The article writer has a good summary:
There are three types of campaign you can run during an election: ‘it’s time for a change’ (normally an opposition message, but a governing party can also campaign like this, as Boris Johnson did in 2019); ‘give us time to finish the job’ (the standard incumbent’s message); or (the last resort option) ‘you might not like us, but at least we’re not as bad as the other lot’.
All this albatross can tell is, if he’s saying that, there’s an election a coming.
“labour will erase all of the last 13 years of tory rule. do you really want THAT” - rishi
(nevermind the fact that in most ways they won’t considering keir and wes streeting’s privitisation plans for the nhs)
It seems people recall “square one” fondly given where the Tories have lead the UK
The good old days, when you only had to try 2 times to get through to the doctors.
I remember when I used to have a dentist. Was that at square 1?
“Square one” sounds good to me!
If only there really was a party offering to undo every law the conservative and coalition governments have passed and return us to a time before they existed.
That party would be the best party.
Sadly that isn’t on offer and even Labour intend to keep this mess of a country mostly without any reverting of changes at all.
The Labour party is currently trying not to give the Tories any ammunition to use against them in an election campaign. That’s why they seem to be aligning themselves with the current Conservative talking points. Come a successful general election they will back away from the Tory position and make some changes. I fucking hope.
@Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk 🤞
Yes, indeed, very much so.
Rishi is going to be the next Gordon Brown isn’t he? I would piss myself if he got hot mic’d on the campaign trail describing the electorate as “bigoted people”.
I’m not sure I’d be comfortable with Sunak trying to make himself look like Brown.
Brown was a flawed character who did a good job seeing off catastrophe during the financial crisis, then got dropped into No.10.
Sunak just sort of nodded along while the right wingers went nuts.Brown, for sure, was (is?) the bigger figure. But let’s look at the similarities. Both chancellor, both took difficult financial decisions during a crisis (global financial crash / COVID), both went on the become unelected prime ministers, both resided over imploding parties, both utterly devoid of charm port warmth as PM (remember Brown chairgate?), both doomed to fight and unwinnable General Election. I don’t think Sunak use trying to make himself look like Brown, but he is in many respects.
I never actually used to like Brown growing up. It genuinely was the charmless sulk vibes he had. But on reflection he did a lot of difficult work when in office and put in place sensible policies that lead to growth. I just think he was never destined for the top job and he should never have taken it. Some people are just better at being back office workers, and I don’t mean that as a slur. I’m actually now really impressed with what he’s done out of office, his ideas for how to hold the Union together and bring prosperity to all party’s of the UK are really worth thinking about - something I hope Starmer takes on board
Sunak is… well. A caretaker for a year.
Lol, is that really the message?
‘Labour will undo everything the Tories have done’ [This PPB brought to you by the Conservative party, apparently.]
there is a lesson you must learn