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PostPosted: Sat Sep 19, 2015 10:29 am 
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The 9 charts that show the 'left-wing' Jeremy Corbyn policies the public actually agrees with


Jeremy Corbyn has been named the leader of the Labour party after a landslide election victory.

The left-winger's lead in the polls had been greeted with trepidation by established figures in the party. He's been branded unelectable, with some warning he would take the party down with him.

Tony Blair has described some of Mr Corbyn's policies as “old-fashioned". But on the issues, it turns out the public agree with a lot of what Mr Corbyn has to say.

Putting railways back into public sector ownership has cross-party support, with even Conservative supporters divided evenly over the issue - 42 per cent back renationalising the railways; 42 per cent oppose it.

Labour party policy under a Jeremy Corbyn leadership would support the renationalisation of the railways, which has overwhelming support from the public.

Mr Corbyn says he wants to bring back the 50% tax rate, which applied to those paid £150,000 (roughly the top 1 per cent of earners).

He’s also said he would be in favour of going higher if it meant raising more money. Is there a public appetite for this? There may be: YouGov polling found 56 per cent of the public support a 75 per cent top rate of tax similar to that proposed by France’s Francois Hollande, with only 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn opposes the £100bn renewal of Britain's Trident nuclear system and campaigns across the world for the scrapping of weapons of mass destruction. He is a long-time supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and is on of its three vice-chairs.

It appears the public share his opposition to renewing Britain's nuclear deterrent - a poll for ComRes last year found 64 per cent of the public wanted to see an international convention on banning nuclear weapons.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to bring down the housing benefit bill is to control private rents, which have become a larger and larger part of Britain’s housing mix in the last few decades.

According to YouGov, a plurality of the public would support the state directly setting rent levels at 45 per cent to 43 per cent. For more generalised rent controls, the pollster found earlier this year that only 6.8 per cent of the public are opposed with 59 per cent in favour.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to control spending on tax credits without pushing people into poverty is to legislate for a higher living wage. George Osborne says he agrees in theory and introduced the ‘national living wage’, which the Living Wage Foundation says is not actually a living wage, though a welcome increase in the minimum wage. But what about a real living wage?

Polling predating Osborne’s living wage announcement found that 60 per cent of the public support a legal mandatory living wage with 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn announced a £10bn plan to scrap tuition fees: £7.1bn would be the cost of providing free university education for all and £3bn would be the cost of reinstating maintenance grants scrapped by George Osborne.

Pledging to axe tuition fees entirely is so radical in today's politics that polling companies have not bothered to ask the question for years, but 49 per cent of people backed Ed Miliband's pledge to cut tuition fees from £9,000 to £6,000 earlier this year, which tells us Mr Corbyn's policy must have public backing.

One of the defining features of Jeremy Corbyn is his strong opposition to the Iraq War, which he claims is a major factor in the problems currently haunting the Middle East. He described the decision to invade Iraq in 2003 as the worst legacy of Tony Blair's government. The public share his opposition to the Iraq War, albeit in hindsight.


Public opinion again chimed with Mr Corbyn's views when it came to whether Britain should take part in air strikes over Syria when evidence emerged of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons against his own citizens.

source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/po ... 07148.html

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PostPosted: Sat Sep 19, 2015 2:54 pm 
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captain cab wrote:
The 9 charts that show the 'left-wing' Jeremy Corbyn policies the public actually agrees with


Jeremy Corbyn has been named the leader of the Labour party after a landslide election victory.

The left-winger's lead in the polls had been greeted with trepidation by established figures in the party. He's been branded unelectable, with some warning he would take the party down with him.

Tony Blair has described some of Mr Corbyn's policies as “old-fashioned". But on the issues, it turns out the public agree with a lot of what Mr Corbyn has to say.

Putting railways back into public sector ownership has cross-party support, with even Conservative supporters divided evenly over the issue - 42 per cent back renationalising the railways; 42 per cent oppose it.

Labour party policy under a Jeremy Corbyn leadership would support the renationalisation of the railways, which has overwhelming support from the public.

Mr Corbyn says he wants to bring back the 50% tax rate, which applied to those paid £150,000 (roughly the top 1 per cent of earners).

He’s also said he would be in favour of going higher if it meant raising more money. Is there a public appetite for this? There may be: YouGov polling found 56 per cent of the public support a 75 per cent top rate of tax similar to that proposed by France’s Francois Hollande, with only 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn opposes the £100bn renewal of Britain's Trident nuclear system and campaigns across the world for the scrapping of weapons of mass destruction. He is a long-time supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and is on of its three vice-chairs.

It appears the public share his opposition to renewing Britain's nuclear deterrent - a poll for ComRes last year found 64 per cent of the public wanted to see an international convention on banning nuclear weapons.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to bring down the housing benefit bill is to control private rents, which have become a larger and larger part of Britain’s housing mix in the last few decades.

According to YouGov, a plurality of the public would support the state directly setting rent levels at 45 per cent to 43 per cent. For more generalised rent controls, the pollster found earlier this year that only 6.8 per cent of the public are opposed with 59 per cent in favour.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to control spending on tax credits without pushing people into poverty is to legislate for a higher living wage. George Osborne says he agrees in theory and introduced the ‘national living wage’, which the Living Wage Foundation says is not actually a living wage, though a welcome increase in the minimum wage. But what about a real living wage?

Polling predating Osborne’s living wage announcement found that 60 per cent of the public support a legal mandatory living wage with 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn announced a £10bn plan to scrap tuition fees: £7.1bn would be the cost of providing free university education for all and £3bn would be the cost of reinstating maintenance grants scrapped by George Osborne.

Pledging to axe tuition fees entirely is so radical in today's politics that polling companies have not bothered to ask the question for years, but 49 per cent of people backed Ed Miliband's pledge to cut tuition fees from £9,000 to £6,000 earlier this year, which tells us Mr Corbyn's policy must have public backing.

One of the defining features of Jeremy Corbyn is his strong opposition to the Iraq War, which he claims is a major factor in the problems currently haunting the Middle East. He described the decision to invade Iraq in 2003 as the worst legacy of Tony Blair's government. The public share his opposition to the Iraq War, albeit in hindsight.


Public opinion again chimed with Mr Corbyn's views when it came to whether Britain should take part in air strikes over Syria when evidence emerged of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons against his own citizens.

source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/po ... 07148.html



Even the pollsters are with JC mmmmmmmmmmmmm lets hope it lasts :D

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PostPosted: Sat Sep 19, 2015 3:22 pm 
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trotskys twin wrote:
captain cab wrote:
The 9 charts that show the 'left-wing' Jeremy Corbyn policies the public actually agrees with


Jeremy Corbyn has been named the leader of the Labour party after a landslide election victory.

The left-winger's lead in the polls had been greeted with trepidation by established figures in the party. He's been branded unelectable, with some warning he would take the party down with him.

Tony Blair has described some of Mr Corbyn's policies as “old-fashioned". But on the issues, it turns out the public agree with a lot of what Mr Corbyn has to say.

Putting railways back into public sector ownership has cross-party support, with even Conservative supporters divided evenly over the issue - 42 per cent back renationalising the railways; 42 per cent oppose it.

Labour party policy under a Jeremy Corbyn leadership would support the renationalisation of the railways, which has overwhelming support from the public.

Mr Corbyn says he wants to bring back the 50% tax rate, which applied to those paid £150,000 (roughly the top 1 per cent of earners).

He’s also said he would be in favour of going higher if it meant raising more money. Is there a public appetite for this? There may be: YouGov polling found 56 per cent of the public support a 75 per cent top rate of tax similar to that proposed by France’s Francois Hollande, with only 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn opposes the £100bn renewal of Britain's Trident nuclear system and campaigns across the world for the scrapping of weapons of mass destruction. He is a long-time supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and is on of its three vice-chairs.

It appears the public share his opposition to renewing Britain's nuclear deterrent - a poll for ComRes last year found 64 per cent of the public wanted to see an international convention on banning nuclear weapons.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to bring down the housing benefit bill is to control private rents, which have become a larger and larger part of Britain’s housing mix in the last few decades.

According to YouGov, a plurality of the public would support the state directly setting rent levels at 45 per cent to 43 per cent. For more generalised rent controls, the pollster found earlier this year that only 6.8 per cent of the public are opposed with 59 per cent in favour.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to control spending on tax credits without pushing people into poverty is to legislate for a higher living wage. George Osborne says he agrees in theory and introduced the ‘national living wage’, which the Living Wage Foundation says is not actually a living wage, though a welcome increase in the minimum wage. But what about a real living wage?

Polling predating Osborne’s living wage announcement found that 60 per cent of the public support a legal mandatory living wage with 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn announced a £10bn plan to scrap tuition fees: £7.1bn would be the cost of providing free university education for all and £3bn would be the cost of reinstating maintenance grants scrapped by George Osborne.

Pledging to axe tuition fees entirely is so radical in today's politics that polling companies have not bothered to ask the question for years, but 49 per cent of people backed Ed Miliband's pledge to cut tuition fees from £9,000 to £6,000 earlier this year, which tells us Mr Corbyn's policy must have public backing.

One of the defining features of Jeremy Corbyn is his strong opposition to the Iraq War, which he claims is a major factor in the problems currently haunting the Middle East. He described the decision to invade Iraq in 2003 as the worst legacy of Tony Blair's government. The public share his opposition to the Iraq War, albeit in hindsight.


Public opinion again chimed with Mr Corbyn's views when it came to whether Britain should take part in air strikes over Syria when evidence emerged of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons against his own citizens.

source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/po ... 07148.html



Even the pollsters are with JC mmmmmmmmmmmmm lets hope it lasts :D



You can hope, but it won't last, it never existed in the first place.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 20, 2015 6:25 pm 
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jimbo wrote:
trotskys twin wrote:
captain cab wrote:
The 9 charts that show the 'left-wing' Jeremy Corbyn policies the public actually agrees with


Jeremy Corbyn has been named the leader of the Labour party after a landslide election victory.

The left-winger's lead in the polls had been greeted with trepidation by established figures in the party. He's been branded unelectable, with some warning he would take the party down with him.

Tony Blair has described some of Mr Corbyn's policies as “old-fashioned". But on the issues, it turns out the public agree with a lot of what Mr Corbyn has to say.

Putting railways back into public sector ownership has cross-party support, with even Conservative supporters divided evenly over the issue - 42 per cent back renationalising the railways; 42 per cent oppose it.

Labour party policy under a Jeremy Corbyn leadership would support the renationalisation of the railways, which has overwhelming support from the public.

Mr Corbyn says he wants to bring back the 50% tax rate, which applied to those paid £150,000 (roughly the top 1 per cent of earners).

He’s also said he would be in favour of going higher if it meant raising more money. Is there a public appetite for this? There may be: YouGov polling found 56 per cent of the public support a 75 per cent top rate of tax similar to that proposed by France’s Francois Hollande, with only 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn opposes the £100bn renewal of Britain's Trident nuclear system and campaigns across the world for the scrapping of weapons of mass destruction. He is a long-time supporter of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and is on of its three vice-chairs.

It appears the public share his opposition to renewing Britain's nuclear deterrent - a poll for ComRes last year found 64 per cent of the public wanted to see an international convention on banning nuclear weapons.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to bring down the housing benefit bill is to control private rents, which have become a larger and larger part of Britain’s housing mix in the last few decades.

According to YouGov, a plurality of the public would support the state directly setting rent levels at 45 per cent to 43 per cent. For more generalised rent controls, the pollster found earlier this year that only 6.8 per cent of the public are opposed with 59 per cent in favour.

Mr Corbyn says the best way to control spending on tax credits without pushing people into poverty is to legislate for a higher living wage. George Osborne says he agrees in theory and introduced the ‘national living wage’, which the Living Wage Foundation says is not actually a living wage, though a welcome increase in the minimum wage. But what about a real living wage?

Polling predating Osborne’s living wage announcement found that 60 per cent of the public support a legal mandatory living wage with 31 per cent opposed.

Mr Corbyn announced a £10bn plan to scrap tuition fees: £7.1bn would be the cost of providing free university education for all and £3bn would be the cost of reinstating maintenance grants scrapped by George Osborne.

Pledging to axe tuition fees entirely is so radical in today's politics that polling companies have not bothered to ask the question for years, but 49 per cent of people backed Ed Miliband's pledge to cut tuition fees from £9,000 to £6,000 earlier this year, which tells us Mr Corbyn's policy must have public backing.

One of the defining features of Jeremy Corbyn is his strong opposition to the Iraq War, which he claims is a major factor in the problems currently haunting the Middle East. He described the decision to invade Iraq in 2003 as the worst legacy of Tony Blair's government. The public share his opposition to the Iraq War, albeit in hindsight.


Public opinion again chimed with Mr Corbyn's views when it came to whether Britain should take part in air strikes over Syria when evidence emerged of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad using chemical weapons against his own citizens.

source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/po ... 07148.html



Even the pollsters are with JC mmmmmmmmmmmmm lets hope it lasts :D



You can hope, but it won't last, it never existed in the first place.


So come on Jimbo what of his policies dont you like and why :?:

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 20, 2015 7:30 pm 
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None of them, not one. Why? Because they are all fiscally imprudent. And Corbin is a mentalist. And a vegetarian. Hitler was a vegaterian and look where meat dodging got him.

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PostPosted: Sun Sep 20, 2015 7:33 pm 
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jimbo wrote:
None of them, not one. Why? Because they are all fiscally imprudent. And Corbin is a mentalist. And a vegetarian. Hitler was a vegaterian and look where meat dodging got him.


come on Jimbo - comparing jezza to hitler? really?

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 21, 2015 9:01 am 
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It appears the public share his opposition to renewing Britain's nuclear deterrent - a poll for ComRes last year found 64 per cent of the public wanted to see an international convention on banning nuclear weapons.


Wonderful sentiments, but until every country does ban them and can prove that they have then we can't...and that will never happen unless they find an even more armageddon inducing weapons than those Nuclear weapons the world already has...can't ever See North Korea's head of Nuclear Weaponry "General Suk Mi Dik" ever giving up theirs.


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PostPosted: Mon Sep 21, 2015 4:22 pm 
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jimbo wrote:
None of them, not one. Why? Because they are all fiscally imprudent. And Corbin is a mentalist. And a vegetarian. Hitler was a vegaterian and look where meat dodging got him.


Yer attention to detail is to be admired..................................................what policy in fiscally imprudent and HOW??

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 21, 2015 4:23 pm 
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bloodnock wrote:
Quote:
It appears the public share his opposition to renewing Britain's nuclear deterrent - a poll for ComRes last year found 64 per cent of the public wanted to see an international convention on banning nuclear weapons.


Wonderful sentiments, but until every country does ban them and can prove that they have then we can't...and that will never happen unless they find an even more armageddon inducing weapons than those Nuclear weapons the world already has...can't ever See North Korea's head of Nuclear Weaponry "General Suk Mi Dik" ever giving up theirs.


SIMPLISTIC #-o

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 21, 2015 4:38 pm 
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captain cab wrote:
jimbo wrote:
None of them, not one. Why? Because they are all fiscally imprudent. And Corbin is a mentalist. And a vegetarian. Hitler was a vegaterian and look where meat dodging got him.


come on Jimbo - comparing jezza to hitler? really?


I know, comparisons are odious, at least Adolf sang the national anthem!

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 21, 2015 4:42 pm 
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trotskys twin wrote:
jimbo wrote:
None of them, not one. Why? Because they are all fiscally imprudent. And Corbin is a mentalist. And a vegetarian. Hitler was a vegaterian and look where meat dodging got him.


Yer attention to detail is to be admired..................................................what policy in fiscally imprudent and HOW??


I did say all of them....

Why? Who said" we'll squeeze the rich until their pips squeak"? And ending up squeezing everyone because they're weren't enough rich to squeeze?

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PostPosted: Mon Sep 21, 2015 4:47 pm 
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jimbo wrote:
captain cab wrote:
jimbo wrote:
None of them, not one. Why? Because they are all fiscally imprudent. And Corbin is a mentalist. And a vegetarian. Hitler was a vegaterian and look where meat dodging got him.


come on Jimbo - comparing jezza to hitler? really?


I know, comparisons are odious, at least Adolf sang the national anthem!


WHICH WAS ABOUT THE NATION NOT SOME POXY OLD FEKKING HOARE :badgrin:

GERMANY OVER ALL, ITS CALLED AND DONT MENTION ADOLF OR ANY LEADER,,,,,,,,,,,,JASUS YER THICK

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 22, 2015 6:42 am 
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TT, I've been trying for ages to think who you remind me of, and then I saw in the paper that they are thinking of reviving the Robert Lindsay "citizen smith". With you in the starring role as the Corbynista "SENIOR CITIZEN SMITH" power to the people!

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 22, 2015 3:34 pm 
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jimbo wrote:
TT, I've been trying for ages to think who you remind me of, and then I saw in the paper that they are thinking of reviving the Robert Lindsay "citizen smith". With you in the starring role as the Corbynista "SENIOR CITIZEN SMITH" power to the people!


Good money in that MUSH :wink:

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PostPosted: Tue Sep 22, 2015 10:41 pm 
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jimbo wrote:
TT, I've been trying for ages to think who you remind me of, and then I saw in the paper that they are thinking of reviving the Robert Lindsay "citizen smith". With you in the starring role as the Corbynista "SENIOR CITIZEN SMITH" power to the people!

You nailed it, I couldn't think who he reminded me of, but you nailed it!

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