First off, I was continuing my response to the post you made earlier:madd0ct0r wrote: ↑2018-09-07 04:40am 1) were the tories whipped? How many rebelled anyway?
2) how many labour mps voted to support?
3) if whipped how many would rebel anyway?
4) of labs voting leave, how many are in constituency that voted leave? How many would lose their seat if they did otherwise?
5) why the fuck arent you blamibg the party in power who is responsible for both referendum, leave campaign and current negotiations?
Running by your logic if I support keeping the UK in the EU or least the single market / EEA and I don't want to see the UK crash out in a hard-Brexit (even if only temporarily)... then Corbyn is a big part of the problem, since (for whatever reasons) he is going along with what the Conservatives are doing, and when it counts (such as the House of Lords Amendment to keep the UK in the EEA) Corbyn has successfully whipped a good chunk of his party into abstaining.madd0ct0r wrote:Don't forget the purpose of the refenredum - to break labour in england like the scottish ref broke labour in scotland and the vote reform broke the lib dems.
That was the reason for the referendum, and the reason for the brinksmanship - cameron let it slip and slip to force the labour party to rescue the remain campign and take the punishement at the polls. As it stands, Labour at the minute can still point to the party in power who started and are wildly mismanaging the whole thing.
There is little justification for a paternalistic labour party to go against it's core base's inclination. They are elected to represent their base, not to vote the opposite way "becuase we know better." If they'd remembered that before then the referendum may not have gone that way.
BUT the labour base is turning, and labour's lead is growing: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/ ... t-13186920
At this point any action just lessens the pain the tories will suffer and slows the increase of labour support.
The Conservatives must bear the bulk blame since they are the ones in power... but this does not make Corbyn blameless and immune from criticism.
Incidentally, I had said to you earlier that my criticism of Corbyn does not mean that I excuse the Conservatives for their behaviour, which you seem to have missed.