Workingman wrote:You have to laugh.
BBC Newsnight just showed two focus groups of six former Labour voters, and guess what, they put JC last and Mrs Balls first - as was intended.
Is there nothing that the media will not do, especially the BBC, to try to rig this election?
Let those who are eligible to vote, vote, then live with it.
Exactly! Talk about desperate pro-Cooper propaganda.
Corbyn is getting popular because he actually engages people in the political process. Just about every other politician in every other party doesn't. In fact I'd go so far as to say that politicians don't actually want the public to be much interested in politics. Just turn up every few years and vote, and then go away again, seems to be their attitude.
In the last 20 years we seem to have developed a professional political class; a managerial type of politics. Well, a manager is someone who tells others what to do. He or she isn't a representative, which is what our MP's are supposed to be.
Corbyn is anathema to these people. He actually answers questions and considers things; he doesn't just trot out a soundbite or go along with the political consensus view.
Buying a rail ticket or deciding which gas tariff to be on is like being the victim of the three card trick these days.
Which sort of ticket to Leeds did you want sir? What tariff is the best for you sir? Which hand have I got the penny in? Which shell is the pea under?
It's been deliberately designed like that so these companies can behave like spivs and get away with it!
So if Corbyn talks of re-nationalising gas and electric and the railways, a lot of people are going to go "Damn right, I like that idea!".
Mainstream politicians will talk of "the best value for consumers", "watchdogs with teeth" and the "benefits of competition". This is all crap and everybody knows it.
But the mainstream realise that all our gas and electric companies are owned by the French and the Germans - they really don't want that stone turning over!