Can Sir Keir Starmer revive the Labour Party? (Vol. 2)

Can Sir Keir Starmer revive the Labour Party? (Vol. 2)

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Discussion

119

7,397 posts

39 months

Sunday 23rd June
quotequote all
S600BSB said:
philv said:
Labour is set to abandon its promise to scrap university tuition fees in England if it wins power, its leader has said. Sir Keir Starmer told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the party was "likely to move on from that commitment", blaming the economic backdrop. The Labour leader pledged to support getting rid of fees in his 2020 leadership campaign.


No climbing out of the labour cess pit for the less well off.
Do you want us to throw you a rope?
No need. He can just use yours.

hidetheelephants

25,849 posts

196 months

Sunday 23rd June
quotequote all
S600BSB said:
philv said:
Labour is set to abandon its promise to scrap university tuition fees in England if it wins power, its leader has said. Sir Keir Starmer told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the party was "likely to move on from that commitment", blaming the economic backdrop. The Labour leader pledged to support getting rid of fees in his 2020 leadership campaign.


No climbing out of the labour cess pit for the less well off.
Do you want us to throw you a rope?
He's waving, not drowning.

James6112

4,630 posts

31 months

Sunday 23rd June
quotequote all
philv said:
Labour is set to abandon its promise to scrap university tuition fees in England if it wins power, its leader has said. Sir Keir Starmer told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the party was "likely to move on from that commitment", blaming the economic backdrop. The Labour leader pledged to support getting rid of fees in his 2020 leadership campaign.


No climbing out of the labour cess pit for the less well off.
It’s not in the 2024 manifesto
The Tories have left the cupboard bare.
The Tory cess pit, quite a legacy after 14 years…

768

14,020 posts

99 months

Sunday 23rd June
quotequote all
119 said:
bhstewie said:
philv said:
Labour is set to abandon its promise to scrap university tuition fees in England if it wins power, its leader has said. Sir Keir Starmer told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the party was "likely to move on from that commitment", blaming the economic backdrop. The Labour leader pledged to support getting rid of fees in his 2020 leadership campaign.


No climbing out of the labour cess pit for the less well off.
Why have you quoted a year old BBC article? confused
Still relevant isn’t it?
If it's not it will be next week. And not the week after. And back the week after that.

anonymoususer

6,169 posts

51 months

Sunday 23rd June
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
From what I remember the Lib Dems literally ran on a manifesto saying they would scrap tuition fees then found out that when you're actually in Government even as a partner in a coalition you don't always get to do everything you said you would and they got punished for it.

I don't think it's the same situation as a party very clearly changing their stance over a year ago and being clear going into an election in two weeks time that they will not scrap tuition fees.
Your memory is correct.
Sometime after that Vince Cable was on a political show (I'm pretty sure it would have been question time) and he vigorously defended the non scrapping of the fees. This could have been during the coalition government itself or it could have been on the LibDem campaign of 2005.
The audience didn't like it but he stuck to his guns.
There was a lot of respect for Vince Cable during the 2010 campaign he was viewed as a sensible chap.

768

14,020 posts

99 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Rayner, barely touching on policy under the scrutiny that is GMB, has been talking about stopping landlords asking for 6-12 month deposits. The current cap is set at 5 weeks.

Meanwhile her boss, also dealing with the important issues of the day, has answered that striker Dennis Bergkamp was Arsenal's greatest midfielder.

119

7,397 posts

39 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
768 said:
Rayner, barely touching on policy under the scrutiny that is GMB, has been talking about stopping landlords asking for 6-12 month deposits. The current cap is set at 5 weeks.

Meanwhile her boss, also dealing with the important issues of the day, has answered that striker Dennis Bergkamp was Arsenal's greatest midfielder.
Yikes, the comments on that video.

turbobloke

104,880 posts

263 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
768 said:
Rayner, barely touching on policy under the scrutiny that is GMB, has been talking about stopping landlords asking for 6-12 month deposits. The current cap is set at 5 weeks.

Meanwhile her boss, also dealing with the important issues of the day, has answered that striker Dennis Bergkamp was Arsenal's greatest midfielder.
Starmer: priorities matter.


Jockman

17,969 posts

163 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
768 said:
Rayner, barely touching on policy under the scrutiny that is GMB, has been talking about stopping landlords asking for 6-12 month deposits. The current cap is set at 5 weeks.

Meanwhile her boss, also dealing with the important issues of the day, has answered that striker Dennis Bergkamp was Arsenal's greatest midfielder.
I can see this being a very short honeymoon period after July 4th.

turbobloke

104,880 posts

263 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Jockman said:
768 said:
Rayner, barely touching on policy under the scrutiny that is GMB, has been talking about stopping landlords asking for 6-12 month deposits. The current cap is set at 5 weeks.

Meanwhile her boss, also dealing with the important issues of the day, has answered that striker Dennis Bergkamp was Arsenal's greatest midfielder.
I can see this being a very short honeymoon period after July 4th.
As well as what happens in the Tory Party, that particular nugget will be must-watch post-election,

DeejRC

5,951 posts

85 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
It will be interesting to see what “scandals” bubble up during the next Labour govt. It will be a good indication as to how the party is being run, how rigid, how controlled and competent a machine it is. They keep Mandy around either controlling the reigns or guiding those who now do and it well be a very slick operation. Of course, the Labour Party being the Labour Party, that just means the left will try to start an internal war.

cheesejunkie

2,840 posts

20 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
DeejRC said:
It will be interesting to see what “scandals” bubble up during the next Labour govt. It will be a good indication as to how the party is being run, how rigid, how controlled and competent a machine it is. They keep Mandy around either controlling the reigns or guiding those who now do and it well be a very slick operation. Of course, the Labour Party being the Labour Party, that just means the left will try to start an internal war.
There will be scandals but it would take some effort to match the tory ones. Scandals aren't scandals until someone talks about them.

The scandals will be overhyped by some of the usual suspects who'd not bat an eyelid if a Tory did the same thing.

Such is politics.

Not so sure on the last line. I think Keir, as did Tony, has made sure he holds more cards. They'll be a pain in the arse but they won't win, in the first term.

As someone a bit lefty I'm getting very annoyed at Kier haters. I've no time for people who'd rather spend their lives in opposition. I'm also annoyed at how far that the party has had to agree with failed right wing rhetoric to get elected. I don't think they'll stick to it. It'll be an interesting few years having a right wing labour party again.

One thing you can be sure of is that the tory party is not being ran as a rigid well oiled machine. I could light a bin fire, walk away, come back three hours later, and have more confidence in it being sorted than I think the average Tory does in Rishi right now.

S600BSB

5,596 posts

109 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
768 said:
Rayner, barely touching on policy under the scrutiny that is GMB, has been talking about stopping landlords asking for 6-12 month deposits. The current cap is set at 5 weeks.

Meanwhile her boss, also dealing with the important issues of the day, has answered that striker Dennis Bergkamp was Arsenal's greatest midfielder.
Bloody Gooners

DeejRC

5,951 posts

85 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
cheesejunkie said:
DeejRC said:
It will be interesting to see what “scandals” bubble up during the next Labour govt. It will be a good indication as to how the party is being run, how rigid, how controlled and competent a machine it is. They keep Mandy around either controlling the reigns or guiding those who now do and it well be a very slick operation. Of course, the Labour Party being the Labour Party, that just means the left will try to start an internal war.
There will be scandals but it would take some effort to match the tory ones. Scandals aren't scandals until someone talks about them.

The scandals will be overhyped by some of the usual suspects who'd not bat an eyelid if a Tory did the same thing.

Such is politics.

Not so sure on the last line. I think Keir, as did Tony, has made sure he holds more cards. They'll be a pain in the arse but they won't win, in the first term.

As someone a bit lefty I'm getting very annoyed at Kier haters. I've no time for people who'd rather spend their lives in opposition. I'm also annoyed at how far that the party has had to agree with failed right wing rhetoric to get elected. I don't think they'll stick to it. It'll be an interesting few years having a right wing labour party again.

One thing you can be sure of is that the tory party is not being ran as a rigid well oiled machine. I could light a bin fire, walk away, come back three hours later, and have more confidence in it being sorted than I think the average Tory does in Rishi right now.
The Tory Party as a whole and No10 Operation hasn’t been well run since Dom and Carrie decided to turn their spat into outright war. I think Zippy, George and Bungle could have done a better job.

I don’t think the Left will win either, I did say *try* to start an internal war, not that they would win it. Like you I also think SKS has made sure he holds all the cards, equally though I think that level of control will be what sparks the professional “you can’t tell me what to do!” brigade that the Labour Left frequently resembles.

BikeBikeBIke

8,527 posts

118 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Jockman said:
I can see this being a very short honeymoon period after July 4th.
Yeah, nobody thanks you for being in government.

Jockman

17,969 posts

163 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
BikeBikeBIke said:
Jockman said:
I can see this being a very short honeymoon period after July 4th.
Yeah, nobody thanks you for being in government.
Agreed. The Media will effectively be the Official Opposition for quite some time.

BikeBikeBIke

8,527 posts

118 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
DeejRC said:
I think that level of control will be what sparks the professional “you can’t tell me what to do!” brigade that the Labour Left frequently resembles.
Maybe, but after their catastrophic spell in the hotseat they may be a little more contrite than before. There will be less of them too.

Plus, becaise it's obvious Labour will win there will be a lot of seriously talented people standing for Labour and they're going to drown out the tattered remnants of the SCG.

119

7,397 posts

39 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
Kier seems to be coming across well on This Morning, although just lacks a bit of charisma imo.

Interesting that his favourite TV show at the moment is "Friday Night Dinner".




turbobloke

104,880 posts

263 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
119 said:
Kier seems to be coming across well on This Morning, although just lacks a bit of charisma imo.

Interesting that his favourite TV show at the moment is "Friday Night Dinner".
Fair enough, the puckering should have mostly died down by then after the UK's problems land in his lap at Friday Morning Breakfast.

bitchstewie

52,545 posts

213 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
And a Labour candidate suspended after being told the Gambling Commission are looking into him.