I think the media and the Tories are worried about the seductive nature of the message of Corbyn and his cronies. Communism (forget socialism this man is the worst kind of communist), is extremely seductive to a certain group of people. That group tends to be low paid, poorly paid or "peasant". For peasant replace perpetually unemployed and you get the idea.
This group takes no active interest in either politics or how the country runs and is therefore very susceptible to the kind of message Corbyn and his allies send out. Worse is that since Blairism, a generation of "peasants" has grown up with absolutely no allegiance to the UK or even interest in the UK's standing in the world. After WW2 it was completely impossible for someone like Corbyn to take high office. Standing up and saying he was too weak to protect the interests of the UK, let alone the UK itself, would have been total political suicide for high office even as late as 1995.
Now we see this. Being reported by Reuters. Something we would never have seen before.
The press are rattled. Corbyn came to the leadership and most of the cabinet resigned. So he should have stepped quietly and wisely. What did he do? He stepped confidently forward with this communist, IRA supporting, chancellor and a gag order on his MP's. Then he tried to gag the cabinet. Then he excluded the cabinet from his speeches he was writing but expected them to back him fully. But did he back off? Not a bit of it, he's pushing hard for Momentum to get into office, using the threat of deselection, rather than whipping, to bring reluctant MP's back in line. He's openly at war with his deputy leader (where have we seen that before in Labour) and is dragging in discredited and banished political figures from the 70's to try and bulwark his office.
Corbyn will resist all attempts to remove him. He will play every dirty communist gagging game there is and he will also play the disinformation and information withholding games to keep his position. In the end it will almost destroy the party to get rid of him.
This, I think, above all, is what the press and the Tories are after. They don't want Corbyn removed. They want the fight as Labour tries to remove him and he refuses to back down. Corbyn is in a position he could never, never have expected to be in if you consider this article. Corbyn will have known, from a very early time, that his politics are not compatible with British Socialism. He will have expected to be able to control a strong subcommittee where he could, insidiously, push his values on a society which did not want them. But he would never, never, have expected to take the position he is in except in his wildest night-time fantasies.
Now that Corbyn is in the place he has so long coveted he won't go. Forget quietly, forget screaming and kicking, he'll hold that place with a knife in the back and a poisoned chalice in his left hand. He will believe that if he can just hold on long enough, get rid of enough blairites fast enough, threaten enough people and hold the reigns of the party controls firmly enough, he will survive and thrive.
The "honest man"? The "principled man"? The man of "democracy"? The cabinet are finding the truth of that. When his cabinet basically told him that he either backs down from his stance on Syria or they would openly defy him in chamber, he acceded to the "majority" decision not to oppose Cameron on his request and not to oppose it. What followed is right out of the communist manual. Corbyn wrote his speech himself, did not invite the cabinet to review with him, delivered the rambling stinking pile in the commons and then wrote, personally, to every Labour MP asking them to override the "democratic" decision of his cabinet. He then started issuing dark threats to his cabinet as to what would happen to them at the next election if they did not comply.
Dangerous? Certainly. But mainly to the Labour party.
Personally I'm a Social Conservative. I believe that before we spend money on "welfare" we have to earn it. To earn that money we need business and business investment. I believe that we need to take a proportion of that money and spend it where it is really needed, BOTH to keep the economic engine going and to help those who cannot help themselves.
BUT, I am not hard right wing. Which means that the danger I see from Corbyn is in 2 decades of unbridled right wing Tory policies through the destruction of the Labour party.
But I see more. I see the way that the Tories will damage themselves in the eyes of the people and the incredible damage that could be done by a 3 or 4 way coalition designed out of expediency to get the Tories out of office. That, to me, is the true danger of Corbyn. Although I'd like him to stay in his position until after the next election. Then be evicted by a truly effective and truly honest Labour leader.
Other articles from the Labour press.
Labour works around Jeremy Corbyn in Greater Manchester byelection. Shades of Miliband and Scotland.
Tom Watson piles pressure on Jeremy Corbyn after backing British air strikes on Isis in Syria
These are not the Tory press. They are saying something else which, I believe, is in line with my position.