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Eugene

(61,822 posts)
Sat Feb 23, 2019, 09:02 PM Feb 2019

Corbyn told: change course before it's too late for Labour

Source: The Observer

Corbyn told: change course before it’s too late for Labour

Senior party figures warn leader over approach to antisemitism and new Brexit vote

Michael Savage
Sat 23 Feb 2019 21.00 GMT Last modified on Sun 24 Feb 2019 00.00 GMT

Some of Labour’s most influential figures are urgently warning Jeremy Corbyn to change his approach to antisemitism, Brexit and factional infighting, as more senior politicians reveal they have already decided to quit the party.

Figures across the party say that a major exodus of MPs, peers and councillors will be triggered over the next few weeks unless the demands for change are met, with some already poised to go.

One senior parliamentarian told the Observer: “I have decided that I am going to have to leave. For me, it’s just a question of when.”

With the Labour leadership battling to contain a wider split after the resignation of nine MPs last week:

• London mayor Sadiq Khan is warning that the party’s response to antisemitism has precipitated a “collapse in trust” between Labour and the Jewish community;

-snip-


Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/feb/23/corbyn-told-change-course-before-its-too-late-for-labour-michael-savage
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Corbyn told: change course before it's too late for Labour (Original Post) Eugene Feb 2019 OP
Wouldn't It Be Simpler for Corbyn to Go? Indykatie Feb 2019 #1
They tried to ditch him in 2016 T_i_B Feb 2019 #2
It would seem simple. Denzil_DC Feb 2019 #3

Indykatie

(3,695 posts)
1. Wouldn't It Be Simpler for Corbyn to Go?
Sun Feb 24, 2019, 12:06 AM
Feb 2019

Labour should be kicking Tory butt and no doubt would be without Corbyn as leader of the party. It appears he also has a Russia problem. There seems to be a lot of that going around these days.

T_i_B

(14,736 posts)
2. They tried to ditch him in 2016
Sun Feb 24, 2019, 04:19 AM
Feb 2019

Last edited Sun Feb 24, 2019, 11:45 AM - Edit history (1)

Corbyn won that leadership contest handily due to strong grassroots support from people joining Labour after he was first elected leader.

I don't wish to recycle the same arguments about him not being a very good leader of the opposition. I will say this though. The constituency I live in was narrowly retained by Labour at the 2017 election. However the local MP has defected to TIG and unless Labour dumps Corbyn they are set to lose the seat to the Tories at the next general election. Angela Smith's statement resigning from Labour is all that any party standing against Labour will need as ammunition.

The reaction of Corbyn fanboys to the split has been pretty dreadful to be honest. It's clear that their intentions are to drive those from other factions out of the Labour party. And that will make it impossible for Labour to build a broad base of support and work with others to get things done.

Denzil_DC

(7,222 posts)
3. It would seem simple.
Sun Feb 24, 2019, 09:30 AM
Feb 2019

What polling there's been claims that without Corbyn at the helm, Labour would be polling better than the Tories. Whether it might be enough to give it a majority isn't clear.

The problem is that a leadership contest, especially at this stage, would widen the splits in Labour, likely be very ugly indeed, possibly even leading to mass defections, and whoever ended up as party leader would be highly unlikely to be universally attractive. So that "ideal-world" polling with a placeholder as leader probably doesn't indicate much.

I don't have much time at all for Corbyn for a number of reasons, but they have little to do with the allegations of "a Russia problem" etc. that the media, and even some on this forum, have focused on.

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