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Related: About this forumI cannot vote for Labour where do I go?
Tis a conundrum. I think it obvious I am a progressive. I am an friend and a supporter of every disenfranchised and shat upon community. Corybn is an anti-semite. I cannot and will not vote for a party that he leads. One of my greatest friends is someone who escaped Iraq with nothing but a back pack when Saddam Hussein was hanging Jews in the public square. She came to the UK and worked her arse off to be a successful member of our community. She is planning to move to Israel cause safety is always key when life gets uncertain. It is a disgrace when Jewish members of our community are scared to live in this country of ours.
I cannot vote Labour, where the fuck do I go?
nycbos
(6,347 posts)But I realized that I would no longer have a political home in the UK because of the anti semitism in the Labour Party.
DavidDvorkin
(19,890 posts)Are the Lib Dems an acceptable alternative? I assume not.
T_i_B
(14,800 posts)Last edited Thu Aug 30, 2018, 12:58 AM - Edit history (1)
But that's just me.
It's not like people have forgotten the coalition though.
The Green Party is also more appealing than Labour right now. The Green Party is also home to the Mayor of Sheffield, Magid Magid, who famously banned Donald Trump from my hometown!
And on that note, I have recently moved house to South Yorkshire, with it's below par Labour councils, so I have even less reason to support Labour, regardless of which faction is in charge of them!
Pope George Ringo II
(1,896 posts)The way he's using Brexit to act like he was right in the first place, while letting the Tories/DUP burn the country to the ground, and daring relatively cosmopolitan Remain voters to find another party because he thinks they're harder to lose than the Leave nitwits is just over the top.
I might actually dislike the man more than Boris Johnson. Oh well, there's always the SNP. At least they don't build any major party platforms around doing something stupid and self-destructive in the name of pride.
shenmue
(38,537 posts)Soph0571
(9,685 posts)As long as he is not actually hanging Jews everything is OK?
LeftishBrit
(41,303 posts)(Difficult sometimes to discuss him, as too many seem to regard him as either the Messiah or the Devil, but...) I am very uneasy about some of his comments on Jews, which are at best tone-deaf. I do NOT regard all criticisms of Israel as antisemitic, and am myself disgusted with the Netanyahu government and its policies and actions; but the comments on British 'Zionists' worry me; as do some of his associations with extremists (though let's not forget that May's government is openly propped up by a party with distinct past associations with terrorists). I also think that he's a classic poacher-turned-gamekeeper in his authoritarian attitude to his party; and just like Blair in fact, has a lot of good ideas, but not enough interest in detail to achieve them adequately. Other parties? Depends a bit where you are, and what your exact views are. LibDem, or, if one can't get over their involvement in the coalition, Green or, where they exist, the National Health Action party, are possibilities.
T_i_B
(14,800 posts)Last edited Tue Sep 4, 2018, 02:06 AM - Edit history (2)
....I am now disillusioned with Labour under Corbyn. Albeit for very different reasons. Corbyn might never invade Iraq, but he has lurched from one anti-semitism scandal to another. That would have been unthinkable under any previous Labour leader. Labour and Momentum's clear issues with anti-semitism make it increasingly difficult for Labour to oppose bigotry with much credibility.
Labour has veered from one extreme to another without ever pausing to try and strike a happy medium. A situation that is not helped by the various internal factions, who seem far more interested in fighting each other than fighting for the common good.