Why Corbyn Will Win
Tomorrow the British Labour Party will announce the results of their second Leadership election in a year. Every expectation is that Jeremy Corbyn will win by a greater margin (60% - 40%) than he did the first time.
I am certainly going to revisit the mendacity and hubris of the Traitors at length, in depth, and repeatedly, because they illustrate so much of the Neoliberal sickness that infests our own politics but today I want to highlight the positive reasons he has won.
Jeremy Corbyn and the Problem With ‘Electability’
By ELLIE MAE O’HAGAN, The New York Times
SEPT. 22, 2016
Is the Labour Party engaging in an act of collective madness? How else to explain a rush to support a guy who can’t manage his own party, much less win a general election? To understand Mr. Corbyn’s remarkable support, you need to know the party’s recent history. What we are seeing now is a corrective to what happened during the years when Tony Blair rebranded the party as “New Labour.”
Under Mr. Blair, the party became professionalized. Activists, previously an important part of Labour’s organization, were reduced to foot soldiers with little influence on policy. Trade unions were marginalized. Members of Parliament were rewarded for obedience rather than talent.
New Labour won three elections, but its focus on spin and brand management alienated the traditional base. The leadership ignored grass-roots supporters — the people who go to local Labour Party meetings, who canvass on its behalf, who attend party conferences.
In addition to pushing the activists to the side, Mr. Blair made the party more conservative. It’s true that Mr. Blair fulfilled some progressive agenda items as prime minister, from expanding L.G.B.T. rights to introducing a minimum wage, but at the same time the party abandoned its traditional socialist values.
One of Mr. Blair’s first acts as prime minister was to introduce university tuition fees, leading to widespread student protests. His support for the Iraq war was similarly loathed by the party’s base. So was his attitude toward capitalism in a party with deep socialist roots. In 1998, his political mentor, Peter Mandelson, declared that he was “intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich.”
Mr. Corbyn wants to reverse many of these positions. He vehemently opposes foreign military intervention and says he wants to rein in income inequality. He has even said he would renationalize industries. He also wants to give party members power to help shape policy, and to elect his top team.
For most rank-and-file members, the no-confidence vote was not just a vote against Mr. Corbyn, but against this ideological sea change, an impression reinforced by the presence of Mr. Blair’s allies at the forefront of the attempts to unseat Mr. Corbyn. During the leadership campaign in 2015, Mr. Blair himself excoriated Mr. Corbyn and his supporters. In July 2015, he told Labour members that voting for Mr. Corbyn could lead to “annihilation” and said, “If your heart’s with Jeremy Corbyn, get a transplant.”
Thus, many Labour members have viewed challenges to the Corbyn leadership not as about competence, but as about ensuring the left does not gain a significant foothold in the party.
Many of Mr. Corbyn’s opponents are tearing their hair out because his supporters are sticking by him even though everyone seems to believe he is unelectable. But the concept of “electability” is fraught within the party. Members of Parliament and commentators hostile to Mr. Corbyn argue that winning elections should be the Labour Party’s primary goal. And to win elections, they say, the party must support policies that the party’s base opposes, like cutting welfare.
But the issue is not that the Labour base would rather lose elections and remain left-wing; it’s that capitulating to British voters’ more right-wing inclinations does not seem to have worked for the party. In the 2015 general election, Labour’s candidate for prime minister was Ed Miliband, a social democrat who promised “controls on immigration,” and to establish stricter welfare policies. He still lost.
So even when Labour had a moderate, allegedly electable candidate, Britain still ended up with a Conservative government. Rank-and-file members therefore started to see the electability question as a cover for moving the party to the right. Mr. Blair embodied their worst fears when, in a 2015 speech on Labour’s future, he said: “I wouldn’t want to win on an old-fashioned leftist platform. Even if I thought it was the route to victory, I wouldn’t take it.”
The Labour Party has always been an uneasy coalition, and its internal factions are much more varied than simply Blairites and Corbynites. But the attempts to get rid of Mr. Corbyn have pushed Labour’s biggest ideological clash to center stage: on one side, proponents of a professionalized, media-friendly party whose role is to win elections so it can make modest social reforms; on the other, supporters of a social movement that aims to change society starting with the grass roots — but for whom winning parliamentary power is not a goal to be pursued at any cost.
Since New Labour’s first election victory in 1997, the British left has found itself virtually excommunicated from politics. These people are not stupid or crazy. In Mr. Corbyn, they have identified an opportunity to reinsert themselves into public life and to return the Labour Party to its socialist values. They recognize this may be the only chance they have. It’s entirely reasonable that they are taking it.
Get that? Your voters don't support your policies. Your tactics lose elections. You are personally offensive and insulting to the poor souls who believed in your lies despite the many times you have betrayed them, by implying they are stupid for not blindly accepting anything you say no matter how self serving, corrupt, and contradictory.
Why Jeremy Corbyn Still Wins
By Richard Seymour, teleSur
21 September 2016
What changed? To look at politics with eyes attuned to the norm for the last 40 years, one would expect that every development in the intervening 12 months should have weakened Corbyn’s position, rather than strengthened it.
He has been lambasted in the press. A study carried out by the London School of Economics found that some 75 percent of news coverage seriously misrepresents Corbyn.
Every major news angle has been an attack, from the BBC’s false reporting of a march outside the home of anti-war MP Stella Creasy, to the inflated stories of anti-Semitism under his leadership. He has been assailed by parliamentary colleagues. Even before his election, there were briefings that he would be overthrown “within days.”
...
As good a place to start as any in exploring this is the recent referendum on membership of the European Union, in which just over half of the population voted for Brexit. In justifying their coup against Jeremy Corbyn, Labour MPs often cited his supposedly ineffectual or half-hearted support for the "remain" campaign, thus blaming him for the outcome. As the psephologist John Curtice points out, the evidence suggests that the real cause of the result was a collapse in support for Remain among Conservative voters in the weeks before the referendum.However, discounting for bad faith among Corbyn’s Labour critics, it seems likely that many of them simply don’t get why "remain" lost. Certainly, racism was a central part of the Brexit sentiment, but the function of racism was to organize an existing reservoir of anguish, resentment and bewilderment generated by the economic privation and social costs to much of the population visited by the credit crunch and its austerian sequel. John Lanchester described the “dominant note” of “bafflement, bewilderment and disorientation” in the country, the sense of having lost again and again, finally of having lost control of the country.
The "leave" campaign got this, while the government-led "remain" campaign spoke in a technocratic language, stressing the benefits of trade with Europe and security cooperation, which in no way touched on these wellsprings of resentment. Remain invoked expertise—economists, the IMF, the OECD, the ECB, and reams of studies suggesting that leaving would be a disaster. But these were the same experts who had championed globalization as an unmitigated boon while large parts of the country went into a protracted decline, and who emerged tainted after the credit crunch blew apart their credibility.
The politicians running the campaign weren’t better placed. For decades, participation in the electoral system had been in decline, a trend that accelerated in the U.K. and across powerful industrial democracies in the 2000s. Then there is the media, whose role in a representative democracy is to represent our major national political debates back to us, as if in our own voice. In fact, what we always got was a soothing establishment voice—but as long as enough of us felt “taken into account,” we continued to trust the media. But trust in politicians and journalists has been in steep decline for years, as many people are effectively excluded from the political system and ignored in the media spectacle.
...
Corbyn articulated varied discontents with the existing political settlement. He spoke to students, for whom the apparatus of supposed “meritocracy” had been trashed by tuition fees and marketization. He spoke to young workers, locked out of the labor market and the housing market. He spoke to trade unionists, for whom austerity is destroying their livelihoods and organizations. He spoke to trade union leaders who had watched their influence in a neoliberalized Labour Party plummet. He spoke to disenfranchised, formerly core Labour supporters who had voted with their feet under the Blair and Brown years. He spoke to users of under-funded public services and privatised utilities, who have been overcharged and underserved. It was clear by 2015, following Labour’s dismal defeat at the hands of the Conservatives, that it was simply not up to facing these problems. Something had to radically change, first in Labour, then in British society.
...
Corbyn often has “the moral clarity of a priest.” By putting these points in simple axiomatic statements to Labour members and the wider public, he sparked unprecedented excitement for a Labour leadership race. By contrast, his opponents, in a way that prefigured the mandarin panic of the official "remain" campaign, found their infantilized, poll-tested slogans failing, and drew a blank.Politicians who couldn’t but see Corbyn’s victory as some sort of joke, struggled over the ensuing year to find the killer comeback, hoping for some political esprit de l’escalier. To no avail. Every zinger has fallen flat. Heckling and sabotage, briefing against him, plotting his downfall, and leaking to the press, at a time when politicians and the media are widely held in contempt, didn’t do the job.
Corbyn declined to be trolled. He shamed them, simply by continuing to articulate more convincing answers to the crisis of British politics than they were able to. Simply because he could talk persuasively on that level, whereas they—often products of a gilded generation of special advisers and technocrats—have never had to.
And he faced down their coup, because his understanding of politics is broader than theirs. They had the political and media establishment, but he understood the power of movements in even a failing democracy. He appealed to that, and in the ensuing ferment drew tens of thousands of new members and supporters into the Labour Party.
That is why, for now, Corbyn still wins.
(Of course it's cross posted from The Stars Hollow Gazette and DocuDharma)

Comments
Vent Hole
I hope Corbyn wins & I will be looking forward to
your report & analysis.
"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"
Corbyn gives me hope
UK Labour Party membership tripled under Corbyn.
A Labour Party that isn't,
A Labour Party that isn't, isn't worth voting for, any more than is an undemocratic Democratic Party. And Blaring against the public interest isn't likely to create public interest in 'austerity' for them to enrich the relative few - at least not in the aware.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Corbyn is the real deal.
while Blair is to Labour what WJC was to Democrats
and just as scummy as clinton, bush and obama.
I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish
"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"
Heard from Margaret Kimberley
Blair and the Clintons used the same consulting firm.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teneo
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
I hope Labour forgets Blair & remembers Benn
"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"
Personally, I hope it's more
Personally, I hope it's more along the lines of 'Never to forgive, never to forget'. Blair was a con in designer workman's clothing...
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
You got me there. You're right: Labour needs to remember &
prosecute Blair for war crimes using the newly completed UK report on the subject when they return to power.
"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"
Well Corbyn has won!
And like Dubya, Blair should be in jail for all did, the Chilcott Report didn't
do him any favors, but while Blair might have his day in court I sadly don't see that happening to Dubya.
I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish
"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"
Heard from Margaret Kimberley
Corbyn has brought new members into the party which
is something neoliberals don't want.
I think Corbyn should publicly call for unity while purging the Blairites.
The potential seems to be there to grow the party membership even more, and I hope that occurs.
"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"
Exactly
"I think Corbyn should publicly call for unity while purging the Blairites."
And the opposite of what the DNC did.
I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish
"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"
Heard from Margaret Kimberley
Corbyn, or anyone else, can't change anyone's mind so, since
time is of the essence, get rid of them as quickly as possible. I think it would be smart for Corbyn to tour the UK's rust belt giving very public newsworthy speeches as both a cover for the purge and to recruit new Labour Party members.
Best of luck and good wishes to him. May he serve as a good example to the Democratic party.
"The justness of individual land right is not justifiable to those to whom the land by right of first claim collectively belonged"
That shouldn't come as a surprise
Globalization isn't meant for us, only for them, with them being the pols and the 1% that feed them.
I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish
"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"
Heard from Margaret Kimberley
Blair joined hands (and armies) with them, after all --
... and "joyfully --"
When Cicero had finished speaking, the people said “How well he spoke”.
When Demosthenes had finished speaking, the people said “Let us march”.
Britain?
Is this the British Labour party (the part opposed to the real Labour leader, Corbyn, that is) you're talking about, or the US Democratic Party? That paragraph sounds an awful lot like Hillary Clinton and Co. (including Monsieur le Petit Napoleon) to me......
The way things are going in the major English-speaking nations of the world, you need a freaking scorecard to keep track......
"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar
"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides
The Five Eyes tend to move together, sometimes
with a time delay when necessary...Canada wasn't ready for their GW Bush as soon as we were, for instance.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
Koch-sucking Harper? Mini-me
Koch-sucking Harper? Mini-me Bush? with extra-petulant sulks when he couldn't get his own way, either internationally, or 'because Canadians have too many rights', as one of his official minions (can't recall which, off-hand, but they probably all complained a lot about this) was quoted as saying. He'd never have managed it without whoever supplied the US companies cheating him in... Not room here for the swearing required to adequately discuss that traitor.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Yes. (growl)
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
Any similarities...
a Reader may find between the Labour and Democratic Parties are entirely the fault of the Labour and Democratic Parties, not the Author or Reader.
All funded and run by similar
All funded and run by similar self-interests intent upon global domination in order to freely pick over whatever remains of the corpse before the oxygen runs out.
Edit: in reference to this comment:
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Wow. Like Bernie, but without the
(possibly engineered by intimidation) compromise.
Crossing my fingers.
"Let somebody go free from this Goddamned prison we are living in!"
--Ursula LeGuin, The Dispossessed
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
Actually, Bernie took the
Actually, Bernie took the only route available where he did not have to concede to Clinton or release his delegates to her at the
ConventionHer Royal Coronation, so he's still in line for the nomination he actually won. Too bad that rules - and laws - don't apply to the Clintons or TPTB any more than does basic decency or anything other than mindless, ruthless greed.Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Go Corbyn
and more importantly go left Labour. So how come Bernie refused to face the Democratic coup? Well actually it's a by-partisan coup in the USA,USA, USA. When The New Democratic candidate, The Mad Bomber, starts kissing Kissinger it's enough to make you twist and shout. At least Brexist got rid of the dead pig head fucker Cameron. I'm getting tired of cowardly people everywhere including this country being so damn afraid to the constant 25% of pig ignorant racist RW assholes taking over that they elect and empower the so called 'lesser evil'.
This time around the lesser evil is spectacularly evil and is making no bones about it. Openly rigging a primary and going scary nationalistic and heating up the Cold War cause Putin/Trump. I do not believe that populism and political resistance always leads to RW fascism as we're constantly told. Corbyn's a good example and so were the Greek people who voted in Syriza. The EU and the global bankster's did the Greek leftist's in but if you ask me it's going to be a long haul prying the vampire Squid off humanities face. I don't despair of get all afraid of empowering the RW when ordinary people somehow manage to make a start.
People wondering why Bernie
People wondering why Bernie didn't spit defiance instead of keeping his head at the Convention over the stolen nomination always makes me think of the suicidal Charge of the Light Brigade, where sword-bearing men and theirhorses were sent to an inevitable doom against cannon to no purpose...
Their lives and potential usefulness were wasted, but their nobility was glorified and a wonderful poem written.
Instead, in this case, we still have Bernie, as well as the proof of his resourcefulness, experience, knowledge, wisdom, self-control and willingness to disengage at a high personal cost when a hopeless battle would be fatal to winning the war, in order to 'live to fight another day' for his country, people, and life on the planet. I like this result better than the one below, where mindless loyalty to orders/an ideal of displays of bravery over sense and strategy obtains.
http://www.nationalcenter.org/ChargeoftheLightBrigade.html
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Agreed:
Cowards. Shaking in their boots.
Go Corbyn!
It's Like the Establishment Is Wearing Glasses That Hide Part
of the visible spectrum.
Only the corporate and shiny parts are seen. The bone and gristle, the seedy underbelly, and the soft human parts do not appear to exist.
I'd love to see this metaphor fleshed out. It would be amazing to "see" things from the Establishment perspective. It might be a powerful metaphor.
“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu
Sigh...
I could. As Hemingway says all you have to do is put your fingers on the keys and bleed.
On the other hand people would hate me forever. Read some Ayn Rand instead. The Fountainhead is probably the best expression, Atlas Shrugged merely 50 Shades of Grey for Libertarians.
In a nutshell it is a warped version of Calvinist predestination- I am a unique snowflake and my success and wealth are proof of my superiority. Empathy, emotion, and ethics are weaknesses to be exploited.
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
'My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!'
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
Kind of Tough to Tease Out the Moral of That Story.
I'm not talking about lofty or clever prose. I'm talking about video and images or gut punch language -- extremely crude and jarring prose.
I believe you, and many on the Left, could do this. The problem is that irony and satire have pretty much gone extinct. I'm afraid that it would come off as un-believable.
Dr. Strangelove comes to mind for some reason... I think that was a bit too clever at the time. Probably like modern day wicked snark.
“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu
Try Hunter Thompson's "John Wayne/Hammerhead Shark" piece
On page 436 of “Fear & Loathing In America: The Brutal Odyssey of An Outlaw Journalist,” Thompson singles out the dumb brute worshipped as the Ultimate American to eviscerate the mentality that leads to imperialism, exceptionalism, consumerism that blinds us and gives the keys to the 1% to keep doing the damage.
Here's some of that inimitable vigorous, jarring prose for you. Never fails to get my blood pumping, hope it does yours.
From “John Wayne/Hammerhead Piece”"
Did Corbyn win? I got a lot going on here and haven't checked to confirm.
"Bloody brilliant!" as many are surely saying over pints in pubs all over Britain today.
I'm stoked. Clear repudiation of the fucking rotting pestilence of Neoliberalism and its shameful protectorates who should be banished from politics forever. Happened here too, but they fucking stole it from Bernie.
"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"
- Kurt Vonnegut
I wrote a diary about this in Feb 2015
when there were very few of us here on this site; I'm gonna republish it.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
Yes, please! And thanks!
Yes, please! And thanks!
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
You're welcome!
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
... In a nutshell it is a
The mindset of the predatory psychopath. The global rule of which, nothing will survive.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.