Cromwell wrote:Every issue he campaigned on was domestic - Brexit was hardly mentioned. He didn't draw a crowd of 10,000 in Gateshead by talking about what type of Brexit (I'd like to see anyone do that!), he enthused them by talking about supporting industry and creating manufacturing jobs!
And that is perfectly in line with what I had been saying for months. Despite the best efforts of Blairites/Brownites (BBs) and the media to destroy him, Corbyn managed to drag the party kicking and screaming back to a centre left position, a position populated by millions of disenfranchised voters.
He did not *buy* the young, the students or old Labourites, as those on the right and in the press would have us believe, he simply laid out his stall and got on with things. He went out and spoke to people, engaged, and he was good at it.
I read today that former shadow chancellor, Chris Leslie, says Labour's election result was "not good enough", and he is right. Not being the biggest party in an election cannot and should not be described as a "win": it wasn't. However, Leslie and his ilk have big questions to answer in that regard.
When the ineffective Ed Miliband managed to reduce the number of Labour's MPs in a "winnable" election he was rightly dumped. There was a backlash in the party against the Blairites and Brownites so Corbyn stood on a platform for a broader range of candidates and a an open debate about the future of the party. He beat the old 'New Labour' trio of Cooper, Burnham and Kendall - and was never forgiven.
For the following 15 months the BBs constantly stabbed him in the back, refusing to accept his taking Labour in a new *old* direction, and the media picked up the baton on their behalf. He was relentlessly vilified in a way not seen since Michael Foot, to the point where his leadership was challenged in July 2016. He won hands down over Owen Smith and it was only at that point that the BBs finally started to shut up.
Corbyn has only had the support of the party for roughly ten months, and we will never know how well Labour could have done in the election had the party been a little bit more behind him over a longer period. Leslie is right, Labour did not win, but he and the other BBs need to sit down and ask themselves what part they played in that.