I get the strategy, and understand it. It is still the case that no-one has won an election without the blessing (some might say anointing) of Mr R Murdoch Esq. and I realise that SKS et al are trying not to rub him, and their other kingmakers, up the wrong way.CEB wrote: ↑Thu Feb 16, 2023 7:41 pmI was being slightly facetious, and I think I’ve tried to convey that I’m not at all excited by Starmer’s Labour at the moment. But yes, absolutely the Tories’ implosion is a big factor, but that hasn’t happened in a vacuum, and Labour as a threat has played a part, too.StillSpike wrote: ↑Thu Feb 16, 2023 7:35 pmIsn't it really just the Tories who've turned the polls on their heads? They must be partially responsible - it's not all the brilliance of Labour.CEB wrote: ↑Thu Feb 16, 2023 7:32 pm Well… since Labour has turned the polls on their head and are on course for government, I’d say it’s fine to start talking about what you want a Starmer government to do, but maybe those of us who were adamant that Corbyn could win should hold off on the advice about strategy for getting into government for a few years yet
To be honest, I suspect that if 2019 hadn’t happpened, Covid may well have been the opportunity for the previous regime to really go for the tories and capture the mood of the nation. But I’m trying to just look at the reality, and for me, all I’m saying is that without a credible road map to power (eg one that deals with the context and electoral system as it is, not as we’d like it to be) then the “bit less sh*t” is better than “same amount of sh*t”, with the added bonus that in power, Labour might actually do more for society’s most vulnerable
The danger - and I think it's quite a big danger - is that if they position themselves too closely to the Tories - and frankly some of their positioning seems to be well to the right of general public sentiment, e.g support for RMT, nurses and other public sector workers - then there's the unwanted side effect of turning more people off the whole politics thing. The right wing absolutely love the sentiment "oh, they're all as bad as each other" - they profit from it - so to make it harder and harder for the public to distinguish your brand from the competition is a risky strategy, in my opinion.
To score an own goal, Labour don't have to persuade "natural" Labour voters, and young potential voters, to actually take the plunge and vote Tory or Lib Dem, they could score just as bad an own goal if they don't enthuse those groups enough to actually get to the polling station. Tories are making it harder and harder to vote, with their voter suppression legislation, anyway - I think the best way to counter that is not to make people see little point in the exercise.