Sandydragon wrote:Is this the same Corbyn agenda that got slaughtered at the last election? Even with one of the worst campaigning PMs in history, Corbyn still lost in 2016.
Labour will not win with that agenda.
And politics is still about having a vision and communicating it to people.Blair was an expert at doing that so I don’t think he would be doing so badly; I’d expect him to be doing far better than Starmer.
It's the same Corbyn agenda where surveys showed people liked the policies when shown them without party headings, but had visceral feelings about the man himself. The 2019 election was weird and anomalous because half of it was about Brexit and the other half was a referendum on the personalities of the leaders.
I agree with Stom that "socialism" could be a vote winner. For one thing, it would be a positive vision of the future rather than a continuation of the same austerity "sorry, the money's all gone so no local services" politics that have dominated the discourse since 2010. It wasn't the case that near 13 million people voted for Corbyn because they disliked May - that was the people who stayed at home. The people who went out to vote for Corbyn went because he told them the future could be better, that it wasn't inherent destiny that the rich would get richer, the poor would get poorer and they would lead more miserable lives than previous generations. Starmer might tap into some disaffected Conservative voters, but I don't know whether it's more than the people he's losing on the left. He might still get their votes because they'll take anything but a Tory victory, but he's pushing them pretty hard right now.
For another thing, the Overton window has shifted so significantly that some of the "CoMmuNiSm!" screams from the Mail are for ideas that 1990s Tories would've taken as normal policy. We could do with that being shifted a bit further across - the idea that some public services might be better off in public hands is surely a vote winner when seeing how "the open and free market in utilities" is doing on energy price rises and dumping sewage into rivers.
Agreed that Blair would be doing better though. Not that it's a particularly high bar to trip over, but he was a consummate salesman and would be wiping the floor with Johnson by now. Mind, his policies were more radical than would be commonly acceptable nowadays - people deride him for being a centrist, but his centre was a hell of a lot further left than the current one.
Puja