P/T Indie wrote:None could they really not find anyone better than those lot is there no new upcoming blood in the Labour party?
The Tories must be pissing themselves laughing all the way to 2020
Keith wrote:It's a strange one for me. Corbyn is almost certainly unelectable in a General Election, but Labour need to return to their roots in many ways. Labour has lost sight of its core reason for existing and the people it should be supporting and who should, in turn, be supporting Labour. Blair tried to out Tory the Tories. The SNP have proved that people in Scotland at least, will support a party that want to protect the NHS, education and working people rather than the Tories, who want to privatise the NHS, education and give tax cuts to the wealthy. The last General Election was English people saying why have Tory 'light' when they can have full fat Tories. Sadly, I can't see Labour winning the next election regardless of who they choose. Perhaps they need Corbyn to wake them from their slumber and they may manage to put up a real fight in ten years time. What, if anything, will remain of the NHS etc by then, I dread to think.
If I was voting in the leadership contest, I'd probably want to vote Corbyn but actually vote Burnham when the moment actually arrived. I think Corbyn is the most principled of the four. I like the fact that he has the lowest expenses claim of any MP. I'm impressed that he gets the night bus home. But he blew it for me in the Channel 4 News interview with Krishnan Guru-Murthy regarding 'our friends Hammas', not because of what he said but because he appeared to believe it wasn't a legitimate line of questioning and he got annoyed at even being asked.
Gone_Shrimping wrote:The stronger the economy is , the better it is for providing finance for the NHS.
mrpotatohead wrote:right bill, you actually just ''unclarified'' things, the post says labour leadership vote, and no you are saying general election vote, are we to take it that you, like a liberal, cannot make up your mind what you mean?
Keith wrote:Gone_Shrimping wrote:The stronger the economy is , the better it is for providing finance for the NHS.
Nonsense! The Tories fundamentally don't believe in an NHS, they believe in a profit driven, insurance funded health service. Can't afford top insurance? You get what you can afford... ...or more to the point 'deserve'. If you are poor, it is because you didn't work hard enough. It's a simple concept but it worked for Thatcher and her supporters ever since.
In March Jeremy Hunt signed the biggest ever NHS privatisation deal, worth £780 million. That is while they are still pretending the NHS isn't up for sale.
Get that BUPA insurance quickly. Can't afford it? Well that's your own fault.
Freez wrote:So if everyone who voted Tory joined BUPA, the NHS wouldn't be as under as much pressure?
Good idea, crack on everyone!
Gone_Shrimping wrote:Well you might not like it but if more people joined B.U.P.A. the NHS would benefit.
The B.U.P.A. people when needing hospital would be in a B.U.P.A. hospital and not occupying a place in an NHS hospital. They would still be paying their Taxes and National Insurance into the Treasury kitty even though they will not be using the service.
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot] and 23 guests