The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Labour the movie: Great plot, no box office clout

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Jeremy Corbyn draws passionate support across the country, but unless he is willing to compromise he will struggle to appeal to floating voters. long-term prospects, a poll this week gave the Tories a 13-point lead.

A previous poll last month put Corbyn’s Labour as far behind the Tories as when Michael Foot handed Ma r g a r e t Thatcher her 1983 landslide.

Theresa May has ruled out a snap general election but the reality is that, were the country to go to the polls, the Conservati­ves would be likely to increase their small majority by a massive margin.

Smith has provided the antiCorbyn­ites with some light at the end of a very dark tunnel.

The Court of Appeal ruling, overturnin­g a High Court decision allowing new party members to vote in the leadership contest, could work in his favour.

It means Labour party officials can reinstate a block imposed on tens of

Owen Smith. thousands of recruits, believed to be widely pro-Corbyn.

But, even with their exclusion, Smith’s chances of ousting the veteran left-winger from the top job look slim to none.

And the outcome seems almost irrelevant anyway.

Should Smith emerge triumphant, would it make much difference?

Four years down the line, if the party gets that long, who knows?

My hunch is that far too much damage has been done for a sudden reversal of fortune to take place.

Given the uncertaint­y following the Brexit vote, it is likely the British people’s natural conservati­sm (with a small “c”) will come to the fore. A vote for the safety of the status quo in those circumstan­ces would hardly be surprising. That said, Labour cannot simply give in.

The game is not lost completely if the party can move on from this toxic episode by avoiding a split and uniting behind whoever is elected leader next month. UK democracy only works if there is a strong opposition, after all. More impor

tantly from the party’s point of view, it owes it to those who have gone before to rebuild trust and support.

The aim must be for Labour to again become a dominant force in British politics.

The party leadership can not simply expect its followers to always be there.

That means if the members want Corbyn, those in the parliament­ary Labour party who don’t will – for now – have to like it or lump it.

As musician and activist Billy Bragg pointed out this week: “People are no longer happy to be taken for granted.”

By way of example, he pointed to the Liberal Democrats’ decision to go into power with the Tories in 2010, Labour assumption in Scotland it could always rely on the working class vote and the Conservati­ves’ belief voters would back Cameron on the EU. He’s right. The PLP must listen to and respect its members.

But Corbyn – if he remains at the helm – will also have to show some willing.

He will have to prove to his MPs, as well as lost Labour voters, that he is serious about winning and that he can compromise. PRIVATE school students are three times more likely to appeal the results of their exams than youngsters at a local authority school.

Statistics from the Scottish Qualificat­ions Authority showed that in 2015 independen­t schools appealed 6% of exam results compared with 2.1% of results that were appealed by council-run secondarie­s.

Labour education spokesman Iain Gray criticised the Scottish Government, saying: “Kezia Dugdale and I have raised this with SNP ministers again and again, but it seems that they could not care less about it.” LABOUR’S only Scottish MP has accused Jeremy Corbyn of a lack of understand­ing of the political dynamic in Scotland by failing to rule out an alliance with the SNP.

Ian Murray, who resigned as shadow Scottish secretary in June, said the SNP’s proposal for full fiscal autonomy would create a £7.6 billion hole in Scotland’s economy.

His successor, the English MP Dave Anderson, said an SNP alliance might be a price worth paying.

Mr Murray said: “This isn’t the first time Jeremy has shown a lack of understand­ing.”

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