The Saturday Boy
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Where I think electability comes into it is that Labour need to persuade both previous Conservative and indeed now SNP voters to want to vote Labour. And the big political shift is the Conservative Party has lurched miles to the right leaving a lot of centrist leaning votes to be hoovered up. The Johnson purge pissed off a lot of people.
That’s what Starmer seems to be trying to do. I’m not sure Corbyn could get those votes (although he did get mine I suppose!).
This is interesting. Your comment above isn't a general smear of the left employed by some others recently...there was a reason why you voted Corbyn and there's no way you could be described as a "lefty".
In 2017 I voted with great enthusiasm for the polices being put forward at that election by Labour and Brexit wasn't a big issue for me. To put that into context, I have voted Labour at every election since I turned 18 because I am anti Tory and where I live only Labour can beat the Tories in a general election.
In 2017, many centrists voted for Labour. The reasons for this are myriad, for some it will be anyone but a Tory (tactical voting), others an anti-Brexit sentiment and then there would be those who believed in the policy offer. This is no different to any election, people have different reasons for voting. By 2019, Labour was such a mess that they would have taken a hit in all those groups - many anti Tory voters would have looked at other options (or not voted), Brexit had become a non-issue for the Labour Party as they were no longer seen as an anti-Brexit vote and their policy offer was made up on the hoof.
2017 Labour was electable because in that moment they had a number of factors working in their favour - factors that they managed to screw up over the course of the next two years. I am not a conspiracy theorist about this, Labour's failures between 2017 and 2019 were of their own making. Corbyn should have gone in 2017 but frankly there were no credible alternatives to him and the left wing infighting was just getting into full swing...forget about external factors, Labour was imploding from within.
Corbyn got more votes than many of his predecessors, he gets that number from across the centre, centre-left and left vote. Does he win in Tony Blair territory, generally no but in 1997 Stephen Twigg took Michael Portillo's seat....Labour won the same seat in 2017 and 2019 having not held it since 2005. Only Tony Blair (1997 and 2001) and Harold Wilson (1970) have secured a higher percentage of the vote than Corbyn in 2017. For all his supposed unelectability, something happened in 2017 that suggests otherwise.
That said, it is a moot point, for all the arguments about 2017, ultimately he lost the election and was not Prime Minister...2017 is not evidence that he was unelectable though. Paddy voted for him.