Quote: Pingl @ June 11 2013, 11:04 AM BSTYou shouldn't underestimate Major, he was a clever and actually quite charming man. I look back on the Major era with a degree of fondness, he was in my opinion the last truly one nation Tory to gain power. Although he made some stupid mistakes, Rail privatisation and protection of the ERM, he left the Labour government and very favourable economic legacy, possibly more by luck than judgement perhaps, but then the same could be said of Blair. Labour will only change by the real breaking of the new consensus, no one is talking strikes, quite the opposite. What we need is Government encouraged growth, an end to a blinkered austerity programme and the persecution of the poor and infirm. Whilst the left splinters or calls each other windbags UKIP will reap the whirlwind. The left must configure a palatable and practical growth policy. By taking it back to the people I hope some new and dynamic figures may emerge. PS Kinnock was never going to win anything, lovely man, sincere politician but could never overcome a public perception that painted him into a corner. The British hate people who want power to much or expect it. He is and always will be less of a what if more of a I wish, Smith on the other hand like Gaitskill is one of the great what ifs.
But much of this I agree with. I think what is needed is a revolotuinary approach.
Firstly the welfare system may have been established by Labor but it was reshaped by Thatcher. This must stop, I am sick of giving advice to unemployed people that they shouldn't take a job. Because JSA STILL disinsentives employment, makes flexible work impossible. And housing benefit needs to stop being a way of shovelling taxes into the pockets of landlords.
Secondly I think we need to get over the idea of the NHS as a provider of services and rather a funder of services. It's no accident that France, Holland and most other European powers with better health outcomes for all follow a state controlled insurance model.
Quote: Pingl @ June 11 2013, 11:11 AM BSTThe unions talk about it, but it is a proposal that I hope can be blocked, they are so obviously counter productive and anti the growth agenda as to be I agree a digression. But the use of strikes as a weapon must always be left open. The great threat within any assembly of the left is the removal of labour, but that is one bomb, that with the history of the eighties, may be more of a deterrent than a weapon of destruction. Cases must be fought within and won, that is democracy. I am always in favour of civil disobedience, it is the last refuge of the decent and caring.
Sorry but the People's Assembly reminds me of Alan Bleasdale's excellent GBH.
With it's sour note that most hard left movements are so inimical to left wing success, they might as well be Tory plots.
My local MPs Jeremy Corbyn, I thought yay I can vote for a Labor MP. The I read his manifesto and voted liberal.
What a charmless self indulgent failure.