jared_7 wrote:Sandydragon wrote:jared_7 wrote:
Surely the old left went through the transition from Governments focussing on full employment, to using labour and the unemployed as a deliberate tool to reduce inflation and keep wages low to control the costs of production?
Surely they would know that immigrants have nothing to do with jobs or housing, ideology does?
I disagree. I live in Stoke on Trent, a very safe Labur seat. I grew up in Newport, a Labour heartland. Both have a degree of immigration which statistically isn't that significant, yet anti-immigration is rife. The BNP have had local electoral success in Stoke because of disillusioned Labour voters who are
fed up of their party not listening to them. I note your comments about ideology, but that isn't something many labour supporters are worried about - they are concerned at how many immigrants are moving in and (allegedly) taking their jobs. That may not match up with left ideology, but its the fact on the ground, as witnessed by the results from last night.
Not listening to what, exactly? I guess thats what I'm digging at, if their complaints are a result of them buying into ideological dogma and the real Labour no longer represents those new views, then its them that have moved away from the left.
I just can't understand how anyone who is truly left on the political spectrum can see immigration as an issue.
Because no working class individual is ever right or left. Many traditional Labour voters did so because the party stood up for their rights. If any party stands up for their rights now, they will follow them. As Labour lurched right under Blair, the party does not stand up for them, so they do not necessarily follow them...
Which is the issue. There is no party for the people. Corbyn may have decent ideas, but he is an "intellectual" leftie. He does not communicate, and the party does not work for the working class.
Those people have not lurched right, as they were never left in the first place. They have always been a combination of policies based upon what works, or would seem to work, for them. Every party in government fails to notice this, one of them on purpose.
This whole shambles is a complete failure of communication. A clear message trumps a jumbled one every time, even if that message is wrong.