Except for that, he'd be the most interesting choice.
Even if either Milliband or Balls (both NuLab loyalists) become PM, I imagine there will be a reassertion of the socialist left, theirs has been the only credible critique of late.
What the party needs is someone with the charisma of Obama and serious left wing policy goals.
I doubt there's anyone like that in the party. Any likely candidates will have been purged.
The Lib Dems are going to have more chance of winning than NuLab will.
Guardian - Jeremy Seabrook - The politics of Impotence
New Labour was thus enlisted on the side of the "forces of conservatism", against which Blair is supposed to have set his face to sternly. With its wholehearted submission to the economics of globalisation, New Labour at the same time provided a strong bulwark against any significant discussion of its political consequences. This is why debate in Britain has been parochial and trivial, and may be the reason why many have voluntarily disfranchised themselves. Popular perception that there is no difference between the Conservatives and New Labour is not a result of apathy or ignorance: it is a proper response to a collusive mainstream agreement on the absence of alternatives.
This is why debate in Britain has been parochial and trivial, and may be the reason why many have voluntarily disfranchised themselves. Popular perception that there is no difference between the Conservatives and New Labour is not a result of apathy or ignorance: it is a proper response to a collusive mainstream agreement on the absence of alternatives.
Excellent.
Otherwise the natural floor is somewhere around 20-25%. And Labour is certainly heading in that direction.