Aber said:
I'm not the one stating absolutes in subjective terms.
How would you characterise this?
As for the SDP, they were even more vacuous than the New Labour leadership candidates.
My opinion, which is not "stating an absolute". It's not in the same category as statements like "the public will never vote for a left-wing party", which is the sort of terms that have corrupted the campaign against Corbyn from the beginning.
1983 Liberal-SDP manifesto is here for a proper, dispassionate, discussion of policies:
http://www.politicsresources.net/area/uk/man/all83.htm
I simply do not understand the point you are trying to make.
This is a Liberal-SDP document, not one produced by the SDP on its own. Of course, they could never have entered an election without a document of this sort - but it doesn't alter my point: their public face was completely without political substance.
In their first party congress, they devoted a session to debating the motion "the SDP wishes to be seen as a left-of-centre party". That's not about politics; it's about trying to manipulate the perception that others have of them.
You asked that any criticism of Corbyn be based on what he has said and done and not on stories from the 'popular press'.
I've identified some key points from his own website - widespread nationalisation, NATO, and continuing belief in the 1983 Labour election manifesto.
In the 1983 election Labour came within 3% of being pushed into third place by the SDP-Liberal Alliance, which indicates to me that the policies in the 1983 Labour election manifesto were not popular. The Falklands factor and Conservative vote share is a red herring in a discussion of the relative SDP labour vote split in that election.
OK let's go back to what I did say: Corbyn is being judged not by what he says, but by what others say about him. You criticise him for supporting the "failed" 1983 Labour manifesto. Your rationale for this is:
- Gerald Kaufman once described it as "the longest suicide note in history";
- other well-known figures left the Labour party and formed the SPD;
- the electorate didn't support it at the General Election.
So you form your judgement of the 1983 manifesto not by what's in it, but by what others have said about and how
they have evaluated it. It comes full circle.
This is the basis on which most criticisms of Corbyn are made - things he espouses were clearly rejected by the public in the 1980s. You may believe the criticisms are unfair, but they are based on evidence not simply prejudice.
Are you suggesting that the whole electorate that voted for Thatcher or the SDP-Libs in 1983 had previously read the Labour manifesto and made an economically-informed judgement of it? Voters don't operate like that.
They voted on perception; and perceptions can be changed. But you cannot do that if you are too scared to challenge them in the first place. That is why Corbyn has the support he has: because people see he is prepared to challenge the perceptions that have dictated policy for the last 30-odd years. We think he has a better chance than the Blairite trio who offered themselves as aspiring leaders in the summer, and a better chance than Michael Foot in 1983.