Matt N
TS Member
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I’m honestly not sure many people pay that much attention to local politics when thinking of how to vote at a national level. At a local level, many people will vote based on person rather than party; I know many, many people where I live vote the way they do in the local elections because of their feelings on the candidate as a person rather than the party. My grandparents, for example, all told me that they weren’t voting Green in the most recent local elections because the incumbent district councillor is a Green and they hate him and the way he’s running things in the village with a passion!Couple of points Reform have a lot of headwinds coming not least the more councils and longer they run the more exposure to their incompetence will be.
Second and more importantly Labour will have more polices in place by next election are economy is growing might be slow but is still more positive. The sure start centres, wage should be more above inflation, if we transfer fully off fossil fuels energy bills will go down, employments rights bill would have been passed, NHS will be better off. And a lot more after. Labour are doing a lot of good things more good than outweighing the bad. Also there will be a noticable difference in living standards. There biggest problem is communication if they constantly pushed media into talking what they want to talk about and stop with migration talk then they would be doing better
With that said, the aforementioned Green Party district council in my area have put much of my family off ever voting Green at a national level, so maybe it has more effect than I think it does…
I also feel that regardless of what he does next, Starmer’s first year has been very damaging for the Labour Party’s reputation. I don’t hate Starmer as much as many people do, and I don’t disagree with some of the things tabled by the government, but the amount of back-pedalling and flip-flopping done in his first year has made him look spineless and lacking in any kind of conviction. Don’t get me wrong, too much conviction is also a bad thing, but with Starmer, it is hard to know what he personally or the Labour Party as a collective actually stands for. He was elected Labour Party leader on an unapologetically left-wing platform, which he swiftly reneged on every single line of upon taking the leadership, and in the election, he made financial and other promises to the electorate that were then binned under the pretence of the “£22bn black hole” and “things being so much worse than we thought”. He then made numerous decisions in government that were later reversed or pared back.
I get that things are hard now in the country, and that no amount of vision will make that better in the short run, but Starmer and Reeves aren’t exactly presenting much of a light at the end of the tunnel; beyond the dark and gloomy rhetoric, they seem to lack a positive vision that they’re working towards. It’s hard to know what the Starmer ministry’s ultimate end goal is; it currently feels like they’re merely trying to stave off Reform rather than having any kind of vision.