He says his party has “rediscovered its roots and purpose”.
The Labour leader continues his hokey-cokey performance.
“Jeremy is ineffective at making the decisions and providing leadership that we so desperately need, both in Parliament and across the country.”
If new members realise that they have no real say in making their new party one that really works for everyone, they won’t remain members for long.
Our snap judgement is that Tory MPs and members are not. But there are warning signs: a fragile leader, a rusty machine – and a project that urgently needs renewal.
There were no Momentum mugs left. “Everything we had has gone ‘just like that’. Do keep checking the website, though”.
The Shadow Minister for Industrial Strategy believes her leader is offering “incompetent out-of-power socialism”.
His reforms will cripple his MPs and are a posthumous triumph for Tony Benn’s belief in extra-Parliamentary action.
The new PFI policy is a classic example.
McDonnell neglected to mention the hundreds of contracts that Labour entered into.
The Shadow Chancellor tells the universities and technology sector that “help is on the way” (as the Marx Brothers put it in “Duck Soup”).
During Labour’s conference week, we take a look at prominent Labour MPs’ views of their leader, in their own words.
The Shadow Foreign Secretary on Brexit, Vote Leave, paternity tests, Gove and £350 million a week.
The difference between us and the Labour is that we deal with the world and reality as it is – not as some utopia we would like it to be.
They include both the working class vote being up for grabs…and the Party adapting to the changing nature of modern Britain.