Friday, 12 June 2015

Pick of the Week: Hard Labour - Politics.co.uk

"The world is run by monsters and you have to deal with them." - Ken Livingstone
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Our top five most-read articles this week

Hard times for the Labour party as it struggles to get back on its feet after a drubbing at the polls. Most of our top five items this week concerned the opposition in various states of despair – from backstage manipulations of the London mayoral race, to the lack of quality of the leadership contenders, to complaints about the analysis the party has offered about its defeat. Truly, it's difficult to find much hope for the opposition as it faces at least five years in the wilderness. 
5. Labour accused of rigging London mayoral contest
The Labour party were roundly defeated in last month's general election and now look a very long way from regaining power on a national level. However, next year's London mayoral election gives the party a fighting chance to win back some real executive power in one of their few remaining local strongholds. With Labour's prospects in the capital looking relatively strong, the battle to be their mayoral candidate is becoming increasingly bitterly fought. The latest row to engulf the London Labour party arose over an alleged attempt to boot Diane Abbott and two other candidates off the mayoral ballot. This week we spoke to the Hackney MP and some of her rivals about what's being alleged.
4. Zac Goldsmith's mayoral bid should strike fear into Labour

Labour's confidence about winning next years's London mayoral election took a major dip this week, however, when respected Tory MP Zac Goldsmith announced that he would be running for the job. Senior Tories including former mayoral candidate Steve Norris and current mayor Boris Johnson have long been pushing Goldsmith to stand with little success until now. With his environmentalist credentials and his maverick reputation, Goldsmith is the Tories' best chance of hanging onto City Hall. Labour's mayoral hopefuls are deeply worried by his entry into the race.
3. Labour can win in 2020 but it has to pause this leadership contest

So what of the contest to become the next leader of the opposition? We're only a month into the battle to replace Ed Miliband, and yet it already feels like it's been going on for years. The leading candidates have yet to inspire either their party or the wider public, with no-one emerging as a candidate likely to be taken into the public's hearts. Part of the problem lies in the selection process which makes it almost impossible for anyone but the most well-established and 'professional' politicians in the party to emerge. With such a moribund and restricted selection, is it time for Labour to open up the contest to all-comers and start their search again?
2. The Tory civil war begins now

There are not many reasons for optimism in the Labour party right now, but the prospect of the Tories once again tearing themselves apart over Europe has certainly lightened the mood of many Labour supporters. These optimists point to a similar battle which tore apart John Major's government in the nineties and which was followed by three terms of a Labour government. While few are expecting a similar turnaround to happen today, the prospect of up to two years of Tory infighting over Europe is bringing light to otherwise gloomy days for Labour.
1. Labour cannot win again by mimicking Ukip

While it is tempting for Labour to assume the Tories will simply defeat themselves, the fact remains that Labour have to decide exactly what they stand for rather than just who they stand against. One of the biggest battles taking place in the party right now centres on the extent to which Labour should try to win back voters from Ukip. Labour has taken a hammering from Nigel Farage's party in many parts of the country and there is no doubt that they have shed a proportion of their traditional voters because of anger over immigration. Yet Labour must tread a careful path. If they simply become another faintly anti-immigration party as some seem to want, they risk losing much of their support among migrant communities and in metropolitan areas. Nobody denies that many voters care about immigration, but any debate on the subject should be based on facts not myths. Andy Burnham's dubious anecdote about a man he met who claimed none of his colleagues spoke any English, highlighted exactly the difficulties Labour face when talking about this increasingly thorny subject.
 

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