Try thinking through it without assuming the entire Bernie wing is as bad as the worst of the Bernie wing.
Worse outcome, yes... all this predictable infighting, the very topic of this discussion, could have been avoided. You don't seem to think these people matter at all, which is straight up foolish.
And you made it sound like Bernie said straight up mean shit. This quote?
"Joe Biden is a friend of mine and I have a lot of respect for Tom Perez. In terms of the next chair of the DNC, however, the question is simple: Do we stay with a failed status-quo approach or do we go forward with a fundamental restructuring of the Democratic Party? I say we go forward and create a grassroots party which speaks for working people and is prepared to stand up to the top 1 percent. That's why we have to support Keith Ellison,"
That's basically the same line he's been saying since the primary. Making a mountain out of a molehill. But even if that was some new low, it's the outcome of the race that matters, not who said what beforehand. Comic still applies.
Or, the other way to look at it:
Sanders (still technically an Independent), has been throwing shade at establishment Dems since the Primary, and does very-little-to-nothing to draw support from across the Democrat ranks. In fact, he openly touts his lack of support - sometimes implicitly, sometimes explicitly - as a reason why people should follow/vote/support him or the people he proclaims as rainmakers.
I still cannot fathom why people think someone who's been a senator for 30 years and has done the bare minimum required of him as a politician during that time is "progressive".
/rant
Wait, what, actually building relationships with other human beings, especially those you work with, is important?
His problem is his dogmatism and a complete inability to understand he actually has to persuade people who voted Conservative last time
He gives a response like that and this is your answer?You don't follow UK politics very closely, do you?
He gives a response like that and this is your answer?
Man, you're basically straight up shit posting at this point.
He gives a response like that and this is your answer?
Man, you're basically straight up shit posting at this point.
You don't follow UK politics very closely, do you?
I find the UK a hateful place, in no small part due to Corbyn, who has singularly failed to provide any balance to Cameron or May. His absolute dislike for the EU and indifference to the EU citizens within the UK mean that even if he was Jesus himself come to redeem mankind, I wouldn't give a monkeys about him.
I was born in the Oxford in '78. I lived through Thatcher. I lived through Blair and Brown. I lived in almost abject poverty at some points, ground down by a Jobcentre who thought I should take an overnight train from Sheffield to London for a Virgin Atlantic interview at 9am.
I think Corbyn should be ashamed of how he has let the Left down, due to his personal pride and ideologies. When Corbyn says "Labour is not wedded to freedom of movement for EU citizens as a point of principle, but I don't want that to be misinterpreted, nor do we rule it out," he is making me (and people like me) spend money to acquire an Irish passport, so I can continue enjoying the freedoms that he doesn't give one single shit about. Because if he did, he would fucking fight for the freedom of movement.
Also, your single, patronizing sentence in reply to my comment is just wank. But I wouldn't expect anything else form someone who thinks Corbyn needs the hateful Tory voters who want to fox-hunt, send spouses back to their country of origin due to not earning enough, or cut disability.
Edit: lol? You're using his Shadow Cabinet as an example of caring about minorities?
The understanding of Corbyn and the Labour Party's current position in this thread is pretty woeful. You do realise that Corbyn is the identity politics candidate uninterested in appealing to the working class and who instead chooses to focus on people who already consistently vote Labour, right? His problem is his dogmatism and a complete inability to understand he actually has to persuade people who voted Conservative last time; in that respect PoliGAF is significantly more akin to Corbyn than you think.
Can you quote where Corbyn has suggested he wanted to 'remove those filthy immigrants from our "glorious streets"'?
His lack of concern for minorities and European citizens within the UK also appeals to the WWC, as they use "economic anxiety" to remove those filthy immigrants from our "glorious streets".
Meh, I'd disagree here in terms of Corbyn aims.
You are absolutely right in that he is utterly failing to appeal to the working class, at all. However, I would suggest that he honestly and really intends too, and that they are what he imagines his voting base to be. This is a guy who has been preaching the same policies and solutions since the 1970s. Identity politics and urban, liberal elites didn't even exist then as a solid voting block, and certainly not enough to make you leader of the party.
That's part of the tragic irony of Corbyn. He wants to be the champion of the working class and unions, but actually doesn't understand them anymore at all. He's still fighting the same battles from 40 years ago without realizing how much the ground has moved under his feet, but still believes that if they just reframe the arguments enough and keep at it long enough, the working class will eventually realize what's best for them and vote labour.
That's fair. I'd say more precisely that he wants to appeal to the working class, but has no interest in understanding how to do that, which I think leaves us at the same point. Currently, this thread seems to have no interest in appealing to the working class at all, which actually probably makes for an even more ineffectual stance than Corbyn's, and is the main reason I find the constant comparisons to Corbyn so weird. Like, Pixie just argued that Corbyn was trying too hard to win back Conservative voters. That's more Corbyn than Corbyn is!
His problem is his dogmatism and a complete inability to understand he actually has to persuade people who voted Conservative last time
Do you know what proportion of Labour's constituencies voted Remain?
So, as I remember it, Labour constituencies voted to Leave, by a fair-ish margin. What would your point be?
Also, feel this may be rather tense. Smiley to de-escalate:
Over 85% of Labour's non-London constituencies voted Leave. What do you think happens if Labour becomes the party of Remain?
Over 85% of Labour's non-London constituencies voted Leave. What do you think happens if Labour becomes the party of Remain?
And yet wasn't the total number of Labour voters (members) in favour of Remain 65% or so?
I mean, this kind of goes to me point about the working class and "economic anxiety". The (poorer) North is the Labour Heartlands. They voted Leave. It's hard to disentangle the shit-stirring Daily Mail/Sun hatred and wariness of foreigners from the genuine desire to leave because it was seen as "better".
But besides that point, I think if Corbyn were less ideologically driven, he would be willing to turn around and sell the proposition of being in the EU being better than out of it. His vacillating on the issue just emboldens people who think it's the immigrants fault, and who are, in turn, Labour supporters (though not entirely Labour supporters, obviously).
I think at some point, Country ought to come before Party - we argue it enough in terms of US politics, so why not here? Just like the GOP need to turn around and tell their base that the ACA is good, but not perfect, Corbyn needs to turn around to the Labour supporters in the North and say "Yes, you voted Leave. But it's the wrong choice! It won't get jobs back, it won't give you training, it won't help!"
Sure sure, political suicide. Yeah. But do you really think Labour is going to win in the next election as it stands now? Tacit admission to the base that everything the racist Right says is true won't work when their jobs still haven't materialised, and when the only holiday they can afford to the Costa Del Sol costs twice the price, and has visa entry requirements.
https://twitter.com/davidfrum/status/836183196249251841
New twist--Spicer himself is the one who arranged for CIA head, Nunez, and Burr to deny the Trump/Russia leaks.
This is what I mean when I say this thread is much more like Corbyn than they want to admit. You both bat for different ideologies, yes. But at the end of the day, neither you nor he is interested in understanding why your parties are losing voters that were once enormously important components of the party's support. The fact you're dogmatists for the liberal technocracy doesn't stop you being dogmatists.
Responding to the news that Perez won and Ellison will be his Deputy by saying "I'm never voting for Democratic candidates again" or "This party is dead to me" means that all you have a shit about at the end of the day is Bernie's endorsement. You didn't care about policies, you cared that Bernie supported that person.
Heard an absolutely disgusting interview on NPR earlier. The woman they were talking to laid it out very clearly: Perez' victory meant that she and hers were taking their ball and going home, not because she believed he'd do a bad job, but SOLELY BECAUSE he was the "establishment," and that the "progressive" wing of the party would no longer be satisfied with "bones" that the "establishment" tossed them. As far as she was concerned it was all or nothing,total control of the party or no unity. Straight up said that Trump wasn't even part of her thinking. Makes me sick, and goes to show just how shallow these people are.
They're not even fucking progressives, they're just rabidly anti establishment types who invoke Warren's name like an prayer or a shield, never mind that Forma herself works with "establishment" Dems all the time. They don't give a damn about policy.
Please tell me that it's not an actual group with actual influence. I don't want to think that that woman is actually running a significant chunk of people.oh the lady who ran one of the women's caucuses right?
She had absolutely no points to make or rationale it was ridiculous. She easily could've referenced podesta emails or whatever but here we are.
You seem to think there's a cogent argument or messaging presentable to prevent the Labour party or the Democrats from "losing voters that were once enormously important components of the party's support", maybe there is (I doubt it to be honest) but I'm not sure there's one which keeps the current support intact at the same time.
Perhaps it's simply a case of picking your poison. Given the increasing effect of technology in the workplace it's only going to get worse.
You are trying to have your cake and eat it. You cannot seriously argue that Corbyn is too dogmatic and ideological, and at the same time argue that he ought to commit political suicide on a point of principle. Pick one of two: Labour being the party of Remain, Labour not being dogmatic. You can't have both.
You seem to think there's a cogent argument or messaging presentable to prevent the Labour party or the Democrats from "losing voters that were once enormously important components of the party's support", maybe there is (I doubt it to be honest) but I'm not sure there's one which keeps the current support intact at the same time.
Perhaps it's simply a case of picking your poison. Given the increasing effect of technology in the workplace it's only going to get worse.
I think there is a path forward for the Democrats, because the fault lines have taken place (mostly) between the parties. Brexit being a referendum meant that these fault lines took place across parties in the UK, which was much more damaging. I'd actually probably agree Labour's position is irreparable, regardless of leader, at least until public sentiment on Brexit shifts significantly.
This is what I mean when I say this thread is much more like Corbyn than they want to admit. You both bat for different ideologies, yes. But at the end of the day, neither you nor he is interested in understanding why your parties are losing voters that were once enormously important components of the party's support. The fact you're dogmatists for the liberal technocracy doesn't stop you being dogmatists.
You seem to think there's a cogent argument or messaging presentable to prevent the Labour party or the Democrats from "losing voters that were once enormously important components of the party's support", maybe there is (I doubt it to be honest) but I'm not sure there's one which keeps the current support intact at the same time.
Perhaps it's simply a case of picking your poison. Given the increasing effect of technology in the workplace it's only going to get worse.
Not the time for that. Once the uk's economy is in full crash and burn? Sure. Until then? Nah.Another reason why political suicide for the Labour party would be good for the country - come out and actually convince the UK public why Brexit was the wrong choice, rather than acquiescing to "the will of the people".
This is what I mean when I say this thread is much more like Corbyn than they want to admit. You both bat for different ideologies, yes. But at the end of the day, neither you nor he is interested in understanding why your parties are losing voters that were once enormously important components of the party's support. The fact you're dogmatists for the liberal technocracy doesn't stop you being dogmatists.
(Getting back to US politics, a bit )
I think it would be interesting to look at the Obama-Trump voters alongside the Labour-Brexit voters. Because, contrary your post here, there was a lot of questioning of why the Rust Belt base that has been so consistent voted the way they did. And I think the reasoning would be mostly the same - a combination of anti-trade sentiment, a lack of jobs for the untrained & non-college educated, racist dog-whistles, and actual economic anxiety.
i, for one, am offering that voter more guns
can you have a hive mind if it's only two people?
and more drugs?i, for one, am offering that voter more guns
the bolded are all related fwiw
and more drugs?
Yeah. How to message policy to that?
i, for one, am offering that voter more guns