- Mon May 12, 2025 6:04 pm
#89160
The issue of course is that it's £2.5bn you can't spend on something else- to use one particularly apposite example, paying care workers more.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 6:01 pm I'm actually surprised the amount isn't higher. I think there are quite a lot of the public who'd actually pay their share of that in extra tax. Or preferably have other people pay it, of course.Care workers are paid by the public sector, why would that money vanish because of a lower
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 8:08 pm The speech is bad enough without the Guardian having to misrepresent it.Is there any push-back from Labour comms on this? Or are they too busy, tucking in to the free buffet at the focus groups in Doncaster?
kreuzberger wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 8:16 pmCooper was clear enough about it. But above all, I think it's reasonable not to expect bullshit from the Guardian.Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 8:08 pm The speech is bad enough without the Guardian having to misrepresent it.Is there any push-back from Labour comms on this? Or are they too busy, tucking in to the free buffet at the focus groups in Doncaster?
Youngian wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 8:18 pm Starmer doing a blinding job of making his own voters feel like strangers in their own land. Throwing all you have to hang onto Stoke and Hull may cost him dearly in safer Labour seats. I know who won't be electorally downhearted at Starmer joining Badenoch in dancing to Farage’s tune and that's Ed Davey. And the Greens if they get their shit together.Davey's almost achieved cross over with Badenoch in the polls. I don't know how many he can take off Labour where he needs them- the distribution was very efficient before. Can he take them where Labour needs them though?
Sir Keir Starmer has unveiled Labour's long-awaited plans to cut levels of immigration into the UK.
The prime minister said measures in the white paper, external, a blueprint for future laws, would make the system "controlled, selective and fair".
Here is a summary of the key measures.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 12:37 pm Panic. Probably not just at Reform, but also at the Democrats and other Labour-type parties losing support over immigration to populist parties. It's often said that those various Labour-type parties all did it wrong by moving right on immigration, but I don't really see many examples of parties who didn't and then romped home in elections. The nearest anyone has in Sanchez is Spain, but last time I checked he was behind in the polls despite the economy doing well.I mean, even Biden had a pretty liberal approach towards immigration in his first two years, and it did him no good he was kicked by the right and left he changed tack and came close to passing a good package in immigration but Trump scuppered it.
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 9:16 pm It's probably worth pointing out that rhetoric from Starmer aside, the policies themselves aren't that bad.The characterization of the rhetoric is a bit unfair there too. It isn't Powellite.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 5:49 pm Cooper's actually making a reasonable job of this. She'd be a better leader than Starmer, I think.I've said before, had Corbyn not 'magnanimously' been allowed onto the ballot in 2015 via false endorsement by a handful of MPs, Cooper would have been the leader and history would have been very different.
Killer Whale wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 10:19 pmWell, perhaps. Yvette finished third of the four candidates, a few thousand votes behind Andy Burnham. But yes, we wouldn’t have had the Corbyn nightmare and have had to basically mark time until he was gone.Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 5:49 pm Cooper's actually making a reasonable job of this. She'd be a better leader than Starmer, I think.I've said before, had Corbyn not 'magnanimously' been allowed onto the ballot in 2015 via false endorsement by a handful of MPs, Cooper would have been the leader and history would have been very different.