Not exact matches
A war erupted inside the
Labour Party, the government's official opposition,
over leader Corbyn's decision to make the party's parliamentarians vote in favour of May triggering
Article 50.
In this
article, Kai Oppermann and Paul Taggart argue that Cameron's pledge originated in three interrelated developments: the policy of previous
Labour governments; rifts within the Conservative party
over Europe; and the rise of UKIP.
I direct you to hundreds of
articles over the years, various pamphlets and suchlike which reveal that I'm a libertarian with a mission to destroy the
Labour Party.
Labour's position was unclear
over the weekend, with Jeremy Corbyn warning the party could block
article 50 if its core demands on Brexit were not met, before the deputy leader, Tom Watson, said the party would not do so.
Prior to Lewis» compelling
article, another columnist, Rafael Behr, noted that the «unfolded triptych» of Corbyn's responses — or lack thereof — to the Skripal Salisbury attack, antisemitism and Brexit necessarily raised questions
over Labour's future.
Stephen Bush
over at the New Statesman has written an interesting
article about the mountain that faces
Labour at the next election.
In an Observer
article, the former
Labour leader wrote: «In the leadership election, we are not choosing the chair of a discussion group who can preside
over two years or more of fascinating debate while the Tories play hell with cuts in local services and public investment.»
•
Over the summer of 2008, after David Miliband's rallying cry for change in a Guardian
article, Blair said that a change in the
Labour leadership would be inevitable unless Brown improved.
Mr McDonnell, who is one of Jeremy Corbyn's closest allies, made clear that
Labour would not look to stop
Article 50 going through, but would take on the Government
over the upcoming negotiations with Brussels.
The Telegraph now have another
article on this poll on their website, Tory lead
over Labour hits 21 - year high.
Numerous
articles in the
Labour blogosphere - particularly Labourlist - have channeled grassroots outrage
over the rejection of popular candidates and their replacement with hard core leftists.
I suggest that
labour - uncut, goes off, thinks up a few sensible policies, that are relevant to a government of 2020, maybe has a few ideas on the EU referendum, and accepts that the Corbyn fans of Students who read a
article about how, capitalism is bad, because there was enough money for everyone in the 80's, and the Tories only got in because people who voted for them were dumb and read the Daily mail, because you're not going to convince anyone that
labour Will be destroyed in 2020 ′ because the Tories may implode
over infighting like they did with Westland or ousting Thatcher, but win in 87 ′ and 92 ′ anyway
Many found the film tedious and
laboured, but it has been winding its way into full - blown cult status
over the past decade with strange
articles like this one.