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Corbyn election heralds a new era for UK politics

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Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn...radical change.

World of Politics with Harry McGee – harrymcgee@gmail.com

I’m sure very few Irish people – other than those who wear their anoraks to bed – were aware of Jeremy Corbyn before he entered the British Labour Party leadership campaign this summer.

Now he is leader of the Labour Party after a phenomenal campaign in which he routed his opponents, winning by even a bigger majority than Tony Blair 20 years ago.

So who is he? Well, he’s a veteran, now in his mid 60s. He is a left-winger and has never, until now, served on the Labour front bench. He seems a conscientious and decent man but his views are very radical in the context of the status quo – EU critical; strongly anti-austerity, republican; and anti-nuclear.

Now some of his rivals claimed that because anyone who handed over £3 was entitled to participate in the leadership election, the result was spiked because a whole pile of militants (and Tory saboteurs) became instant members so as to wreck the Labour Party for a generation.

There might be a small smidgen of truth in that but Corbyn won all the electoral college suggesting a majority of people who consider themselves Labour in Britain supported him. That included the unions but also ordinary members of the party. The one chapel in which he is a minority is the Labour parliamentary party where his leadership has become really divisive.

Why did Corbyn win? Well, the obvious answer is that it is a reaction to the inefficacy of Labour in opposition. Ed Miliband’s election as leader was influenced by the unions who backed him rather than his more New Labour brother David.

But Ed’s leadership was also a moderate one – the party’s critiques of Tory policies was hard to explain and, ergo, hard to differentiate sufficiently from the Conservatives. In other words, the alternative was not spelled out clearly enough.

None of the three other candidates who put themselves up for leadership – Yvette Cooper, Andy Burnham, or Liz Kendall – were really in a position to offer a new way, a new politics. It seems the perception among the Labour electorate is that these guys just offered more of the same.

Step forward Corbyn. He has always been on the militant left wing of the party, a consistent and wayward critic. Until now, he could have been likened to Napoleon in Animal Farm, the donkey who knows the faults of the rulers, can articulate them in a cynical and fatal style, but really does nothing about them.

It must be remembered that Corbyn just about gathered the required number of signatures from fellow MPs to enter the race, showing how little purchase his world view has within the parliamentary party.

But his campaign prospered because as well as the old reliable of the left-wingers in the party, he got backing form the largest and most hard-line union, Unite, as well as from a large and committed new group of energised active, who were no longer satisfied with Labour following predictable patterns in the manner in which it opposed the Tories.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune

The fine art of good timing when it comes to elections

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Charlie Haughey...snap election backfired on him.

World of Politics with Harry McGee

Academically, politics is described as a science. But in the real world, it’s more of an art – and one of the big decisions a Government has to make is to decide when to call an election.

Will they see out the full term, or will they go early – either to mitigate the damage they will ship, or to secure a victory before things go awry, or the economy takes a dip, or some kind of controversy erupts?

Timing is everything.

And there’s a bit of art to that – not to mention a lot of luck. If you call it early and win big, you’re a genius. If you call it early and lose, you are the political version of the village fool.

Charlie Haughey was a poor judge of the public mood. Twice he called snap elections and on both occasions they backfired. Haughey succeeded Jack Lynch as Taoiseach in late 1979 and did not – technically – have his own mandate. He tried to remedy that by calling an election in 1981. But it recoiled. Ray MacSharry warned him not to hold it during the H Block hunger strikes when republican prisoners were dying each day. He did not listen to the advice and found himself out of office.

After his return to power in 1987, Haughey tired of presiding over a minority government that kept on losing votes in the Oireachtas (the opposition won nine private members motions).

So he called a snap general election and it backfired. Fianna Fáil lost seats and had to broker a coalition deal with the Progressive Democrats and his long-standing political adversary Dessie O’Malley.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

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Inch protest arguments are more subtle than Oughterard

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Minister Roderic O’Gorman: promise of more emergency beds.

World of Politics with Harry McGee

I was cycling down Mount Street in Dublin on Tuesday. It’s a wide esplanade that links the Grand Canal with Merrion Square. The street is a mixture of fine Georgian buildings and modern office blocks.

About half-way down is the office of the International Protection Office, which deals with asylum seekers who have arrived in the country.

Needless to say, the office has been overwhelmed in the past year. Besides an estimated 80,000 refugees who have arrived from Ukraine, there have been about 20,000 people from other parts of the world who have arrived into Dublin (mostly) claiming asylum.

The numbers peaked around Christmas, but they have been falling a little. In January, more than 1,300 people arrived seeking asylum but the numbers fell back to 831 and 858, in February and March respectively.

They are still huge numbers in a historical context.

So back to my cycle on Tuesday. I knew that some asylum seekers were camping outside the International Protection Office, but I was taken aback by how many. There were six tents lined up on the pavement directly outside. Then on the ramp that led down to the basement carpark on the side of the building, there were about another 20 tents.

It looked like what it was, a refugee camp in the middle of Dublin’s business district. If you pan out from Mount Street, you will find tents here and there in nearby streets and alleys. There were a good few tents in an alleyway off Sandwith Street about 500 metres away.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

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The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

 

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Sinn Féin hunt for seats in ‘locals’ across Galway

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Sinn Féin's Cathal Ó Conchúir, Mairéad Farrell and Mark Lohan all lost their seats in Galway City in 2019

World of Politics with Harry McGee

God that was a dramatic and historic weekend in England, wasn’t it? So much excitement, so much change, so much hype, so much out with the old and in with the new, and what looks like the coronation of a new leader. Yes, the local elections in Britain were something else weren’t they!

Apologies for not going on about King Charles III but the contract I signed when I became a lifelong republican forbids me to discuss the topic!

I know the British local elections sound a bit boring by comparison, but the results were stunning.

The Conservatives lost nearly 1,000 seats, the British Labour Party gained almost 500 and both the Lib Dems (with 350 gains) and the Greens (gaining over 200) also had amazing days at the polls.

It was Labour’s best day since 2002 but its victory was only partial. The Greens and the Lib Dems actually made gains at the expense of Labour in more affluent areas, and in parts of Britain where there were high numbers of graduates.

It was in the Red Wall constituencies in the North of England where the Labour recovery was strongest. These are working class constituencies with pockets of deprivation where people voted for the Labour Party forever. But all of those constituencies voted for Brexit and then voted for the Tories in the next general election. Labour is now winning back some of those votes.

Local elections are classified as second-tier elections which essentially means – from a national perspective – they are not life-or-death affairs, and not everything turns on them. Of course, it’s really important to have good local representation. But they are not an amazing weather vane for who rules the country.

For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.

Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App

Download the Connacht Tribune Digital Edition App to access to Galway’s best-selling newspaper.

Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

Or purchase the Digital Edition for PC, Mac or Laptop from Pagesuite  HERE.

Get the Connacht Tribune Live app
The Connacht Tribune Live app is the home of everything that is happening in Galway City and county. It’s completely FREE and features all the latest news, sport and information on what’s on in your area. Click HERE to download it for iPhone and iPad from Apple’s App Store, or HERE to get the Android Version from Google Play.

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