What is novel is that it will mean the UK left will have stopped succumbing to extortion and something else can occupy the space currently held by red tories.
Oh, like what didn't happen last time, or the time before that.
So like Blair/Brown. The cycle. You're happy with endless repetition?
Absolutely not; hence why I want Labour to shift
left, rather than further rightwards as they would after defeat by the right.
Maybe if they are extraordinarily stupid, which... OK, sure, it's the UK. But I believe you can overcome your affliction. There is this thing called turnout that can be measured. Also support for other parties. There is not just one single variable from which all conclusions spring forth. There is, indeed, a conversation-- about what can and cannot work, what will or will not work, and so on.
So let's
have that conversation, rather than the smug condescension. Turnout hovers between ~60 and ~75% for UK general elections. It saw a bit of an uptick in 2017 for Corbyn (~68%), but nothing to write home about, and failing to match Blair or Kinnock.
Then we have the other parties, as you say. Except outside of the main 2, the next biggest voteshares belong to.... the neoliberal Lib-Dems, the SNP, the Greens, and the far-right Brexit Party/Reform. If you took
all of the further left-wing parties and combined their voteshares, you'd get.. perhaps 4%. And if anything, consolidation of the vote into the main two parties is
increasing. There is no huge untapped constituency hankering for socialism that can be tapped. Sorry.
You're right, there are a lot of factors to consider. Unfortunately none of them point towards this radical restructuring of British politics your surface-level reading is hoping for.
And the Blairites are saying right now that Starmer's election will be a vindication of the superiority of the Blair/Starmer approach. Do you believe that to be so? Corbyn failed twice, but Starmer will pull through; if the Labour Party is half as stupid as you think the entire UK is, then a win for Keith will mean the only reasonable conclusion will be to expel any remaining anti-Zionist Jews, savvily and realistically counter the threat of trans healthcare, and basically agree with the Tories about most things but say you're better at managing the economy.
A victory for Starmer would not be a vindication of a Blairite/Starmerite policy direction, because his
policies aren't what are garnering support. His overwhelming lead owes itself to the shiteness of the Tories, the flatlining quality of life, and unarguably better political communication skills.
Labour had 13 years to shift leftward while it was in power. Starmer's shift right is only dramatic because of what Labour looked like under Corbyn, not Brown. And you want to reward the force of reaction that purged the left from Labour with a prime ministership. You want to capitulate.
Capitulation would be abandoning all influence. If you sit in opposition and make all the right noises, while influencing nothing, you've capitulated.
I can see the seeds there for improvement-- in the publically-owned energy company, the renationalised railways, and in Angela Rayner generally. Those are things that can shift the British political window back in favour of nationalisation, which is already popular among the voterbase.