LOL. The lefties seem to think he's the other JC reincarnate (no, not Jezzer Clarkson, the dude in the New Testament) so who knows, maybe he is.Someone should tell Corbyn he can't win the 2010 electionUnless he's a Time Lord.
Typo edited.

LOL. The lefties seem to think he's the other JC reincarnate (no, not Jezzer Clarkson, the dude in the New Testament) so who knows, maybe he is.Someone should tell Corbyn he can't win the 2010 electionUnless he's a Time Lord.
Tories are scared of Corbyn, our next prime minister.
Someone should tell Corbyn he can't win the 2010 electionUnless he's a Time Lord.
My read on the last election result was that the Tories have the distinction of being the least unappealing alternative. Their vote was hardly a ringing endorsement, but then, neither was Labour's. Both, by the way, marginally increased vote share, but the Tories gained a couple of dozen seats and Labour lost a couple of dozen. It wasn't a direct transfer, though. It was more complex than that.
I suspect that the relevance to the leadership race would be a consideration of, after several years of "austerity", quite why the Tories went from largest party and coalition, to an overall majority even if a slender one?
Something about Labour 2015 was distinctly unappealing to the electorate. But what? A good chunk of it was losing Scotland to the SNP. The reasons for that, in my opinion, make it unlikely they'll gain large numbers of those lost seats back any time soon. And if Labour can't, it means they've got to do much, much better taking seats from the Tories, and that means they have to do much better in those marginal areas that Blair won, several times, and Brown and Miliband couldn't reach, like the South East, and East Anglia. It's not just those areas, but without inroads in those areas, it's hard to see Labour winnng in 2020.
So .... in areas traditionally centre, or slightly right of centre, will Corbyn reach them when Brown or Miliband couldn't? Standard electoral logic would suggest it's highly unlikely.
If JC wins, as seems likely, the next four years leading up to Gen Elec 2020 should be ..... interesting.![]()
Get real. 2015 was closer, and the Tory Party are less popular.
No chance as he's stuck in time.![]()
When the starting favourite is Andy 'The Mid Staffs Bungler' Burnham it says all you need to know about this group of hopefuls. And as much as despise the politics of Corbyn he is a breath of nostalgic air.
Because the Conservative Party has such a convincing majority?
Get real. 2015 was closer, and the Tory Party are less popular, than many would like to admit. It is the Lib Dems, sadly, that are knee-deep in poop (and I say that as a Lib Dem party member).
Tories are scared of Corbyn, our next prime minister.
not a chance, the tories will think it's Christmas come early if that lunatic gets elected
The lack of boundary changes has had an impact that currently favours labour (compare the 1992 and 1997 elections results
They were meant to be revised in the last parliament but the Lib Dems didn't back them as they were protesting over the cut in the higher rate of tax I think. 2015 could and should have been a lot worse for Labour.
Tories are scared, now they have opposition with a backbone that will actually challenge the evil tory policies.![]()
They weren't "meant to be revised"; the Tories wanted to revise them to help tilt the election in their favour.
Tories are scared, now they have opposition with a backbone that will actually challenge the evil tory policies.![]()
Wasn't the remit to make all constituencies of similar size? The boundary commission would be responsible for implementing the actual boundaries. So it isn't really about tilting it in their favour but more about removing the advantage that Labour currently have.
Why would they care? They have a majority government, so they can force through any legislation they want.
Why would they care? They have a majority government, so they can force through any legislation they want.