It does include that journalist, in the same wave that Tory Gove's wife has a column in the Daily Mail. It's a very small world in british politics. As I said before, if Corbyn had campaigned the way Labour did in the Scottish referendum, then Labour would have been rewarded the same way at the next General Election. Why should he sacrifice his party to keep Cameron in power? Just like the Scottish referndum, the anger over immigration in the north not something that would go away afterwards, all neatly resolved. It'd rumble on, stoked by papers and UKIP wannabees.Thanas wrote:Sure, you may go and dismiss it as the next great rightwing leftist conspiracy and maybe it is. On the other hand, I have been following the referendum closely and Corbyn seemed disinterested. Heck, he even went on vacation. You may disagree and say it is all a long-planned coup by the anti-corbyn conspiracy (which apparently includes the guardian now) but I think there is truth to the charges.
This is a referendum promised by Cameron, designed to undermine labour and UKIP and cement the oik in power. It failed. Blaming Corbyn is clearly easier than examining the deeper issue. And I'm not at all surprised the Remain guy is looking scapegoat who is not himself. Corbyn should have just clicked his fingers instead of travelling and making speeches that the papers barely reported. As I've said before in this thread, Remain's arguments were complete dross for speaking to the heartlands. Who the fuck cares about economic impacts when you've been struggling for decades anyway? It's change you want, something different to the status quo of smug middle class MPs who live in London and visit their constieuncies onyl for dinnerparties with other smug middle classers.
I actually watched one of Corbyn's speeches.
"This is a Tory Brexit, pushed by people who want to undermine worker's rights, your rights. These people do not have your intrest in mind when they talk to you."
That's about the only line that 1) works against the similarly emotionally charged leave campaign, 2) posistions Labour to not be eviserated at the election following. Pity that the Blairite's couldn't stomach it and preffered to stick to the conservative economic line.