ChatterBank0 min ago
Do Labour Have Any Chance At All Of Winning The Election
could they sway things their way with a Lab/Lib Dems pact perhaps, or
do they stand no chance at all.
do they stand no chance at all.
Answers
emmie Funnily enough, I had a look at the Labour Party website and browsed their front bench. None of them (apart from Diane Abbott, who is voter arsenic) have much of a public profile. I think it needs to be someone from the moderate end of the party. Who that could be is a mystery to me. An unknown? Like Corbyn (how many people had heard of him before he became...
12:42 Fri 21st Apr 2017
emmie
Funnily enough, I had a look at the Labour Party website and browsed their front bench. None of them (apart from Diane Abbott, who is voter arsenic) have much of a public profile.
I think it needs to be someone from the moderate end of the party. Who that could be is a mystery to me.
An unknown?
Like Corbyn (how many people had heard of him before he became leader?)
Funnily enough, I had a look at the Labour Party website and browsed their front bench. None of them (apart from Diane Abbott, who is voter arsenic) have much of a public profile.
I think it needs to be someone from the moderate end of the party. Who that could be is a mystery to me.
An unknown?
Like Corbyn (how many people had heard of him before he became leader?)
The tail wags the dog, surely, with small majorities. This is why May has called an election. There will be no electoral pacts (different in any case from things like the liblab pact, which was a parliamentary one)
As for who would lead Labour again there are plenty of viable candidates but most are keeping their heads down. Corbyn is a double whammy as not only are many of his policies dubious but he is also useless as a leader. But I suspect he'll relish the canpaign: a chance to get away from parliament which he seems to care little for anyway, and get out into the country to preach lots of the converted and convince himself he is on a roll.
As for who would lead Labour again there are plenty of viable candidates but most are keeping their heads down. Corbyn is a double whammy as not only are many of his policies dubious but he is also useless as a leader. But I suspect he'll relish the canpaign: a chance to get away from parliament which he seems to care little for anyway, and get out into the country to preach lots of the converted and convince himself he is on a roll.