ChatterBank1 min ago
Should The Britex People Pack Up And Go Home Now That Jeremy Corbyn Will Give His Imprimatur To
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No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I dont think he really does believe it, that is why he has ducked the ssue.
He has been put into this position by the powerful Unions who are in charge of the party, not Mr Corbyn.
However, I for one am glad he is backing remain. That alone whould gain Brexit some votes in the same way Cameron and Osborne undoubtedly have.
Many people distrust all three of them!
At this moment in time though I would not say defeat is staring either side in the face.
The big problem we will have is that whichever way it goes approx half the country will not be behind the decision. That is very divisive.
He has been put into this position by the powerful Unions who are in charge of the party, not Mr Corbyn.
However, I for one am glad he is backing remain. That alone whould gain Brexit some votes in the same way Cameron and Osborne undoubtedly have.
Many people distrust all three of them!
At this moment in time though I would not say defeat is staring either side in the face.
The big problem we will have is that whichever way it goes approx half the country will not be behind the decision. That is very divisive.
Labour campaigned in Scotland to remain (in the UK) and their reward was annilation in the general election.
If Cameron wins the EU referendum, he will upset a lot of Tory voters and will face a similar backlash to that which Labour suffered.
By being half arsed about the Stay campaign, Corbyn is ensuring that the voters don't blame Labour, if we stay in the EU.
If Cameron wins the EU referendum, he will upset a lot of Tory voters and will face a similar backlash to that which Labour suffered.
By being half arsed about the Stay campaign, Corbyn is ensuring that the voters don't blame Labour, if we stay in the EU.
Tora.
Corbyn is Labour leader, and the party is pro-EU. As leader, he has to follow the party's policy, not his own. It is not a case of him being got at, it is a case of going with policy that is voted on at the Party Conference, and following that.
Corbyn is anti-EU which explains his lack of enthusiasm for the cause so far.
Corbyn is Labour leader, and the party is pro-EU. As leader, he has to follow the party's policy, not his own. It is not a case of him being got at, it is a case of going with policy that is voted on at the Party Conference, and following that.
Corbyn is anti-EU which explains his lack of enthusiasm for the cause so far.
Naomi,
Labour Party policy is voted on at its annual conference, and sometimes policy gets through or is blocked by the members which is not to the liking of the leadership, but they have to put up with it, because that is democracy.
Every Labour leader has had that. It is not weakness, or being led, it is how the Labour Party has always been run.
Meanwhile the civil war in the Conservative camp reaches fever pitch...
Labour Party policy is voted on at its annual conference, and sometimes policy gets through or is blocked by the members which is not to the liking of the leadership, but they have to put up with it, because that is democracy.
Every Labour leader has had that. It is not weakness, or being led, it is how the Labour Party has always been run.
Meanwhile the civil war in the Conservative camp reaches fever pitch...
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