Jews leading the drive to Oust Corbyn
Newsletter published on 31 August 2016
(1) Jewish Millionaire leading the
drive to Oust Corbyn
(2) UK Labour Party head of Friends of Israel calls
Corbyn 'Rubbish'
(3) Corbyn accused of being 'anti-Semitic'; Jewish Chronicle
calls him
'pro-Palestinian'
(4) Corbyn's would-be Treasurer John
McDonnell wants to nationalise
banks and cap executive pay
(5) Corbyn
mobilises ordinary people against Elite critics; denounced by
Jewish
Chronicle
(6) Corbyn warns Bank of England he will sack Governor if they
refuse to
print free money
(7) Jeremy Corbyn and Donald Trump express the
resentment of the common
people - Roger Cohen
(8) Guardian joins grubby
Blairite crusade against Jeremy Corbyn
(9) Corbyn wants to return to Old
Labour policies
(10) Corbyn wants tro overthrow New Labour and the entire
ruling elite
(11) Feminist lobby against Corbyn (and Assange and Tommy
Sheridan) -
Craig Murray
(1) Jewish Millionaire leading the drive to
Oust Corbyn
From: "Israel Shamir adam@israelshamir.net [shamireaders]"
<shamireaders-noreply@yahoogroups.com>
Date:
Tue, 30 Aug 2016 22:42:11 +0200
Subject: [shamireaders] Jews against
Corbyn
http://www.haaretz.com/world-news/europe/.premium-1.738869
The
Jewish Millionaire Trying to Oust Labour's Jeremy Corbyn
Michael Foster
is leading the drive to unseat the U.K. Labour Party
leader, calling his
supporters ‘Nazi storm troopers.’ But while every
anti-Semitic utterance in
Britain has caused a furor recently, why was
the ex-showbiz agent’s comment
allowed to slip through?
Yakir Zur Aug 27, 2016 2:08 AM
The
campaign being waged by Jewish millionaire Michael Foster against
Jeremy
Corbyn is one of the most fascinating stories in the ugly battle
to lead
Britain’s Labour Party.
For some reason, it hasn’t been adequately
covered by the British media
— perhaps because both of the involved parties
are perceived as being on
the wrong side of the story. One is a Labour donor
who, up till
recently, controlled Rights House, a literary and media agency
that
represented prominent actors like Sacha Baron Cohen and Hugh Grant, as
well as authors such as Simon Schama and Jeanette Winterson. Foster’s
empire also controlled TV production companies such as Carnival Films,
which was behind the TV series "Downton Abbey."
The other person is
Corbyn, the man most of the media loves to hate.
If you asked people on
the street who Corbyn is, you’d most likely hear
opposing views. His
supporters believe he’s the right person to head the
British Labour Party, a
man of integrity and principles who fights for
his views, not a chameleon
who changes colors according to public
opinion. In their eyes, he’s the
right person to stand up to the
Conservatives and fight for the rights of
the working and disadvantaged
classes in Britain, in contrast to the
policies of austerity and cuts of
the present government.
His
opponents, however, see him as a dangerous man with extremist
positions, and
whose stubbornness could lead to the breakup of the
venerable left-wing
party.
For the ex-media agent, Corbyn is a reviled figure, the leader of
a
"group of thugs" Foster terms the Sturm Abteilung (Nazi storm
troopers).
The struggle within Labour is an ideological one concealed
behind a
personal battle. Behind the personal arguments against Corbyn for
his
lack of charisma and inability to lead, there are power struggles from
the party’s right, trying to preserve the hegemony it attained during
the rule of Tony Blair. Opposing these are thousands of Labour members
who joined the party after Corbyn’s 2015 election as leader. These are
new members, or ones who’d left and are now returning to the fold. They
view Corbyn as the person who can restore the socialist hue the party
lost during Blair’s tenure (1994-2007).
Foster’s campaign against
Corbyn links together personal frustration and
ideological considerations.
He left the world of show business in 2013,
selling his shares in Rights
House and deciding to try his luck in
politics. In the 2015 general
election, he unsuccessfully ran for
parliament in the Cornish constituency
of Camborne and Redruth, losing
out to the Conservatives.
He is known
for his fiery temper and angry outbursts. In a public debate
between the
electoral candidates last year, a rival candidate drew
laughter after she
mentioned that Foster lives in a fancy house worth $2
million, in an area
considered one of the poorest in Britain. According
to some reports, Foster
approached her after the debate and said, "‘You
c***! If you pick on me
again, I will destroy you." Foster denies the
allegation.
The first
public confrontation between Foster and Corbyn occurred last
September
(shortly after Corbyn was elected leader), when Corbyn
appeared at an event
held by the Labour Friends of Israel parliamentary
group during the annual
party conference. Corbyn talked about the need
for dialogue in the Middle
East in order to reach a just solution of two
states for two peoples. At the
end of his eight-minute speech, Foster
heckled him, urging him to "say the
word Israel, say the word Israel."
The second confrontation came after
last month’s failed parliamentary
attempt to depose Corbyn. Labour MPs who
tried and failed to bring about
Corbyn’s resignation after a resounding vote
of no confidence then tried
to prevent him from running for the leadership,
with the argument that,
like every other contender, he should present a
minimal number of MPs
who support him. They assumed Corbyn would be unable
to garner the
required number of nominations. However, the party’s National
Executive
Committee ruled, in a majority vote, that Corbyn does not have to
gather
nominations in order to run again.
Foster didn’t like that
decision. He appealed to the courts in an
attempt to overturn the ruling,
but lost both prestige and a lot of money.
Venting his
frustration
Michael Foster is a person who doesn’t like losing. He vented
his
frustration in an article in the Daily Mail two weeks ago, headlined
"Why I despise Jeremy Corbyn and his Nazi stormtroopers."
In that
article, he heaped venom on the "Corbyn Circus," called his
supporters
"Corbynistas" and alluded to the fact that they’re more like
followers of a
religious cult than members of a legitimate political
party. He also
criticized the courts for giving an advantage to Corbyn
and his
cronies.
In the atmosphere now prevailing in Britain, in which any
anti-Semitic
expression or use of Nazi analogies causes a storm, Foster’s
article
passed relatively calmly. Marie van der Zyl, vice president of The
Board
of Deputies of British Jews, halfheartedly condemned the use of a Nazi
analogy because of its potential to incite, while simultaneously
expressing her concern at the language and behavior of some Labour Party
members.
Jewish newspapers reported briefly on the incident, while
online
newspaper the Jewish News provided Foster with a further platform, in
which he stated he had "no regrets, none" about his controversial choice
of words. Many British dailies, which in recent months have been dealing
extensively with anti-Semitism within the Labour Party, made no mention
of the incident.
David Rosenberg, a veteran left-winger and member of
the Jewish
Socialists’ Group in Britain, returned to the Labour Party after
an
absence of 30 years following Corbyn’s election. He views the Foster
incident as a classic example of the hypocrisy of the British media with
regard to anything connected to Corbyn.
In a recent blog, Rosenberg
cited the irony of Foster choosing the Daily
Mail as a platform for his
attack on Corbyn: That newspaper’s
then-owner, Lord Rothermere I, was a
supporter of Hitler in the 1930s —
he even sent him a congratulatory
telegram when the Nazis took over the
Sudetenland. Six months after the
Nazis came to power in 1933,
Rothermere published an article praising them
for managing to root out
"‘alien elements’ in the German government,"
including members of the
Jewish faith and members of international
organizations who had
succeeded by manipulating their way into key positions
in Germany.
Hitler managed to rid Germany of such exploitation, Rothermere
wrote.
Rosenberg also mentioned that the Rothermere family still owns the
tabloid newspaper, which "as we know (and Michael Foster knows) ...
spends most of the year stirring up hatred against migrants and
refugees, and whipping up Islamophobia."
The writer is an Israeli
journalist and photographer living in London.
(2) UK Labour Party head of
Friends of Israel calls Corbyn 'Rubbish'
http://rehmat1.com/2015/12/30/labour-jewish-leader-jeremy-corbyn-is-rubbish/
Labour
Jewish leader: Jeremy Corbyn is ‘rubbish’
Posted on December 30,
2015
Last week, UK’s Labour Party’s vice-Chairperson of Friends of Israel
Rebecca Simon speaking at a forum entitled, Re-examining the community’s
relationship with the Labour party, called her party leader Jeremy
Corbyn, Rubbish.
"People are not going to know how to vote. They will
on the one hand
want to support their party, one they have been
card-carrying members
for all their lives, but then no one wants to vote for
a leader they
think is rubbish. And he is rubbish – never mind about the
Israel stuff,
he is just not a credible opposition," she was quoted saying
by Rosa
Doherty at Jewish Chronicle, December 30, 2015.
The forum was
attended by over a hundred Jewish members of Labour party.
She told them
that the relationship had fractured because of hostile
attitudes towards
Israel. Under Corbyn, she said, Israel has
fundamentally been
delegitimized.
However, she told her Jewish colleagues they can burn
brass and drop
their pants, but urged them not to burn party membership
cards, because
that would leave the Labour party in the hands of anti-Israel
members
who support Corbyn.
Rebecca Simon also lamented that there
wouldn’t be an anti-Corbyn coup
in the party and the Friends of Israel have
no other choice but bear
Corbyn until 2020.
She said Jews in the
party would have to become more active to counter
such a strong anti-Israel
force that was going out there to knock on
doors. Corbyn is not a credible
leader, but she don’t expect him to step
down at any point.
The
Zionist Jewess also predicted that based on Corbyn’s anti-Israel
record,
Labour party has no hope of winning the next election.
I certainly share
Rebecca Simon’s ‘Jewish pain’. After the disappearance
of paedophile Jewish
Lord Greville Janner, the Friend of Israel cannot
afford to lose another
leader of country’s Jewish Lobby.
Jeremy Corbyn is not a 9/11 truther as
accused by the UK’s Jewish Lobby.
(3) Corbyn accused of being
'anti-Semitic'; Jewish Chronicle calls him
'pro-Palestinian'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/labour/11804288/Jeremy-Corbyn-accused-of-being-anti-semitic-as-Labour-grandees-round-on-hard-Left-leadership-frontrunner.html
Jeremy
Corbyn accused of being 'anti-semitic' as Labour grandees round
on hard Left
leadership frontrunner
Lord Hattersley, the former Labour deputy leader,
told The Telegraph
that Mr Corbyn would have no right to 'impose' his views
on the party as
he called on MPs to openly rebel against his policies should
he win
By Ben Riley-Smith, Political Correspondent
10:00PM BST 14
Aug 2015
Jeremy Corbyn was accused of being an anti-Semite by one of
Labour’s
most senior politicians last night as a series of party grandees
rounded
on the hard-Left candidate.
Ivan Lewis, the shadow Northern
Ireland secretary, attacked Mr Corbyn’s
"anti-Semitic rhetoric" and said the
party must have "zero tolerance"
for such views.
Mr Lewis said he was
"saddened" that people on the Left of the party had
failed to take a "no
ifs, no buts" to anti-Semitism.
It came as both Liz Kendall and Yvette
Cooper called on their supporters
to pick anyone but Mr Corbyn as second and
third preferences as other
grandees spoke out.
Lord Hattersley, the
former Labour deputy leader, told The Telegraph
that Mr Corbyn would have no
right to "impose" his views on the party as
he called on MPs to openly rebel
against his policies should he win.
Meanwhile Gordon Brown, the former
prime minister, announced he would be
making his first intervention in the
race on Sunday in a speech expected
to be heavily critical of Mr
Corbyn.
Writing on the Left-leaning website Labour List, Mr Lewis said:
"Some of
his stated political views are a cause for serious concern. At the
very
least he has shown very poor judgment in expressing support for and
failing to speak out against people who have engaged not in legitimate
criticism of Israeli governments but in anti-Semitic rhetoric.
He
added: "It saddens me to have to say to some on the left of British
politics
that anti-racism means zero tolerance of anti Semitism, no ifs,
and no buts.
I have said the same about Islamaphobia and other forms of
racism to a
minority of my constituents who make unacceptable statements."
It comes
after the Jewish Chronicle raised concerns about Mr Corbyn's
pro-Palestinian
views as they demanded he urgently answer questions
about his links to
controversial Middle Eastern figures.
Mr Corbyn, now accepted by all
sides as the front-runner to become
Labour leader, has faced a growing
backlash this week since a YouGov
poll put him of 53 per cent - more than
double the support of any other
candidate.
While Mr Corbyn spent
another day in Scotland justifying why he could
win back dozens of seats
lost to the SNP there were signs that the
Labour Party machine was moving
against his candidacy.
Whispered briefings from his rival campaigns saw
Mr Burnham urged to be
stronger in his attacks on Mr Corbyn in an attempt to
ensure no moderate
voter names him as a second or third
preference.
There is growing belief that the only way Mr Corbyn can be
stopped is if
he wins less than 45 per cent of first preferences - leaving
another
candidate to win overall once second and third preferences are
distributed through the alternative vote system.
Lord Hattersley told
The Telegraph the hard-Left candidate had no right
to "impose" his ideology
on MPs if he won and urged moderates to
continue opposing Mr Corbyn if he
becomes leader.
The Labour peer urged MPs to fight Mr Corbyn’s proposals
to take Britain
out of Nato, nationalise the railway and energy companies
and scrap the
country’s nuclear weapons.
"MPs have to follow their
consciences and if the consciences are
different to Corbyn’s, that is what
they have to follow. That is what he
has done on 500 occasions over the last
20 years," Lord Hattersley said.
"If that means a Parliamentary Labour
Party voting in favour of
continuing Trident when the leader of the Labour
Party doesn’t want it,
too bad. The leader of the Labour party would be out
on his own."
He added: "I don’t regard it as a rebellion. If Jeremy
Corbyn becomes
leader that doesn’t give him a mandate to impose his view on
the
Parliamentary Labour Party."
Meanwhile in an interview with The
Telegraph, Mr Burnham warned that the
party is in danger of splitting even
if Mr Corbyn does not become leader.
He pointed to private polling
suggesting many voters' second and third
preferences will go to him to prove
that he is the only moderate
candidate that can defeat Mr Corbyn.
(4)
Corbyn's would-be Treasurer John McDonnell wants to nationalise
banks and
cap executive pay
Public Banking Institute<info@publicbankinginstitute.org>
16 September
2015 at 06:46
Public banks and pay caps: the thoughts of
UK Labour's new economy chief
By REUTERS
PUBLISHED: 22:46 EST, 14
September 2015 | UPDATED: 22:47 EST, 14
September 2015
Sept 14
(Reuters) - John McDonnell, the man who could be Britain's next
finance
minister if the opposition Labour Party wins power, is a critic
of the
capitalist system which he has said he wants to overhaul by
nationalising
banks and capping executives' pay.
McDonnell was named as Labour's top
spokesman on economic policy by
newly-elected party leader Jeremy Corbyn,
adding to Labour's sharp shift
leftwards since its heavy defeat in May's
parliamentary election.
Below is a summary of economic proposals and
ideas put forward by
McDonnell, a former trade union official and a member
of parliament
since 1997:
BANKS - McDonnell wants public ownership of
the banking system to take
control of "our casino economy". This would
include full separation of
retail and investment banking and the
introduction of a financial
transaction tax. He has also proposed capital
controls on banks if they
oppose the tax.
BANK OF ENGLAND - A Labour
government should reclaim the power to set
interest rates from the Bank of
England, reversing a reform made by
former prime minister Tony Blair in 1997
that helped to persuade
investors the economy was safe under
Labour.
PUBLIC FINANCES - McDonnell said in August that a Labour
government led
by Corbyn would be committed to eliminating the budget
deficit but not
at the expense of cuts to tax credits for lower earners and
to public
services, or a public pay freeze.
HIGHER TAXES - Instead,
the money to balance Britain's books would come
from higher taxes on the
rich and corporations as well as from tougher
enforcement of tax payment.
This would also help to pay for investment
in housing and
infrastructure.
In an article written in 2012, McDonnell said the income
tax rate should
be raised to 60 percent for people earning more than 100,000
pounds
($155,000) and 70 percent for those earning more than 1 million
pounds a
year.
INEQUALITY - In the same article, McDonnell called for
a cap on wages of
no more than 20 times the lowest paid in any company. He
also wants
legislation to tackle the gap between pay for men and women, and
to
restore trade union rights. He opposes welfare spending
cuts.
RAILWAYS, UTILITIES - McDonnell says the rail industry should be
renationalised, with workers and passengers given a role in its
management. The energy sector would be "socialised from below" through a
huge expansion of renewable energy production and supply, following
Germany's model. McDonnell is opposed to nuclear power which Britain
plans to expand.
MEDIA - Laws on the media would be reformed to
prevent "the monopoly
ownership and control of our media by rich individuals
and
corporations," McDonnell says on his website, an apparent reference to
the British media interests of Rupert Murdoch. (Compiled by William
Schomberg; editing by David Stamp)
(5) Corbyn mobilises ordinary
people against Elite critics; denounced by
Jewish Chronicle
Kelvin Heslop<keljohn01@gmail.com> 15 August 2015 at
06:50
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/labours-jeremy-corbyn-plan-to-isolate-commons-critics/story-fnb64oi6-1227484222789
Labour’s
Jeremy Corbyn plan to isolate Commons critics
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/labours-jeremy-corbyn-plan-to-isolate-commons-critics/story-fnb64oi6-1227484222789
The
Australian
August 15, 2015 12:00AM
Jeremy Corbyn has set out his
plan to contain and marginalise MPs who
oppose his drive to make Labour more
left-wing.
Mr Corbyn’s position as the frontrunner in the race to be
Labour leader
has been strengthened further by the late surge of voters
joining the
contest, pollsters said yesterday.
According to an
updated analysis by YouGov, the hard-left MP is now on
course to win 57 per
cent of the vote, which began yesterday and will be
announced on September
12.
In the most detailed explanation to date of how he intends to run the
party, the hard-left candidate said he was preparing to mobilise his new
army of supporters by giving them many more votes on policy and party
direction.
Mr Corbyn was denounced by The Jewish Chronicle, which
accused him of
associating with Holocaust deniers. He previously has denied
a link to
Paul Eisen, a Holocaust denier.
In a front-page editorial,
the newspaper said it was certain it spoke
for the vast majority of British
Jews in "expressing deep foreboding at
the prospect of Mr Corbyn’s election
as Labour leader".
According to a pamphlet for the Fabian Society
published yesterday, they
would be pitted against the party’s
representatives in Westminster, many
of whom are hostile to his
objectives.
Mr Corbyn used the pamphlet to set out his plans for running
the Labour
Party, making it a priority to swell the number of new members
further
beyond the 299,755 announced on Wednesday.
He also wants to
change the membership fees structure to convert
registered supporters and
affiliates — the new Corbyn army — into full
members with voting rights on
the direction of the party. He will then
hold regular votes on policy issues
and organisational changes with a
newly expanded left-wing membership, most
of which he is likely to win,
while arguing that MPs who oppose him are part
of an out-of-touch
Westminster bubble. "Labour has drifted into a
presidential model of
politics in which the leader and their office comes up
with all the
policies. I want to change that," Mr Corbyn wrote.
"In
the past when Labour party conference voted for something the
leadership
didn’t like, senior MPs were wheeled out to tell the press
that it would be
ignored. That alienates our support and undermines our
principles as a
democratic socialist party. That top-down behaviour has
to end."
Mr
Corbyn also hopes to persuade figures from unions to the left of
Labour to
rejoin.
(6) Corbyn warns Bank of England he will sack Governor if they
refuse to
print free money
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/Jeremy_Corbyn/11820156/Jeremy-Corbyn-will-sack-Bank-of-England-governor-if-they-refuse-to-print-free-money.html
Jeremy
Corbyn will 'sack' Bank of England governor if they refuse to
print free
money
Richard Murphy, architect of so-called 'Corbynomics', issues
warning to
Bank of England over Jeremy Corbyn's quantitative easing
plans
By Michael Wilkinson, Political Correspondent
10:37AM BST 24
Aug 2015
Jeremy Corbyn could sack the Bank of England governor if they
refused to
print money to fund his spending projects, the leftwinger's
economic
adviser has suggested.
Richard Murphy, who is seen as the
architect of Mr Corbyn's economic
agenda, the so-called 'Corbynomics',
warned that there was "no such
thing" as an independent Bank of
England.
He said that if Mr Corbyn's government wanted to use the cheap
money
from the Bank any governor who refused to carry out the plan for
"people's quantitative easing" should be "on the next plane" out of
Britain.
Tax expert Richard MurphyRichard Murphy is Jeremy Corbyn's
economics guru
Under the proposal, Mr Corbyn would create a national
investment bank to
fund infrastructure projects which would issue debt to be
bought by the
Bank of England - effectively meaning the Bank would fund
government
spending on housing, energy, transport and other
projects.
Mr Murphy said current governor Mark Carney has said it would
be
possible but other experts have warned the Labour leadership
frontrunner’s plans would fall foul of EU laws intended to avoid runaway
inflation.
Asked if Mr Corbyn would sack a Bank governor who refused
to carry out
the plans, Mr Murphy told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "Bank
of
England governors are responsible to democratically elected politicians.
If we have governors who think they are over and above the rule of
democratically elected politicians, then I'm afraid to say, yes they
should be on the next plane."
Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney
speaks during a news conference upon
the release of the Monetary Policy
Report in Ottawa October 26, 2011Mark
Carney, the Bank of England governor,
says quantitative easing is
possible Photo: Reuters
"There is no
such thing as Bank of England independence, there never has
been, it's a
fiasco put together, a facade created to appease people to
put forward a
presentation of something that doesn't exist."
Mr Murphy also suggested
that the Bank takes its cues on setting
interest rates from the independent
Office for Budget Responsibility,
which he claimed was in fact influenced by
the Chancellor because it is
based in the Treasury.
He said: "The
Office for Budget Responsibility has issued a forecast
which says at the end
of this year it is expecting interest rates to rise.
"If you were sitting
on the Monetary Policy Committee, might you take
that as some steer that the
Chancellor would be happy if that's what you
did?"
(7) Jeremy Corbyn
and Donald Trump express the resentment of the common
people - Roger
Cohen
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/25/opinion/roger-cohen-jeremy-corbyn-donald-trump-bernie-sanders-politics.html
Politics
Upended in Britain and America
AUG. 24, 2015
Roger
Cohen
Very little appears to link Jeremy Corbyn, who has emerged from
nowhere
to become the favorite to lead the British Labour Party, with Donald
Trump, the equally surprising front-runner for the Republican
nomination.
Corbyn is a slight, quiet, parsimonious radical leftist who
is
anti-money, anti-meat, anti-war and pro-nationalization of banks. He
has, to put it mildly, deep misgivings about America. Trump is a large,
loud, self-promoting businessman who is pro-money, pro-market and wants
to "Make America Great Again" by unleashing its animal entrepreneurial
spirit and putting the red meat back in political discourse clogged by
political correctness. He has spoken approvingly of John Bolton, hawk of
neocon hawks among Republican foreign policy officials.
But the two
men do have a couple of things in common. Both opposed the
Iraq war (Trump
thought Mexico might be a more sensible target). More
importantly, both
speak their minds at a time when a lot of people in
Britain and the United
States have had it with politics as usual and the
mealy-mouthed,
finger-to-the-wind calibration of the political persona.
Rupert Murdoch
recently tweeted that Corbyn would probably triumph in
the Labour Party
leadership election for this reason: "Corbyn
increasingly likely Labor
winner. Seems only candidate who believes
anything, right or wrong." The
result is to be announced Sept. 12
(elections in Britain are not multiyear
affairs as in the United States).
This is a season of radical discontent.
People believe the system is
rigged. They have good reason. Rigged to favor
the super-rich, rigged to
accentuate inequality, rigged to hide huge
increases in the cost of
living, rigged to buy elections, rigged to put off
retirement, rigged to
eviscerate pensions, rigged to export jobs, rigged to
sabotage equal
opportunity, rigged to hurt the middle class and minorities
and the
poor. Increasingly unequal societies have spawned anger, an
unsurprising
development. The anger is diffuse, in search of somebody to
articulate
it, preferably in short declarative sentences.
It’s the
same anger, in many respects, that produced the leftist Syriza
government in
Greece and the rise of the rightist National Front in
France. Enter Corbyn
and Trump and, of course, Senator Bernie Sanders of
Vermont.
Corbyn
has been described as "attractive in a world-weary old sea-dog
sort of way."
He’s against everything Tony Blair stood for: the slick,
centrist makeover
of the Labour Party that allowed it to win election
after election, and also
allowed Peter Mandelson, a guru of New Labour,
to declare that he was
"intensely relaxed about people getting filthy
rich." Corbyn wants to go
back to socialism. So does Sanders, a
socialist in America who is drawing
huge crowds.
As my colleague Jason Horowitz wrote of Sanders: "For
someone who has
always had a sweepingly macro, if not entirely Marxist,
critique of
America, having the largest crowds of the election cheering each
description of income inequality, and each proposal to eradicate it,
amounts to the validation of a career spent in relative obscurity. Mr.
Sanders’s grumpy demeanor, his outsider status and his suspicion of all
things ‘feel good’ are part of the attraction."
On both sides of the
Atlantic, grumpy is good in politics. Outsider is
good. Plain talk is good.
Trump’s "Deal with it," is the phrase du jour.
Sanders wants to expand
Social Security, take America to a single-payer
European-style national
health system, invest massively to restore
America’s crumbling
infrastructure, make public college tuition free,
get rid of "starvation
wages" for workers, tax Wall Street trading, end
America’s wars, and break
up banks that are too big to fail.
His message is important. It’s
resonating because it precisely reflects
the current unease. Hillary Clinton
cannot ignore it.
Trump is not going away. His base of support is broad.
America always
wants to dream of some riveting reinvention; he’s captured
that longing
for now. In polls of Republicans he leads among women, despite
his
denigration of them; he leads among evangelical Christians; and he leads
among the college-educated, not an obvious constituency for his populist
anti-immigrant message. He has people nodding their heads, as when he
calls his rival Jeb Bush a "low-energy" guy.
Corbyn, however, may
well be the only one of the three outsiders who
wins anything. He’s likely
to be the next Labour leader. That would be a
disaster.
He has almost
no support among Labour members of Parliament; no
experience of running
anything; has called Hamas and Hezbollah "our
friends" (but says he was
misunderstood); forgot (before remembering)
that he’s socialized with a
Lebanese extremist who called 9/11 "sweet
revenge" and has since been banned
from Britain; wants Britain out of
NATO; and has a European leftist’s de
rigueur view of America as the
source of the world’s problems. If he’s
chosen, Labour could
disintegrate. It certainly won’t win an
election.
But Corbynmania shows no sign of abating. It’s a new season in
politics.
Anything could happen, either side of the pond.
(8)
Guardian joins grubby Blairite crusade against Jeremy Corbyn
https://redflag.org.au/article/guardian-joins-grubby-blairite-crusade-against-jeremy-corbyn
18
August 2015 | Nick Everett
A flurry of articles in the UK Guardian has
poured scorn on Jeremy
Corbyn’s campaign for the leadership of the British
Labour Party. The
Guardian, a liberal newspaper with an online readership of
30 million
worldwide, has provided a platform for the deep angst that has
now taken
hold within the British establishment.
Winning the prize
for most ridiculous is columnist Jonathan Jones, who
claims to represent
"the truly ethical wing of the left". Jones also
claims to have once flirted
with membership of the Communist Party of
Great Britain, but decided against
the idea after a stay at the hostel
of the Komsomol – a now defunct
Stalinist youth organisation – in Moscow
just before the fall of the Berlin
Wall.
In an opinion piece on 8 August, Jones asserts that "Marxist
ideas",
which he holds responsible for "human suffering almost unequalled in
the
history of the world", have come alive "in some spectral form in
Corbyn’s runaway campaign and the enthusiasm of his supporters for a
truly socialist Labour party".
On 12 August, former PM Tony Blair,
who led Britain into the criminal
invasion of Iraq in 2003, pleaded with
Guardian readers, "It doesn’t
matter whether you’re on the left, right or
centre of the party, whether
you used to support me or hate me … please
understand the danger we are in".
Asserting that UK Labour "is walking
eyes shut, arms outstretched, over
the cliff’s edge to the jagged rocks
below", Blair urged his Labour
colleagues to launch "a rugby tackle" to save
Labour not only from
defeat at the next election, but from a "rout" and
"possibly annihilation".
Needless to say, Blair’s bleating has fallen on
deaf ears, or perhaps
driven his audience into Corbyn’s arms. Since Corbyn
entered the
leadership contest on 15 June, 200,000 voters have either joined
Labour,
or become supporters eligible to vote in the September poll. A
YouGov
poll, commissioned by the Times on 11 August, suggests that Corbyn is
set to gain 53 percent of first preference votes, 32 percentage points
ahead of his next closest rival, Andy Burnham.
Blair protégé Liz
Kendell, who is trailing a distant last among the four
leadership
contenders, told the Guardian on 10 August: "We can’t turn
back and be the
unelectable party of protest. I don’t want to protest. I
want to get into
power". A Guardian editorial praised Kendell on 14
August for having "shown
courage in telling Labour audiences what they
don’t want to hear about the
need to win Tory votes".
A conga line of right wing Blairites – including
former home secretary
Alan Johnson, former health secretary Alan Miliburn
and Labour financier
John Mills – has railed against the prospect of a
Corbyn victory in the
pages of the Guardian. Miliburn warned Guardian
readers on 23 July: "I’m
afraid history tells a very brutal lesson about
what happens when Labour
lurches to the left.
"You are out of office,
not for five years or 10, but for very many
years to come. Now, if the
Labour party really does have a death wish,
then that is where it will
go."
Former foreign secretary Jack Straw and shadow home secretary Yvette
Cooper, another leadership contender, have described Corbyn’s
infrastructure investment plan as "economic illiteracy" and "bad
economics".
"Printing money year after year to pay for things you can’t
afford
doesn’t work – and no good Keynesian would ever call for it", Cooper
told an audience in Manchester on 13 August. "History shows it hits your
currency, hits investment, pushes up inflation and makes it harder not
easier to get the sustainable growth in a global economy we need to
tackle poverty and support our public services."
Cooper’s argument
for "sustainable investment" (i.e. ongoing
privatisation and squeezing of
funding to public services) has won her
the Guardian’s backing. A 14 August
editorial described her as the only
candidate who could unite the
party.
But Labour voters are not looking for a leader to hold the left in
check. Corbyn’s campaign has shaken up British politics and given voice
to the discontented. Just as a revolt against austerity has found
political expression in Syriza in Greece and Podemos in Spain, albeit
within the limitations of electoral politics, "Corbymania" is a breath
of fresh air in an otherwise desultory political atmosphere.
(9)
Corbyn wants to return to Old Labour policies
http://www.vox.com/2015/8/13/9149623/jeremy-corbyn
Jeremy
Corbyn, the socialist who’s tearing Britain’s Labour Party apart,
explained
Updated by Zack Beauchamp on August 13, 2015, 3:30 p.m.
ET
The United Kingdom's Labour Party has a big problem, and that problem
is
named Jeremy Corbyn.
This Friday, the Labour Party will send out
ballots for its leadership
election. Corbyn, a member of Parliament from
Islington North, is ahead
by pretty large margins in some of the polls. And
that's an absolute
shock: Corbyn is best known for his radical left-wing
views and
comments, which include, for example, once referring to "our
friends
from Hezbollah." Labour's center-left establishment is
terrified.
"If Jeremy Corbyn becomes leader it won’t be a defeat like
1983 or 2015
at the next election. It will mean rout, possibly
annihilation," former
Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair warns in a Guardian
op-ed.
Yet Corbyn continues to do well in polls. "Corbynmania," as the
British
press has dubbed it, is sweeping the UK, with Corbyn's poll numbers
remaining steady. He very well might still lose — but no one expected
him to be doing this well. Here's why Corbyn is where he is, and what it
tells us about British politics.
Why are people so freaked out about
Corbyn?
To put it very simply: Corbyn's policy views are way out to the
left of
the Labour mainstream. Not all of his ideas are extreme, but enough
of
them are that the party chiefs fear they'd be unelectable if he led the
party.
The BBC has an excellent rundown of Corbyn's actual policy
platform. It
includes, among other things, renationalizing Britain's
railroad system
and energy companies, abolishing tuition for British
universities, and
imposing rent controls to deal with Britain's affordable
housing
problem. He's even open to reopening the coal mines that used to be
a
big part of Britain's economy. It's essentially a throwback to the
unreconstructed socialism — the real thing, way beyond Bernie Sanders —
of the old-school British Labour Party, which used to be way more into
the idea of the government controlling huge sectors of the
economy.
Some of Corbyn's ideas are more appealing than others. Most
importantly,
he wants to end Britain's austerity spending cuts, which
damaged the
UK's recovery from the Great Recession. He also proposes
something
called "people's quantitative easing," in which the Bank of
England
would print money to invest in infrastructure projects. This won him
praise from the Financial Times's Matthew Klein, who described it as a
good way to get money into the hands of ordinary Brits and thus
stimulate the economy.
Corbyn's positions on foreign policy are more
extreme. He wants to
withdraw from NATO, abolish the UK's nuclear arsenal,
and has suggested
that Blair could face a war crimes trial for his role in
the Iraq War.
His position on Ukraine echoes the Kremlin's: He's written
that Russian
expansionism "is not unprovoked" and that "the obsession with
cold war
politics that exercises the Nato and EU leaderships is fueling the
crisis."
Notoriously, Corbyn once referred to members of Hamas and
Hezbollah as
"friends," and invited Hamas representatives to speak in
Parliament.
Here are the comments, from a 2009 speech he gave as a patron of
the
Palestine Solidarity Campaign:
It will be my pleasure and
honor to host an event in Parliament
where our friends from Hezbollah will
be speaking. I’ve also invited our
friends from Hamas to come and speak as
well. … So far as I’m concerned,
that is absolutely the right function of
using Parliamentary facilities.
Corbyn has tried to play down the
"friends" comments, arguing that he
was just saying all parties to a
conflict should be involved in peace
negotiations. But they play into an
all-too-well-founded belief that
Corbyn is a real extremist on a number of
important policy issues. What
happens if he actually wins?
No one's
actually sure. But the Labour establishment is freaking out:
They think a
Corbyn victory would render the party unelectable,
potentially forever. To
understand why, you need to understand the
internal ideological fights that
have plagued the Labour Party for the
past several decades.
Around
the 1980s, Labour was repeatedly trounced by the Conservatives.
Two Labour
Party leaders — Tony Blair and Gordon Brown — blamed their
party's left-wing
platform for its losses, and became the leaders of a
movement called New
Labour. Think of it like a British equivalent of
Bill Clinton and the
Democratic Leadership Council: a force that pulled
the party to the
political center, particularly on economic issues, in
the name of
electability.
New Labour initially succeeded. It took over the party in
1994, when
Blair was elected leader, and controlled the premiership from
1997 to
2010. But in 2010, the brand was retired after the Great Recession
led
to electoral defeat. However, New Labour's ideological influence is far
from gone: Labour's mainstream and its leadership are still far more
free market–oriented than they were in 1983, the year a landslide
electoral defeat began the shift toward New Labour.
Corbyn's
socialism, particularly his support for nationalizing chunks of
the British
economy, is a direct threat to Labour's current centrism.
His critics accuse
him of wanting to take the party back to the 1980s,
or even the 1970s. A
spokesperson for Yvette Cooper, a Labour MP and one
of three leadership
candidates competing against Corbyn, warned of
"returning to the dismal days
of the 1980s, with internal party warfare
and almost two decades of [being
in the] opposition."
Corbyn's fans, by contrast, see his candidacy as
proof that today's
Labour Party can finally renounce its centrist pretension
and embrace
its left-wing roots. "The Corbyn Surge, whatever it is, is a
resounding
comment on what has become of the worst of New Labour; an
unflinching
belief that Britain is a 'conservative country' and a 'centre'
that must
[be] chased not shaped," Neal Lawson writes in the New
Statesman.
So the question of "what happens" if Corbyn wins really
depends on your
ideological read of the UK: Do you think Britain is ready
for a
hard-left Labour party? Or will moving Labour to the left just hand
victory to the Conservatives?
Why are Labour voters turning to
Corbyn?
The interesting thing about the Corbyn surge is that Labour, in a
recent
election, had tried moving to the left, and it got trounced. Its last
candidate for prime minister, Ed Miliband, was sometimes called "Red
Ed." Labour lost so badly that Miliband was forced to resign, and
Conservatives won a surprising victory. So moving the party even further
left seems like an odd political strategy.
That said, Labour also
lost seats to the Scottish National Party, whose
platform was distinctly to
Labour's left. And in any case, the Corbyn
surge is about something deeper
than that: It's part of the backlash to
austerity happening across Europe,
which in the UK has combined with
simmering anger at the New Labour years
finally boiling over.
In more economically distressed countries, such as
Greece and Spain,
you've seen left-wing parties surge as part of a populist
reaction to
austerity cuts. The UK's economy has fared much less poorly. But
Prime
Minister David Cameron's spending cuts have been pretty painful for
much
of the population. They've also set back the British left's core
political project, of expanding the welfare state to protect the
vulnerable and promote equality. Cameron is with the Conservative Party,
not Labour, but the backlash against his policies may have grown the
support for a left-leaning Labour.
But Labour has been relatively
timid in challenging the austerity cuts.
Corbyn represents a real
alternative: a full-throated rejection of
austerity. That's an appealing
vision to a lot of Labour voters
frustrated with the direction their party
has gone.
Indeed, Corbyn appears to have energized a newer wing of the
Labour
party. "People who joined the Labour party between 2010 and 2015 are
more pro-Corbyn, [and] people who have signed up since 2015 are
extremely pro-Corbyn," YouGov's Anthony Wells writes. Can he
win?
It's impossible to say at this point, but the polls seem to indicate
he
has a serious chance. The most recent poll, from YouGov, shows Corbyn
with 53 percent support. The next most popular candidate, Andy Burnham,
showed 21 percent support. Corbyn has support from the strongest labor
unions, a critical constituency in the Labour leadership race. And UK
betting markets have him as the odds-on favorite.
"Corbyn's odds have
collapsed from 100/1 into 1/2 in the space of a few
weeks," Matthew
Shaddick, the odds compiler for the Ladbrokes betting
agency, told City AM.
"It now looks as if the Labour Party is going to
deliver the biggest shock
result in the history of political betting."
But it's far from over.
Earlier in the election, polls other than
YouGov's have shown Burnham
leading. And the party's establishment,
which pretty clearly opposes Corbyn,
may find some way of blocking him.
The structure of the election also
could hurt him. The vote uses
something called the Alternative Vote, where
voters are asked to rank
the four candidates in order of preference. If no
one gets an outright
majority on the first ballot, then the person with the
least votes is
eliminated, and everyone who voted for that candidate gets
their votes
shifted to the next candidate. If there's still no majority, the
second-to-last candidate gets eliminated, and his or her votes get
distributed to the remaining two candidates, where someone has to have a
majority.
Presumably, most of the people voting for Burnham, Cooper,
or Liz
Kendall — all more mainstream candidates — will rank Corbyn last. So
even if Corbyn gets close to a majority on the first round, the
Alternative Vote procedure could end up allowing "anyone but Corbyn"
sentiment to carry the day.
But whatever happens after ballots go out
on Friday, one thing is
certain: Jeremy Corbyn represents the biggest
ideological threat to the
Labour establishment, and by extension the
mainstream consensus in
British politics, in the past 20 years. That's a
really big deal.
(10) Corbyn wants tro overthrow New Labour and the
entire ruling elite
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/08/15/corb-a15.html
What
does the "Jeremy Corbyn phenomenon" represent?
By Chris Marsden and Julie
Hyland
15 August 2015
British political life is dominated by
speculation over whether Jeremy
Corbyn will win leadership of the Labour
Party.
A new "one member, one vote" system for the leadership contest was
meant
to help consolidate the party’s right-wing course, based on the
assumption that the electorate—or, more properly, the narrow social
layer to which all the parties pitch their rotten wares—shared the
party’s concerns and prejudices. This appears to have backfired.
The
decision to open up the contest to anyone defining himself as a
Labour
supporter on payment of just £3, and to allow individual
affiliation through
the trade unions, has drawn sufficient numbers
supporting Corbyn’s
anti-austerity appeal to potentially tip the balance
in his
favour.
For the media and most Labour Party parliamentarians, this
prospect is
regarded as a threat to the neo-liberal agenda pursued by Labour
and the
entire ruling elite for more than three decades. On what passes for
the
"left," it has been hailed as opening the way for Labour’s renewal as a
party for working people. It is, in fact, neither.
What is
alternatively described as "Corbyn-mania" and the "Corbyn
phenomenon"
certainly reflects broader leftward sentiment. The
hysterical attacks on the
veteran Labour "left" MP as a relic of a
failed socialist utopia has little
traction, especially among young
people who know only too well the failures
of capitalism and are looking
for an alternative.
The more Corbyn
comes under attack, the more attractive he becomes to
working people. Two
interventions by the former Labour prime minister
Tony Blair warning against
Corbyn’s victory only prompted a surge in
applications to back Corbyn.
Registered and affiliated supporters now
outweigh Labour Party members,
though Corbyn records majority support in
all three
categories.
Corbyn is also helped by comparison with the self-serving
scoundrels he
is contesting—Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper and Liz Kendall. He
has a
record of voting against the worst excesses of New Labour, has called
for Blair to face war crime charges for aiding the illegal invasion of
Iraq in 2003, and was the only leadership candidate to vote against the
Conservative government’s latest package of welfare cuts. [...]
(11)
Feminist lobby against Corbyn (and Assange and Tommy Sheridan) -
Craig
Murray
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2016/01/feminism-a-neo-con-tool/
Feminism
a Neo-Con Tool
by craig on January 7, 2016 6:01 pm in
Uncategorized
UPDATE
Minutes after I posted this article,
the ludicrous Jess Phillips
published an article in the Guardian which could
not have been better
designed to prove my thesis. A number of people have
posted comments on
the Guardian article pointing this out, and they have all
been
immediately deleted by the Guardian. I just tried it myself and was
also
deleted. I should be grateful if readers could now also try posting
comments there, in order to make a point about censorship on the
Guardian.
Catching up on a fortnight’s news, I have spent five hours
searching in
vain for criticism of Simon Danczuk from prominent or even just
declared
feminists. The Guardian was the obvious place to start, but while
they
had two articles by feminist writers condemning Chris Gayle’s clumsy
attempt to chat up a presenter, their legion of feminist columnists were
entirely silent on Danczuk. The only opinion piece was strongly
defending him.
This is very peculiar. The allegation against Danczuk
which is under
police investigation – of initiating sex with a sleeping
woman – is
identical to the worst interpretation of the worst accusation
against
Julian Assange. The Assange allegation brought literally hundreds,
probably thousands of condemnatory articles from feminist writers across
the entire range of the mainstream media. I have dug up 57 in the
Guardian alone with a simple and far from exhaustive search. In the case
of Danczuk I can find nothing, zilch, nada. Not a single feminist
peep.
The Assange case is not isolated. Tommy Sheridan has been pursuing
a
lone legal battle against the Murdoch empire for a decade, some of it in
prison when the judicial system decided his "perjury" was imprisonable
but Andy Coulson’s admitted perjury on the Murdoch side in the same case
was not. I personally witnessed in court in Edinburgh last month Tommy
Sheridan, with no lawyer (he has no money) arguing against a seven man
Murdoch legal team including three QCs, that a letter from the husband
of Jackie Bird of BBC Scotland should be admitted in evidence. Bird was
working for Murdoch and suggested in his letter that a witness should be
"got out of the country" to avoid giving evidence. The bias exhibited by
the leading judge I found astonishing beyond belief. I was the only
media in the court.
Yet even though the Murdoch allegations against
Sheridan were of
consensual sexual conduct, Sheridan’s fight against Murdoch
has been
undermined from the start by the massive and concerted attack he
has
faced from the forces of feminism. Just as the vital messages WikiLeaks
and Assange have put out about war crimes, corruption and the relentless
state attack on civil liberties have been undermined by the concerted
feminist campaign promoting the self-evidently ludicrous claims of
sexual offence against Assange.
As soon as the radical left pose the
slightest threat to the neo-con
establishment, an army of feminists can be
relied upon to run a
concerted campaign to undermine any progress the left
wing might make.
The attack on Jeremy Corbyn over the makeup of his shadow
cabinet was a
classic example. It is the first ever gender equal shadow
cabinet, but
the entire media for a 96 hour period last September ran
headline news
that the lack of women in the "top" posts was anti-feminist.
Every
feminist commentator in the UK piled in.
Among the obvious
dishonesties of this campaign was the fact that
Defence, Chancellor, Foreign
Affairs and Home Secretary have always been
considered the "great offices of
State" and the argument only could be
made by simply ignoring Defence. The
other great irony was the
"feminist" attack was led by Blairites like Harman
and Cooper, and
failed to address the fact that Blair had NO women in any of
these posts
for a full ten years as Prime Minister.
But facts did not
matter in deploying the organised feminist lobby
against
Corbyn.
Which is why it is an important test to see what the feminists,
both
inside and outside the Labour Party, would do when the leading
anti-Corbyn rent-a-gob, Simon Danczuk, was alleged to have some
attitudes to women that seem very dubious indeed, including forcing an
ex-wife into non-consensual s&m and that rape allegation.
And the
answer is …nothing. Feminists who criticised Assange, Sheridan
and Corbyn in
droves were utterly silent on the subject of Danczuk.
Because the purpose of
established and paid feminism is to undermine the
left in the service of the
neo-cons, not to attack neo-cons like Danczuk.
Identity politics has been
used to shatter any attempt to campaign for
broader social justice for
everybody. Instead it becomes about the
rights of particular groups, and
that is soon morphed into the neo-con
language of opportunity. What is
needed, modern feminism argues, is not
a reduction of the vast gap between
rich and poor, but a chance for some
women to become Michelle Mone or Ann
Gloag. It is not about good
conditions for all, but the removal of glass
ceilings for high paid
feminist journalists or political
hacks.
Feminism has become the main attack tool in the neo-con
ideological
arsenal. I am sceptical the concept can be redeemed from
this.
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