nayimfromthehalfwayline
Andy Thompson
Isnt Rover Indian now? Or Chinese? I forget, pretty sure its changed hands a couple of times...
You said we were restricted by the EU to invest in manufacturing - I have shown you this was not the case, this is not philosophical debate there is tones the government are able to do (and didn't ) under the EU rules.Who invests though? Not companies, because they just buy-in ready made from abroad. And not governments because they've outsourced all their business to companies.
Infrastructure is much more than people too. It's transport, buildings, underwriting loans. The way to alleviate concern about Nissan pulling out or the tariffs for importing from Germany is for the government to relaunch Rover.
You said we were restricted by the EU to invest in manufacturing - I have shown you this was not the case, this is not philosophical debate there is tones the government are able to do (and didn't ) under the EU rules.
I don't think it will happen but if they put a limit of say 5 years on it as Poland suggested then the deal would go through, there's also Labour people like Snell who have hinted they'd back a revised deal like that particularly as there will be a small change to put in more protection for environment regulations and workers rights.
The last paragraph is it though. It works for shareholders, not society
If companies have no roots, they really are just mining workers until they spot a slightly better seam somewhere else, then bugger off.
The EU was not why our manufacturering went down and doesn't prevent the state from improving it if it desired.Mainly disincentivised. But also to some extent restricted - see state aid laws
If a few flighty neo-liberal organisations are getting twitchy at the state reasserting some authority, I'd take that as a good sign
Before the EU we had our own manufactures, rather than being reliant of Japanese good favour (based on access to cheap eastern european labour) and being able to buy German. Imagine if we produced and owned our own stuff again.
This conversation started out of the description of Labours plans being instantly dreamland stuff, and so then described as an opening gambit toward a solution.
Quite rightly it was pointed out that time has passed. And instead of playing PR and flimflam, if Labour have a desired solution they should be pushing for it directly.
They could be rallying Parliament behind it, leading the push for change, and really taking charge of proceedings.
Instead they, according to you, are more interested in playing games, manoeuvring, and making sure the Tories get shown up.
This is the fundamental problem I have. And what you reply isnt solutions, its rhetoric.
And yes - you are right. The government have fudged up. But the UK collective pay the price. And while the Conservatives have let us down, I fail to see how the same cannot be levelled at Labour to.
The Lib Dems are toothless, I know, but at least they have had a firm stance/solution throughout. All parties should have the same conviction.
As I said, the small time flimflam really shouldnt be the priority right now. A proper vision, and solution, should be.
And Corbyn saying he can get a unicorn deal is not it. Him using that as an opening stance is locking the door after the horse has bolted, this isnt the time for it and the EU have no need to entertain it. He is wasting time. And his preoccupation with apportioning blame is just getting in the way.
If he was a real leader he would have a bigger picture perspective.
I think we are a lot less strong economy than we think we are. We may be a member of G7 and notionally sixth strongest economy, but I'm not sure that truly reflects shifting economic power in the global economy. We are hugely reliant on our (financial) services but everyone is after a slice of that pie, the financial world is being heavily disrupted by new technologies, I know from speaking to senior execs there are banks in Africa that have a better grasp of the future of banking than some UK banks. Personally, in an exceptionally mobile business world, I think our economic position is much more precarious than many people would think. Of course a lot of people are well aware of this - but a lot of those people have homes in many countries.
One thing that has worked in our favour is that people with money and power like to live and work in London. But London has changed for the worse in recent years - and if it has less pulling power - that will also make a big difference.
I was just posting what came up on the BBC, is about the only "news" today in the politics section.
I know, my Corbyn bashing comment was directed at Chukka Ummuna, champion of the "People's Vote."
I mean this lot are acting like there is this huge surge of support amongst Labour MPs for what they want, and Corbyn is the dam that's holding it all back. But it's not true and they know it; if it was, they'd table their amendment and watch as a huge Labour rebellion against Corbyn took place, which they would love as the side aim of the likes of Ummuna is to undermine Corbyn at every opportunity. Unfortunately for him, he isn't very good at politics.
I thought from the convention there was an appetite for a referendum, and he basically quite begrudgingly accepted it as a "maybe if all else fails" option? Im pretty confident he doesnt want one, though cant say I know the workings or will of the party to know if he is the particular problem in this case.