Aggers wrote:The big mistake in the Referendum was the Prime Minister taking sides, and putting out exaggerated statements
of what the results of an OUT vote would be, and thereby inviting the IN brigade to behave in similar fashion.
If he had kept neutral he would not have had to resign.
The OUT brigade did little more than put their best foot forward. The press then took their statements and twisted them to meet their own political ends. The IN campaign didn't have any direct "positive" that they could give us for staying, besides more of the same, so they went with the fear of leaving.
Having watched the last BBC debate and Ruth Davidson's tirade about the statements on laws (60% vs 8%); then reading the fact checker which stated that the document they BOTH were quoting had a RANGE of possible results which fitted BOTH statements, I despaired. How was anyone going to get to the truth of the matter. On this specific issue it was a matter of perspective. One was saying 60% of our laws were controlled by the EU (mostly true), the other was arguing that only 8% of our laws were MADE in the EU (mostly true). But the point is this. What bothers the people more? What impacts our laws or what specifically makes our laws. Personally I believe that the former is true so Ruth Davidson was being dishonest by using a vertical focus on one specific nitpicking detail.
On the Labour side? They picked Corbyn, now they have to live with him. If true Labour voters want to have a say in which leader Labour has, they need to join the party which will also have a knock on effect of funding them.....
I doubt Corbyn is going to stand down and, I expect, will use every trick he can to stay on. If they want rid of him they'll have to have a vote of no confidence. But if it goes to the party then they will vote for him by at least 60% because so many of them joined to see him in that seat.
For me that works perfectly...
I'm more interested in having the strongest team of Tories leading the Exit. I don't want an election until Corbyn has done enough damage to make Labour unelectable. Then, perhaps, if we were to have an election before the exit, we could have some reasonable number of UKIP MP's to do the job they want to do.
But it's all moot. Labour will do the self destruction dance and the Tories will spend the better part of the next 4 years bickering over getting us out.