big internal blights of the left in this country
Minimum wage is actually a pretty dumb idea too. All it does is cause wage and price inflation (plus discrimination against young people). Pay ratios are a much smarter idea - 15:1 between the CEO and the cleaners.
I agree that elements of the hard-left are spectacularly obnoxious on Twitter, and that women who attract Momentum's opprobrium get a harder time of it than men.
Not sure that stops the PLP, collectively, from preferring female representatives of the various factions and putting them to the membership.
Those ratios would be unenforceable for multinationals, and create even more incentives for tax avoidance.
What's wrong with wage inflation at the bottom end of the payscale? Isn't that the objective?
Look at the internal assignation of Angela Eagle when she stood as leadership candidate - they had to quickly slot in Owen Smith because it was getting so embarrassing for the party. Harriet Harman and Yvette Cooper should have been far more prominent in a meritocratic party. It's a big cultural problem. It's the old tension between the majority old white working classes and minority metropolitan Guardian readers. In contrast, look at how the Lib Dems are grooming Jo Swinson
It doesn't happen at the bottom end though. People higher are the foodchain are much more adept and getting theirs increased to maintain the gap, so all wages increase, the price of all goods increase and exports drop. Wages are always relative, not absolute. So the trick is to manage the relativity.