London-based writer. Often climbing.

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Joined 3 年前
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Cake day: 2023年6月29日

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  • There are lots of other examples of them blocking or voting against development, including green development, but often as they’re in opposition it’s not enough to block it entirely (or they team up with whoever the local blockers are and so only contribute to, rather than cause, the problem).

    Their default position on everything is ‘This is good, but not perfect, so we’re going to vote against it’, which then leads to nothing happening or just to bizarre contradictions. It’s not just housing and pylons, either: look at their position on HS2 and it’s the same thing: ‘More public transport! But not that.’ Or even on the oil and gas crisis it’s the same thing, with them now arguing that the government should subsidise scarce fossil fuel resources (which is baffling on its own), but not do anything to increase our own production (which is a contradiction). Again, it’s ‘Do this, but not like that’ and the default to stasis.






















  • There were undoubtedly some Leavers who voted Labour, but the idea that it was Labour’s ‘core’ or ‘traditional’ voters turning against them is largely untrue. The more working class or blue collar Leavers were mostly people who rarely/never voted consistently at all, or they were blue collar Conservatives, who have always made up a significant chunk of the working class but never really voted Labour.

    So, they sort of ‘look like’ a concept of traditional Labour voters, but the actual people were not Labour voters. Ironically, the actual Labour Leavers looked a lot more like Jeremy Corbyn: the old-school, often middle-class Bennites!