News1 min ago
'Narcissist' Corbyn Boasts ' Pandemi Shows I Was Right
29 Answers
He said he was right on public spending. Can you believe it?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by lindapalmara. 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.Alastair Darling as Labour Chancellor shook the magic money tree in 2008 to bail,out the banks, and George Osborne did it in2010 to give £7bn to the Republic Of Ireland to buoy them up.
Corbyn wanted to do the same £500bn but to revamp public services and capital expenditure on infrastructure projects to generate income and boost the economy.
It was a good plan, but he carried too much baggage with terrorists and antiSemitism etc to get elected.
Corbyn wanted to do the same £500bn but to revamp public services and capital expenditure on infrastructure projects to generate income and boost the economy.
It was a good plan, but he carried too much baggage with terrorists and antiSemitism etc to get elected.
Theland - // It was a good plan, but he carried too much baggage with terrorists and antiSemitism etc to get elected. //
It's a little more complex than that -
Corbyn was not and never ever could be an actual party leader - he got the role by default and was never remotely suited to it.
Add to that the party surrounding him - people promoted seriously way above their abilities and attributes, and the ludicrous policies they offered the public, and it was all over.
The electorate are not actually stupid, treat them as if they are at your peril, and reap the rewards.
As I have advised previously - my last five years with BT were on the ground floor of the Broadband rollout and I have had direct site of the gigantic complexity and costs involved, so Corbyn advising 'broadband for everyone … ' for £20 billion sounded great.
I know more about Broadband infrastructure and costs than Jeremy Corbyn, and the current BT Chairman, who knows more than both of us, and then some, advised that £40 billion would do as a starting figure, and rise from there, and hey presto, Corbyn looks like an out-of-touch dreamer instead if a credible leader.
He was unelectable when they selected him, and he managed to make his party unelectable as well - they have some serious ground to make up to even think of being a serious Opposition Party - and a shot at government is so far ahead that it's invisible.
It's a little more complex than that -
Corbyn was not and never ever could be an actual party leader - he got the role by default and was never remotely suited to it.
Add to that the party surrounding him - people promoted seriously way above their abilities and attributes, and the ludicrous policies they offered the public, and it was all over.
The electorate are not actually stupid, treat them as if they are at your peril, and reap the rewards.
As I have advised previously - my last five years with BT were on the ground floor of the Broadband rollout and I have had direct site of the gigantic complexity and costs involved, so Corbyn advising 'broadband for everyone … ' for £20 billion sounded great.
I know more about Broadband infrastructure and costs than Jeremy Corbyn, and the current BT Chairman, who knows more than both of us, and then some, advised that £40 billion would do as a starting figure, and rise from there, and hey presto, Corbyn looks like an out-of-touch dreamer instead if a credible leader.
He was unelectable when they selected him, and he managed to make his party unelectable as well - they have some serious ground to make up to even think of being a serious Opposition Party - and a shot at government is so far ahead that it's invisible.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.