If Labour is to survive in any form it needs a new leader NOW. Nobody in the current cabinet, or any Zionist funded MP should apply for the job.
I, too, remember the euphoria of 2017. I was a labour party member most of my adult life but not now. I left the party under Blair and rejoined under Corbyn. Had the wicked factionism, as detailed in the Forde report, not occurred Corbyn would have won that election. The country was ready for socialism, except the media of course.
what do you think of the relatively more anti-market policies of the starmer government, like higher minimum wages, rent tribunals, cancelling welfare reform on behest of the party’s soft left, etc? I don’t see much commentary about these from the left but they definitely annoy the more centrist/right voters
To some extent, I think a few of these represent the partial representation of the soft left within the Starmer project and/or efforts to give Labour’s more centre left constituency something. In the case of the two child benefit cap it really did have to be pried from their cold dead fingers. The thing is, the British state has been so hollowed out and the government has so intensified the power of market actors in other areas that even the best of these things don’t register for many people (e.g. the minimum wage increases are good, but there’s been so much inflation that their value in real terms is less than it appears).
If Labour is to survive in any form it needs a new leader NOW. Nobody in the current cabinet, or any Zionist funded MP should apply for the job.
I, too, remember the euphoria of 2017. I was a labour party member most of my adult life but not now. I left the party under Blair and rejoined under Corbyn. Had the wicked factionism, as detailed in the Forde report, not occurred Corbyn would have won that election. The country was ready for socialism, except the media of course.
Now the Green Party is our only hope.
what do you think of the relatively more anti-market policies of the starmer government, like higher minimum wages, rent tribunals, cancelling welfare reform on behest of the party’s soft left, etc? I don’t see much commentary about these from the left but they definitely annoy the more centrist/right voters
To some extent, I think a few of these represent the partial representation of the soft left within the Starmer project and/or efforts to give Labour’s more centre left constituency something. In the case of the two child benefit cap it really did have to be pried from their cold dead fingers. The thing is, the British state has been so hollowed out and the government has so intensified the power of market actors in other areas that even the best of these things don’t register for many people (e.g. the minimum wage increases are good, but there’s been so much inflation that their value in real terms is less than it appears).