.........For example, Attlee won two elections and was certainly leftist, so he must be not of the 'modern era'. Wilson won 4 (though one was a minority government) so must be either not 'modern' or must be centrist. However, I'd say most (virtually all?) would consider Wilson well to the left of Blair, so Wilson must also be 'old era'..........
Finally, some meat on the bones.
We've already agreed that Attlee was on the left of his party, and that his example showed that I was wrong to say "
all elections are won from the centre". Ditto for Thatcher on the other wing. So, you could possibly take that as read, and not bring it up every time, maybe? Being as I have conceded the point, days ago.
Wilson is the arguable one. Being to the "left of Blair" doesn't put him on the left of his party though, does it. It doesn't make him a Labour left-winger. I'm afraid I only arrived in the country as a 14 year old towards the end of his chaotic rule, so I couldn't add my personal view as to his location on the political spectrum, but others tell me that whilst a union man he wasn't as far left as some in the party at the time. Perhaps you could enlighten me? Perhaps you could then comment on the mess he left behind?
I am not defining away the issue. I'll take any post-war version of "modern" you like for the purposes of this discussion. My definition of centrist is simply not being on the extremes of either left or right. So, centre-left for Labour, centre-right for Tory. The latter used to define themselves as one-nation Tories, but gave that up with the advent of Thatcher, who called them "wets".
So, I say again.........barring Attlee and Thatcher, (with Wilson being a conversation in progress).........name a post-war PM that was not on the centre-right or centre-left of their respective parties.