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Politics

Lifelong Labour voters: how are you feeling?

156 replies

VerlynWebbe · 11/04/2024 17:25

I ask because DH and I were discussing this last night.
He is of the opinion that he'll do anything that gets the Tories out, even if he has to hold his nose a bit.
I can't do it, though. I can't get over their inaction over the genocide in Gaza. Like, I can't imagine walking into a polling booth and setting aside that massive abdication of morals.
But I know things are fucked in Britain as well.
I really find it upsetting and wondered if anyone else feels the same.

OP posts:
Zonder · 12/04/2024 12:20

Excellent point @Kneidlach

Zonder · 12/04/2024 12:20

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Exactly. I'm stunned anyone is still believing this Tory lie.

kirinm · 12/04/2024 12:28

I will vote labour as I always have but I am becoming increasingly concerned about how much pandering to Tory voters is going on. I hope that this is a strategy rather than the planned direction.

I could never vote in a way that risked the Tories getting back in.

HaveANiceFuckingDay · 12/04/2024 12:32

TheFairyCaravan · 11/04/2024 17:43

I’m not risking another term of the Tories. I just can’t do it.

As a voter since i was 18 i can't do It

Nicebloomers · 12/04/2024 12:37

I have to vote tactically to even stand a chance of getting rid of the Tory MP here. Probably Lib Dem. But I am a bit disillusioned by Labour in general I have to say. The Gaza thing in particular is very depressing. My thoughts align with your DH on this one. I’ll be holding my nose.

Charlie2121 · 12/04/2024 12:39

I don’t think I could ever vote for Labour. It’s quite possible that none of the parties really represent anything I’d want to support.

Its a fairly moot point though as the Conservatives will win in my constituency anyway regardless of how poorly they perform overall in the election.

Despite moving areas a few times I’ve never lived in one without a Conservative MP going right back to childhood.

kirinm · 12/04/2024 12:54

VenetiaHallisWellPosh · 12/04/2024 10:53

As a PP said, I can't vote for Labour as it is now with Starmer in charge, because he disciplined his MPs who joined unions on picket lines during the height of the NR strikes. I find that despicable.

That, and Starmer's fudging of women's rights issues. Oh, and that w@nkbadger Wes Streeting wanting to bring in more private companies into the NHS. And the fookin LEZs in London. And the pay per mile proposal by Sadiq Khan (I'm voting Count Binface in the Mayoral Election). I will think of more.

My MP is Labour and only comes sniffing around when she wants my vote. She can foxtrot Oscar.

I should be a moderate Labour voter. I am a union member, I'm working class, I believe in the fairer distribution of wealth and opportunities for all...but no amount of nose-holding is gonna persuade me to put an X next to them.

In the GE I'm voting for the most obscure candidate or spoiling the ballot.

He had to discipline them and that idiot Sam Tarry was behaving the way he was out of spite.

I don't agree that they should have been banned from supporting in the first place though but I can also see why Starmer feels like he has to avoid falling into the usual Tory trap. I've just said in my own post that I am trusting that the pandering to the Tory voters is just for the purposes of being elected but I'm starting to be concerned that it may not be.

CambridgeCat · 12/04/2024 13:06

But Kier Starmer, actual human rights lawyer, could have spoken out when it became clear that there's a case for genocide, and could have challenged government over arms sales. Instead he's hedged his bets with a wan call for some sort of ceasefire - the barest of bare minimums. I'm disgusted.

OP you've no doubt heard the Ming vase analogy. Starmer is in a precarious position. We desperately, desperately need a new government and realistically that can only be Labour, but until recently the party was split and utterly toxic, much of the arguments relating to their response to anti-semitism and Corbyn's approach / views surrounding this. It's an absolute minefield for Labour / Starmer and very very difficult to navigate as as soon as he calls out genocide the Tories will cry antisemitism and compare him to Corbyn, say the party hasn't changed and possibly lose the red wall voters who will hear Corbyn being mentioned on repeat.

You might believe he should take a more principled position but realistically at the expense of the election, when he knows he can only affect actual change if he gets elected? He's not going against his morals, he's just trying to tip toe towards the finish line with the vase intact, which ultimately is going to be the more effectual outcome.

Piggywaspushed · 12/04/2024 13:08

Those of you saying Tories will win in your constituency so it makes no odds, don't be so sure. I live in Dorries Land. Now Labour. That was a huge majority.

Motheroffourdragons · 12/04/2024 13:18

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CambridgeCat · 12/04/2024 13:30

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I am deciding which champagne to save up for, and look forward to getting it chilled ready for October(?)

Zonder · 12/04/2024 13:37

Lee Anderson jumped ship @Motheroffourdragons

Motheroffourdragons · 12/04/2024 13:38

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Zonder · 12/04/2024 13:40

First and last hopefully - and probably short lived!

marmaladeandpeanutbutter · 12/04/2024 13:50

@CambridgeCat but what if the electorate DO have morals?

AgathaMystery · 12/04/2024 13:51

I don't know how i'm going to vote but I know it won't be labour.

I've resigned my party membership - I cannot vote for a party that cannot agree on what a woman is. They are tying themselves up in knots - i've no respect for the party anymore.

maudelovesharold · 12/04/2024 13:56

I’m hopeful that the Tories will be out at the next election, but not hopeful that anything much will change. There’s absolutely no feeling of optimism at the thought of a Labour government, which I’m sad about.

Zonder · 12/04/2024 14:15

marmaladeandpeanutbutter · 12/04/2024 13:50

@CambridgeCat but what if the electorate DO have morals?

Then they will definitely be voting that list of MPs out.

Turkeyhen · 12/04/2024 14:34

I agree with @CambridgeCat about the Ming vase.

I'm a lifelong Labour voter, apart from 2019 when I abstained in protest at Corbyn's disgusting antisemitism. I wanted Keir Starmer to be leader from the day he was elected as an MP - I don't find him at all dull, I think he is a properly decent man with an excellent track record who will make a good, competent PM. He's inheriting an omnishambles though and I'm worried that one term won't be enough to start turning things around.

Agree with pps who point out that lefties refusing to vote Labour over Gaza shows how insulated those people are from fourteen years of Tory policies. Remember how enthusiastic the British public were about Corbyn's "bold" manifesto in 2019?

On women's rights, I think that's been another Ming vase situation and the Cass Report will give Labour the path back to a sensible position on this issue. The spectacle of Keir Starmer squirming over the trans issue has been awful to behold and I wish he had had the guts to stand up for truth, but I kind of understand why he fudged it.

Tlolljs · 12/04/2024 14:39

VerlynWebbe · 11/04/2024 17:41

Good lord, no of course I don't think Rishi has done more! I don't even consider the Tories, they have been execrable for all my life! They have done precisely what I would expect a Tory party to do in these circumstances.

But Kier Starmer, actual human rights lawyer, could have spoken out when it became clear that there's a case for genocide, and could have challenged government over arms sales. Instead he's hedged his bets with a wan call for some sort of ceasefire - the barest of bare minimums. I'm disgusted.

I’m guessing he doesn’t want to be accused of being anti semetic

Tlolljs · 12/04/2024 14:42

MuggedByReality · 11/04/2024 18:03

I was a Labour activist in the 90s, and I campaigned successfully in a very important marginal seat in the East Midlands in 97. I quit the party over Iraq, then re-joined to vote for Yvette Cooper in the 2015 leadership election. I left again when Corbyn was leader and it became obvious that the party wasn’t serious about winning.

I’m obviously delighted about the current polls which point to a solid Labour victory. The Tories have failed even on their own terms & deserve to be kicked out.

I completely understand the current leadership’s strategy which is demonstrably working. Starmer is a credible candidate for PM and he has done remarkably well to get the party into this position, albeit with a massive amount of help from Johnson, Truss etc. Obviously I would like them to be much bolder, to acknowledge that Brexit has been a disaster and set out what they are going to do to fix it, and to offer some hope that things might actually improve for ordinary people. As a former activist, however, I understand why they have to be so cautious. They are trying to hold together a very disparate coalition of younger, socially liberal graduates, older socially conservative white working class voters & BAME voters. There are massive dividing lines between these groups on issues like immigration, the environment, ‘wokery’ & Israel / Palestine. The party has to constantly walk a tightrope to avoid alienating big groups of voters.

Or they could all just tell us what they really think.

RhubarbAndGingerCheesecake · 12/04/2024 14:45

I’m not risking another term of the Tories. I just can’t do it.

Given the polls I don't think there a chance in hell of another Tory government - they will be lucky to avoid total annihilation.

I suspect it's all more going to be how big the next Labour majority end up being.

Predictablenamechange1 · 12/04/2024 14:46

Keir is meh and deeply uninspiring but the alternative is worse. So I'll continue to vote tactically (for Labour).

My husband is voting Green.

Both lifelong Labour voters. My husband's is a protest vote essentially.

Zonder · 12/04/2024 14:46

What is this Ming vase analogy?

Predictablenamechange1 · 12/04/2024 14:47

I am tempted to vote Green, in case there's a chance of a coalition...

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