- Thu May 14, 2026 6:52 pm
#110667
He can look at the numbers as well as the next man, and he's not going to get a better chance. He has to go for it.
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Thu May 14, 2026 6:01 pm No way the NEC can turn him down again.Why not? What's changed since February?
Oboogie wrote: ↑Thu May 14, 2026 7:05 pmFar more people think he's needed in Westminster than did before, that's the difference. And there'd be resignations if he was blocked again.Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Thu May 14, 2026 6:01 pm No way the NEC can turn him down again.Why not? What's changed since February?
Burnham still has two years to serve in his "dream job" as Mayor of Manchester, is that no-longer important?
Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Thu May 14, 2026 6:52 pm He can look at the numbers as well as the next man, and he's not going to get a better chance. He has to go for it.Perhaps, if that really is the nature of his driving ambition. But as I’ve already said, it looks increasingly like a massive gamble on Burnham’s part. Which, in my view, does him no credit whatsoever.
Some essentials cost nothing: electoral reform, abolishing the House of Lords, while accelerating rejoining the EU. It’s baffling that this government has been so timid.What does "accelerating rejoining the EU" even mean in practice? We aren't rejoining, and the EU would tell us to come back when there was cross party consensus. So I'm not baffled.
More like Brian Marwood. When he was an analyst[…]