Nylock
I hate 'these days'...
Good spot, but in my defence I mangled capitalisation and proper use of ellipsis not the English language in generalthree dots in an ellipsis and the 's' should be small in see
Good spot, but in my defence I mangled capitalisation and proper use of ellipsis not the English language in generalthree dots in an ellipsis and the 's' should be small in see
Which of course begs the question, what is the purpose of winning elections above and beyond the contest itself? A question that inturn asks us to consider what the Labour Party is for (besides electoral competition).
It used to have a rhetorical (and at times practical) commitment to things such as progressive redistribution of wealth, equality of treatement (e.g. medically and before the law) and common ownership.
That Labour Party is dead - wouldn't you agree - so what is the Labour Party for?
Cheers - Louis MacNeice
He then allowed his Chancellor, Gordon Brown, to redistribute income from the rich to the poor...
What does this statement mean? Strikes me there's a lot in there that needs unpacking.ordinary people are aspirational
sometimes one has to compromise for the common good.
There is no point having a commitment to things that have been rejected by the electorate and make the party unelectable.
Only one Labour Party leader has won a General Election for 40 years. That's because under his leadership they sought to engage ordinary people, welcome that ordinary people are aspirational, and listened to ordinary people rather than preaching to them.
As others have said better than me and hence I plagiarise - sometimes one has to compromise for the common good. Tony Blair, who, according to Neil Kinnock, was always impressed by wealth, aided by Peter Mandelson, the man who famously said that he was intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich, ensured that in the right-of-centre conservative United Kingdom, Labour gained power through finding a middle way between two extremes. He then allowed his Chancellor, Gordon Brown, to redistribute income from the rich to the poor, haul 700,000 children out of poverty and provide some of the best public services this country has ever enjoyed. Working conditions for teachers, for instance, were improved immeasurably between 1997 and 2003. Who knows what kind of country we might be living in now if the Iraq war hadn’t got in the way?
Subject: the bleedin’ obvious. It is very difficult for political parties to help the disadvantaged in society if they are not in government.
Hopefully the Labour Party can return to becoming a party that can actually help the disadvantaged, rather than bask in rhetoric..
and I think if they'd come out with something that was coherently and purposefully principled about social justice, equality etc, even if it hadn't won it for them, it might have offered some hope for the party's future in terms of rebuilding a cohesive support base.
The Labour party has'nt kept to that purpose of being a voice to the unions, it distances itself like tories have done with ukip when bascically they are the same party.What do mean by "union apologist"? The Labour Party has no reason to apologise for its founders the Union movement. Its whole purpose was to be the voice of the unions and working class
The Labour party has'nt kept to that purpose of being a voice to the unions, it distances itself like tories have done with ukip when bascically they are the same party.
While I agree with this, I also think it's important not to forget that it's all too easy to shout "We believe in equality" while delegating to markets decisions that will severely impact on that same equality.
You still haven't explained this phrase: "ordinary people are aspirational"There is no point having a commitment to things that have been rejected by the electorate and make the party unelectable.
Only one Labour Party leader has won a General Election for 40 years. That's because under his leadership they sought to engage ordinary people, welcome that ordinary people are aspirational, and listened to ordinary people rather than preaching to them.
As others have said better than me and hence I plagiarise - sometimes one has to compromise for the common good. Tony Blair, who, according to Neil Kinnock, was always impressed by wealth, aided by Peter Mandelson, the man who famously said that he was intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich, ensured that in the right-of-centre conservative United Kingdom, Labour gained power through finding a middle way between two extremes. He then allowed his Chancellor, Gordon Brown, to redistribute income from the rich to the poor, haul 700,000 children out of poverty and provide some of the best public services this country has ever enjoyed. Working conditions for teachers, for instance, were improved immeasurably between 1997 and 2003. Who knows what kind of country we might be living in now if the Iraq war hadn’t got in the way?
Subject: the bleedin’ obvious. It is very difficult for political parties to help the disadvantaged in society if they are not in government.
Hopefully the Labour Party can return to becoming a party that can actually help the disadvantaged, rather than bask in rhetoric..
You still haven't explained this phrase: "ordinary people are aspirational"
labour politicks predicated on a future for capitalismTime for a meander. Society has changed so much since the post war settlement.
In the late 1960s i worked in a hospital as a driver/porter. my best mate there was (believe it or not) an ex professional footballer. He had absorbed progressive political ideas from his home area of Scotland's Clyde Valley, and was an ardent Labour Party supporter - not sure if he was a member, but he always argued that working class people had an immediate duty to join the appropriate trade union, and to then vote Labour at elections, because Labour had a mission to improve conditions for ordinary people by using nationalisation to tame the obsession of the wealthy with private ownership and individual profit. His main supporting evidence for this political stance was that working conditions and wages and long term job security were always better for people who were employed by the state. i more or less accepted this view, not only because a charismatic Scot had made it, but also because there were many other people around at the time whose belief system was quite similar. Labour back then had a clear and intelligible identity based in a long term strategy of 'securing for working people the full fruits of their labour'.
We know the history of Labour subsequent to the 1960s, its attempts to diminish the trade unions through 'in place of strife', it's total capitulation to the free marketism, and its middle class embrace. We also know the damage done to workers' communities by the combination of Tory and Labour politics through the same period.
my mate the footballer became embittered when Thatcher came to office, and used to say that he would not live to see another Labour government. He was right, he died in 1996. But he had seen what was to come, the betrayals of noble and honest social democratic ideas which at least had a human character (if nothing else), and then the final cut, the extravagant dumping of clause four by an incubus cabal who were desperate to save the market system and ingratiate with the decadent.
Today it is hard to even imagine a time when ex pro' footballers could be found doing proper jobs once their sporting careers had ended - so complete is the cult of celebrity, and the never ending elevation of individual 'solutions' to the enormous collective problems wrought by inequality.
Labour has definitely gone as a reforming organisation, and just like my mate Willie, we'll not see the like again. i reckon that starting from scratch is the only viable way forward - sticking to Labour politics guarantees a future for capitalism.
There is no point having a commitment to things that have been rejected by the electorate and make the party unelectable.
Only one Labour Party leader has won a General Election for 40 years. That's because under his leadership they sought to engage ordinary people, welcome that ordinary people are aspirational, and listened to ordinary people rather than preaching to them.
As others have said better than me and hence I plagiarise - sometimes one has to compromise for the common good. Tony Blair, who, according to Neil Kinnock, was always impressed by wealth, aided by Peter Mandelson, the man who famously said that he was intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich, ensured that in the right-of-centre conservative United Kingdom, Labour gained power through finding a middle way between two extremes. He then allowed his Chancellor, Gordon Brown, to redistribute income from the rich to the poor, haul 700,000 children out of poverty and provide some of the best public services this country has ever enjoyed. Working conditions for teachers, for instance, were improved immeasurably between 1997 and 2003. Who knows what kind of country we might be living in now if the Iraq war hadn’t got in the way?
Subject: the bleedin’ obvious. It is very difficult for political parties to help the disadvantaged in society if they are not in government.
Hopefully the Labour Party can return to becoming a party that can actually help the disadvantaged, rather than bask in rhetoric..
And yet clearly can't as evidenced by recent elections.Yes, leave the Labour Party to those that actually want to win elections.
profile says female, so 'she' I'm guessing.And he/she isn't going to.
Yes, while the party concentrated on trying to become "electable" (a weasel word) it managed to lose its support base. It seems to have "triangulated" itself out of existence.And yet clearly can't as evidenced by recent elections.
There is no point having a commitment to things that have been rejected by the electorate and make the party unelectable.
Only one Labour Party leader has won a General Election for 40 years. That's because under his leadership they sought to engage ordinary people, welcome that ordinary people are aspirational, and listened to ordinary people rather than preaching to them.
As others have said better than me and hence I plagiarise - sometimes one has to compromise for the common good. Tony Blair, who, according to Neil Kinnock, was always impressed by wealth, aided by Peter Mandelson, the man who famously said that he was intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich, ensured that in the right-of-centre conservative United Kingdom, Labour gained power through finding a middle way between two extremes. He then allowed his Chancellor, Gordon Brown, to redistribute income from the rich to the poor, haul 700,000 children out of poverty and provide some of the best public services this country has ever enjoyed. Working conditions for teachers, for instance, were improved immeasurably between 1997 and 2003. Who knows what kind of country we might be living in now if the Iraq war hadn’t got in the way?
Subject: the bleedin’ obvious. It is very difficult for political parties to help the disadvantaged in society if they are not in government.
Hopefully the Labour Party can return to becoming a party that can actually help the disadvantaged, rather than bask in rhetoric..
their are socialists within the labour party. It isn't, and never was a socialist party. You'll be old enough to recall something I have only read of in retrospect, the expulsion of the Militant faction, who while trots and with all that entails, were doing just what you suggest. It got murdered and kicked out of the machine. Its a dead vehicle. When they line up with the tories to shrilly demand we stay in the EU they are going to face a similar loss of support as that seen when Slab lined up with the tories over indyreff.The Labour party is not dead, sorely wounded, but not dead.
Labour can stage a comeback, and it can do so by all the people here who are whinging about it, joining it, and effecting change from within.
their are socialists within the labour party. It isn't, and never was a socialist party. You'll be old enough to recall something I have only read of in retrospect, the expulsion of the Militant faction, who while trots and with all that entails, were doing just what you suggest. It got murdered and kicked out of the machine. Its a dead vehicle. When they line up with the tories to shrilly demand we stay in the EU they are going to face a similar loss of support as that seen when Slab lined up with the tories over indyreff.
(I hope anyway)
You still haven't explained this phrase: "ordinary people are aspirational"
The Labour party is not dead, sorely wounded, but not dead.
Labour can stage a comeback, and it can do so by all the people here who are whinging about it, joining it, and effecting change from within.
In the recent General Election, "aspirational" was mostly used by the political class as a shorthand for "wants to get on the property ladder", hence the focus on fantasy house-building by every party.
As far as I'm concerned, ordinary people are aspirational. many of us, however, either self-limit our aspirations to such things as surviving day-to-day, or have our aspirations limited by external factors - most of which are the result of neoliberal economic policies and their poisonous effect on the social.