General Election 2019

4 years ago

In conversation: Deborah Mattinson – Beyond the Red Wall

The 2019 general election was disastrous for Labour. At the heart of the party’s defeat was the loss of the so-called Red Wall, around 60 seats stretching from the Midlands to the north of England To examine how these seats were lost, we’re delighted to be joined at 1pm on September 30th by Deborah Mattinson whose new book, “Beyond the Red Wall”, examines this titanic shift in party loyalties. Deborah…

4 years ago

Labour’s future with business and the city

Thoughts from Labour in the City Chair, Sophia Morrell, following the General Election.   We are just three weeks out from Labour’s most disastrous election result since 1935 and there have already been many thousands of words offered on what went wrong. Where I’d like to offer a perspective is on Labour’s approach to business relations and wider economic policy. Renewing both of these in tandem will be critical to…

4 years ago

Not all doom and gloom

Thoughts from Labour in the City Membership Officer, Dave Clarke, on the General Election. The election result was obviously bad, but the evidence suggests that a progressive majority is possible. The result was widely heralded as a triumph for the tories, but their vote share only increased by 1.2% over the result of the 2017 general election under Theresa May’s leadership. In 2017 the combined share of the Tory and…

4 years ago

Listen to the many, not the few

Reflections on the General Election from our Vice Chair, Bilal Mahmood Anyone who tries to give you a hot take about this election with one simple answer is selling you a dud. Part of the reasons behind our defeat have arguably been generations in the making. The fall of the red wall certainly happened on Jeremy’s watch, but even his most ardent critics would begrudgingly admit it wasn’t all down…

4 years ago

Post 12 December – Where do we go from here?

Some reflections from LITC Treasurer, Christian Mole Whilst Jeremy Corbyn is correct in saying that a period of reflection is needed, the danger is that this morphs into excessive navel gazing: the reality is quite simply that we need to start thinking properly about what the electorate wants, rather than the socialist fantasyland that we seem to have targeted in an policy programme which by the time election day came…

4 years ago

There’s no such thing as a free lunch

Post general election thoughts from Labour in the City Secretary, Nick Smith. This is the first time I’ve ever felt bad voting Labour.  There are many reasons for this but mainly because of what the party has come to represent, and how it’s no longer a viable candidate to run the country. I’ve seen the party change considerably in the past few years.  While we’re good at recruiting activists this…

4 years ago

Desperate policies drowned out good ideas

Reflections on the general election from Labour in the City COO, Andrew Clark The binary nature of the bitter, hungover post-election argument in the Labour Party is dispiriting. Was it Brexit that lost it for us? The unpopular leader? The hostile media? An over-ambitious manifesto? Of course, it wasn’t one of these things – it was a bit of each. On Brexit, personally, I don’t blame the leadership for settling…