Showing posts with label Party of London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Party of London. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 May 2020

LABOUR STAFFER'S SWIPE AT THE NORTH


We are all acutely aware of how Labour has in recent years become the party of the metropolitan elite, primarily wealthy Londoners and the middle-classes.  The sneering attitude towards the rest of the country, Leave voters and the working class has become second nature to the London-based elite of the Labour front benches.  Corbyn, Abbott, Starmer, Thornberry, McDonnell, Butler, Osamor, Lammy, Gardiner - the list of London Labour frontbenchers in recent years is phenomenal.  London is now the Labour heartland, scene of the only seat it gained on December the 12th and now under the leadership of a second consecutive London MP.

One of those co-ordinating the campaign for Keir Starmer's election was senior Labour Parliamentary staffer Tara Jane O'Reilly (pictured above with Starmer).  She has previously worked for Sadiq Khan and also Owen Smith's failed leadership campaign of 2016.  Last night she tweeted the following take on the Dominic Cumming's affair...


At the time of writing the tweet is still there for the world to see - and yes London Labour, that does include the north, that huge electoral expanse that you despise, but cannot ever win power without.

Monday, 9 March 2020

CAN'T LISTEN, WON'T LISTEN


The Labour party has been accused of a distinct lack of self awareness since their election defeat.  All the mistakes that led to December the 12th's humiliation appear destined to be repeated.  Their policies were 'popular' we keep hearing from the hard left, while the remoaners still can't get past Brexit and continue to ridicule Leave voters.  Rebecca Long-Bailey recently told Andrew Neil that Labour "spoke in quite intellectual terms that were quite alien to our communities".  In other words, the voters were too thick to comprehend the beauty of our wondrous policies.

This kind of sneering attitude towards the electorate is one of the key factors that brought Labour to its disastrous defeat in the first place.  Yet they are too arrogant and cocooned in their ivory tower bubbles to see it.  "I do not sneer" Emily Thornberry repeated over and over again in an interview earlier this year.  If there's one thing people detest more than a condescending politician, it's a politician who cannot comprehend their own arrogance.

This isn't a trait that's unique to the hard left, it's endemic across the party.  Take centrist Keir Starmer, who many in the party blame for the election defeat.  He is widely perceived as the main driving force behind Labour's lurch towards Remain.  The 2017 general election, which many Corbynistas are still convinced they won, was fought on a platform of 'accepting the referendum result'.  Since then the party has flip-flopped so frequently that the public had no idea from one week to the next what Labour's Brexit policy actually was.  For the entirety of 2019 the PLP fought tooth and nail to stop Brexit from happening altogether, while the official party policy was still unclear.  After finally settling on a second referendum where 'Leave' was not an option, the stage was set and the electorate responded.

There is no doubt that Labour's referendum con was a significant factor in their losses across the Brexit heartlands, areas that corresponded neatly with the so-called 'red wall'.  If Labour are ever to regain power they will need to regain the red wall and they won't do that by continuing to treat northern voters like thickos.  Step forward Sir Keir Starmer at Labour's leadership hustings in Dudley yesterday, coincidentally a town that overwhelmingly voted Leave and that kicked Labour into the dust on election day.  When asked whether they would commit to a 'rejoin' policy all but one of the candidates rejected such a policy, all but the London-based architect of the second referendum con.

Starmer appears incapable of listening to the electorate outside his London bubble.  The British people voted Leave in 2016, they voted for Leave-backing parties in 2017, they voted Brexit Party in the European elections and they voted to 'Get Brexit Done' on December the 12th.  And yet Sir Keir is now suggesting he could well enter the next general election by ignoring three and a half years of Leave votes by pursuing a rejoin policy!

Do it Keir.  You'll consign Labour to the scrap heap for good.

Tuesday, 24 December 2019

NANDY VISITS ASHFIELD

Lisa Nandy spent Monday visiting former Labour voters in the Nottinghamshire constituency of Ashfield.  There's little doubt that she's gearing up for a leadership campaign with this latest stunt.  Accompanied by the former Labour MP for Ashfield, Nandy was told by one former Labour voter that people didn't want to return to the chaotic 1970s with Corbyn's policies.  Another told her that Labour no longer cared for the north and was now the party of students and inner London.  Watch below.


Gloria De Piero was Ashfield's incumbent going into this election and had a wafer thin majority.  She stood down rather than contest the seat and it turned out to be a wise move.  The Labour vote plummeted and the Tories ended up taking the seat despite haemorrhaging 1,600 votes themselves.  It was a strange place to come to be asking voters why they switched to the Conservatives because in this case most Labour votes were lost to the Ashfield Independents who finished second.

Ashfield general election 2019

Lee Anderson (Con) 19,231 (39.3%) -2.4%
Jason Zadrozny (Ind) 13,498 (27.6%) +18.4%
Natalie Fleet (Lab) 11,971 (24.4%) -18.1%
Martin Daubney (Brexit) 2,501 (5.1%) New
Rebecca Wain (Lib Dem) 1,105 (2.3%) +0.3%
Rose Woods (Green) 674 (1.4%) +0.6%

Sunday, 15 December 2019

PARTY OF LONDON

by Richey Edwards

Following their election defeat many Labour supporters immediately began repeating exactly the same mistakes that led them to such a heavy defeat.  It was the same response that followed the EU referendum and fed growing resentment over the following three and a half years.  If Labour thought they could get away with talking down to the people in their heartlands, those who elected them without fail for a century, taking them for granted and trying to reverse their 2016 decision - they were sorely mistaken.  Yes, the election humiliation was about more than just Brexit, they lost seats across the south of England too, including even in their new heartland of London.  But primarily, above all else they were hammered by working class voters in the north of England.

BTLP's #PartyOfLondon hashtag was not understood by everyone.  That didn't matter, it wasn't for everyone.  Its target was the Labour heartlands - the old heartlands of the north of England and south Wales, places that were also the Brexit heartlands.  We tapped into the perception that Labour had abandoned its working class northern roots in favour of a metropolitan London elite.  Its activist base was increasingly being drawn from the middle classes and pro-Brexit voices were slowly being stamped out and excommunicated.  All of the top people on Labour's front bench represented London seats, including all four of those who would occupy the Great Offices of State - Corbyn, McDonnell, Abbott and Thornberry.  With the exception of Corbyn, they all indicated they would back 'Remain' in Labour's People's Vote con, in itself an infuriating insult to those who had voted Leave.  Just behind those four was a London barrister and anointed knight Sir Keir Starmer.  His whiny voice was anathema to those northern Leave voters and the fact he'd been appointed Shadow Brexit Secretary whilst consistently opposed to Brexit just made it all the more nauseating.  That he is one of the favourites to succeed Corbyn goes to show that Labour still doesn't get it, even now.

Imagine how the election of Starmer would go down with those northern working class voters who have just ditched Labour and astonishingly crossed straight over to the Tories because of decades of being taken for granted by London elites?  It would only reinforce that 'Party of London' perception.

It also didn't go unnoticed that after the election was called the London-based leadership did everything it could to parachute London candidates into northern seats vacated by those that had been driven out or retired.  Islington councillors popped up in places like Liverpool, Leicester and Coventry as potential Westminster candidates.  In West Bromwich Tom Watson's replacement was a Lambeth councillor who prints anti-Brexit messages on the receipts at his London kebab shops.  West Bromwich voted overwhelmingly to Leave.  The imposition of such candidates sparked huge resentment in local constituency parties that was reported in various local news media outlets.  Again, the perception that Labour had abandoned the Midlands and the north was strengthened.

One of the only decent remaining Labour MPs to make it to this election was Caroline Flint.  A Londoner herself, she represented a Yorkshire seat and had backed Remain in 2016.  However, rather than lie through gritted teeth like many of her colleagues did following the result, she fought to get Brexit done.  Cynics might suggest that she did so to placate her Leave-voting constituents and therefore survive the onslaught that was to come.  The fact she saw it coming actually put her head and shoulders above her Yorkshire colleagues in Westminster.  The likes of Yvette Cooper, Ed Miliband and the hideous Mary Creagh thought they could continue to bash Brexit and their dopey constituents would continue to slavishly cross their boxes on the ballot paper.  Flint knew there would be consequences and she knew the reasons why.

On election night it was tragically Flint herself that paid the price for the actions of others.  Miliband and Cooper survived, but only just, and saw their majorities slashed so fine that their once safe Labour seats are now marginals.  Creagh departed Westminster, but at her election count used her speech to attack Brexit one last time and in doing so further alienate her former Wakefield constituents.  She was still in denial, something Flint had never been.  She explained to Sophy Ridge on Sky this morning what led to so many seat losses in the north, including her own. Flint namedropped Keir Starmer and Emily Thornberry as prime examples of the London elitist snobbery that had taken the north for granted.



Labour is now in serious trouble going forward from this election defeat.  The perception that it is a party of London is no longer a theory, it is fact.  Labour gained one seat at this election - one.  An astonishing fact in itself, but if you were told this at any point in Labour's history your mind would immediately have drifted to the north, Midlands, Wales or Scotland as to where that seat was won.  It was actually won in Putney, a leafy well-to-do heavily Remain voting seat in south-west London.

Labour is far from its roots and is in a state of denial.  Elect Keir Starmer or Lady Nugee as leader by all means.  Then watch what remains of your so-called 'red wall' in the north crumble into dust at the next election.  That's why I'm backing either of those for the leadership.