• manualoverride@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    That’s just not true… he took over the party when Corbyn became toxic due to failing to deal with antisemitism, and wanting to leave NATO the EU and remove our nuclear deterrent. He came in on the intention of continuing a lot of socialist policies but then the Tories destroyed the economy, the NHS and our social care system, and put us in the highest debt to GDP we have ever been in. He has had to get more realistic with his policies and taken great steps to not promise things he cannot deliver for the last 5 years.

    • Guntrigger@sopuli.xyz
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      6 months ago

      I keep wondering how “Corbyn’s Antisemitism” would look today, now that more people are aware Anti-Zionism ≠ Anti-Semitism

      • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        A lot of it was a perception issue, certainly the Israeli government has done a lot of damage to the reputation of Israel.

        Corbyn was playing against a stacked deck as the UK media is Tory-aligned, but he failed to change the narrative.

      • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Far be it from me to refute such diligent investigative reporting but this is the paper you say “no you keep it” when handing a homeless person a pound, an online petition, the National paper of the SNP and a reddit thread.

        Even if Starmer did fundamentally change his beliefs on every policy listed, the fact that in 5 years since he became leader we are now in record debt, our NHS is all but crushed, our current government is so overtly corrupt there are billions being stolen every year and my local river is literally full of shit… I think any opposition leader can readjust their priorities a little.

        • sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al
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          6 months ago

          I made a joke about him changing his pledges a lot. You got defensive and denied. I provided evidence. You dismissed the evidence and then justified the thing you said started out by saying he didn’t do. This has been a journey!

          • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            I’m a bit sensitive about this subject as I’m directly impacted by the policies of this morally corrupt government, to the point where a less sane person might begin to take it personally.

            People perpetuating the Tory lie that “Starmer can’t be trusted because of XYZ” just increases the likelihood that people won’t vote or will use their vote ineffectively and allow the Tories back in.

            No hard feelings as long as you remember to vote tactically.

      • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        At the moment we have two choices, the Tories or Labour. I know the Tories are corrupt criminals, given the choice I’m going for the ‘might not be a corrupt criminal’ guy.

        Maybe he did think to himself “I’m going to tell all these lies and once I’m party leader I’m going to roll back on the promises because fuck everyone who voted for me”

        Or maybe he had all these plans and then as the situation changed he had to make some compromises.

          • frankPodmore@slrpnk.net
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            6 months ago

            I don’t know how you can look at the five pledges, particularly on house building, the Green New Deal and the New Deal for Workers and say, ‘Nothing is going to change’ if Labour are elected.

              • frankPodmore@slrpnk.net
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                6 months ago

                That doesn’t follow. The 10 pledges, many of which in fact still stand, despite what the Tories would have you believe, were not the only possible way of changing things.

                  • frankPodmore@slrpnk.net
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                    6 months ago

                    Best to look at primary sources. Here are the 10 pledges.

                    Now, there’s not a conveniently straight forward answer to all of this, so bear with me. But for my money, in terms of the headline of each pledge, all of them still stand. If things were simple, I’d be 10 for 10. Unfortunately for my argument, things are not so simple.

                    Starting at the top, with pledge 1: Economic Justice. Starmer is still pledged to economic justice, it’s the raison d’etre of the Labour Party, but the devil is in the detail:

                    Increase income tax for the top 5% of earners, reverse the Tories’ cuts in corporation tax and clamp down on tax avoidance, particularly of large corporations.

                    The only one of those three policies that still stands is the tax avoidance clampdown. However, things are, again, not so simple. The income tax pledge has been dropped, but the money that was going to raise has been replaced with a different tax on the rich (VAT on private schools and, till the Tories nicked it, abolition of non-dom status). So, is that a ‘broken pledge’? Or has he found a better way to achieve the same goal? Should he really be held to a policy if he thinks it won’t work and he can do it better in a different way?

                    I’m not going to go through all the pledges like this. But, 3, 7, 8, 9 and 10 all still stand, I would argue in pretty much every detail. That’s 5 out of 10. For the others, #2 and #5 has been scaled back, but replaced with I would argue similar policies that achieve similar goals. #4 and #6 are very different in all but the headline. I think the changes are justifiable, but it’s perfectly understandable if you don’t.

                    Now, my questions to you is: Should Starmer stick to promising to deliver all ten things in every detail, even if: he sincerely changes his mind (which people do); the circumstances genuinely change (which they have); or he sincerely thinks some of those things, good ideas or not, will lose him the election? Should he keep promising ten things at the risk of delivering none of them? Or, should he stick to five of them, and modify the other five, in order to deliver some of them?

                    For me, not getting elected would actually, definitively break all ten pledges, because it would mean he’d categorically failed at his job.

          • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            So I am paying more attention than 99.9% of the electorate, and I’m still not sure where this hostility is coming from. I watch/read at least 4 hours of political content a day, I’m not sure I could do much more without it being a full time job.

            What is the single most egregious act he has performed against you and your beliefs as a Labour member?

              • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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                6 months ago

                In your last message you appeared to be annoyed because you were a Labour member who has been “fucked over”, you can just be annoyed on their behalf, but I’m sure they can speak for themselves.

                This is why I asked you for one thing, I can have a rational discussion with you and offer counterpoints but not when you try and present 30 things at once… so again what is the one thing you believe is the most egregious example of betrayal/lying/or a broken promise that affects you personally.

                Also who do you see yourself voting for?

    • HumanPenguin@feddit.uk
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      6 months ago

      That’s just not true…

      Followed with a list of excuses pointing out. It is actually true.

      I think you need to understand the meaning of true. Having reasons for why he did do something. Dose not mean the person saying he did something is living.

      At the end of it. The man won leadership of the party members. By making overt pledges. Then cancelled all those pledges. If you can’t understand why a high % of party members feel there vote was stolen by him. You are not trying.

      Honest Democracy involves convincing voters to follow you. Not lieing to gain there vote.

      If you can’t convince the majority of a party to follow you. Run to lead a party where the majority agree with you.

      • frankPodmore@slrpnk.net
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        6 months ago

        He didn’t cancel all the pledges. This is Tory misinformation that some people have swallowed. Here are the pledges. In fact, looking at the headline of each pledge, he’s still promising the same broad directions for all ten of them.

        Some policy details have changed (justifiably, I think). But not completely. For example, under pledge 1, they’ve found other taxes to raise instead of income tax: different policies, same overall goal. Is that a broken pledge? Maybe, but it seems a bit much to say he has not only to to tax the rich but do it in the exact way he promised five years ago lest he be accused of lying.

        Others, like pledge 3, on climate justice, are still entirely in place, as are 7, 8 and 10.

        Some have changed a lot. I don’t think the foreign policy or immigation stuff really resembles his current policy positions. But I also don’t think he should let himself be dragged down by unpopular positions once their unpopularity is clear.

        I don’t personally think that shifting specific policies, but keeping the clear overall direction, is such a big deal. Your mileage may vary, obviously, but we should at least talk about what has actually happened, not repeat Tory propaganda at each other!

      • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        More accurately it was “Starmer changes his pledges more than he changes his underwear” followed by:

        “That’s just not true”

        Followed by a lot of discussion pointing out that while he may have scaled back some aspects of his pledges, he has also gone to great lengths not to promise very much at all over the last 5 years because the Tories keep making it financially impossible to promise anything.

          • manualoverride@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Or stealing enough to say, “we already did that!”whilst not changing anything for their donors, and giving them an excuse to cut taxes because of imaginary future savings.

            Imaging a government that works as hard for the 99% and the planet, as the Tories work for the 1%