To The Point returns to Labour’s past leadership elections.
The media’s comic inability to foresee the election result will have political consequences.
Unlike every other victorious Labour leadership candidate of the past 30 years, he drew most of his support from party members and MPs.
We think they’re mistaken. They simply think we’re evil. And their error may have contributed to the failure of the polls.
The BBC needs to review now who will cover the 2020 election in a way that interests young viewers. Neil, Marr and Paxman have a combined age of 185.
Labour could have done better with a different leader and a different strategy. But its error was its usual one: to assume moral superiority
So we are back at the Palace of Varieties with far more MPs than expected – and relatively few casualties.
Thursday again proved that Labour cannot win from the left. But the voters who once made up their winning coalition are now deeply at odds with each other.
Completing our triumvirate of resignation videos.
It was perfectly possible to foresee where undecided voters were likely to go when at last they got round to making up their minds.
Plus: Scotland is a problem of Labour’s own making. Dan Jarvis’s time has come. Prepare for a UKIP leadership bloodbath. And good riddance to Vince Cable!
Farage, Sturgeon, Miliband, Bennett and Cameron visit their local polling stations.
Pollsters should have had follow-up questions to UKIP and Green supporters to assess their likelihood of switching to their preferred main party choice.