Quote Originally Posted by CardiffIrish2 View Post
I wasn't fussed on corbyn and wanted a more moderate Labour leader.
However he's grown on me during this campaign, he's acted with integrity, professionalism (interview on women's hour aside ) and he's offered some postive Policies.

The Conservatives and their shameful propagandists have proposed nothing but fear of Corbyn, they are meant to be he government and standing up for themselves but a clear example of their pathetic campaign was Boris Johnson having a childish spat on Sky news.

Utterly pathetic. David Cameron in comparison looks a world class statesman compared to this lot.
I agree with you. I have been conditioned to believe Corbyn is bad, can't lead, and Socialism will cost this country. Every time I listen to him, I find it hard to disagree with him. He's appealing to my more Socialistic instincts, and is proving that the tycoons that run UK media are out for themselves.

It was fear that won Brexit, and fear that defeated Brown and kept Miliband out. With people now viewing a "post-Brexit" world (not that we are there yet!) as being "actually ok, not as bad as they said", sooner or later people will stop voting to avoid the worst scenario, and start voting to get the most positive scenario.

Theresa May is answering pre-selected questions, and as soon as things go off script, her bottom lip quivers and her face contorts as she tries to suppress her REAL agenda.

She called this election because she believed she could get a huge mandate to push through some of her REAL policies.

Corbyn looks week in Parliament because his back benchers are like spoiled children, looking at watches and ceilings whenever he speaks. His back benchers are scared of the headlines in Murdoch's out-dated media.

Corbyn is a decent bloke, and he is far more popular on the streets than Murdoch wants us to know, and far more believable than the weak Labour MPs have given him credit for.

If the next Parliament has a similar Tory majority to what it currently enjoys, then Corbyn has won.

I'm hoping he does even better, and we get the coalition of "chaos" that May warns us of. Far better to invest in the country because austerity is not working. The child poverty figures back that up.

We already live in a world where, if you argue every kid should have the same opportunities, you're seen as a revolutionary Bolshevik. The National Debt has risen by Ł1 trillion in 7 years of Tory cutbacks. Household debt continues to rise as credit remains unrealistically low. If we are going into debt, surely it's better that the money is put into the future of the country, because we have very little to show for our spending in the last 7 years.