Jamie Reed takes truth drug
I suggested here that Labour's acting leader Harriet Harman must have taken a truth drug when she admitted in an interview in the "Independent" that Labour had the wrong message and was not trusted by the electorate: the interview produced the headline
"Harriet Harman interview: even labour supporters were glad we didn't win the election says interim leader."
Now it seems that Copeland MP Jamie Reed must also have been at the Sodium Pentathol: he writes "The Last Word" column in the "Progress" website and today's is a doozy.
http://www.progressonline.org.uk/2015/06/19/the-last-word-bring-out-your-dead/
The article is called "Bring Out Your Dead" and is full of such language, which appears deliberately designed to evoke a direct comparison between Labour's recent campaign and The Black Death.
Although I do not agree with everything Jamie says - in particular, he seems to be acutely aware of all Tony Blair's strengths and completely unable to perceive his weaknesses - he certainly does not pull any punches about the Labour campaign which he was very recently part of. He writes
"We chose not to undertake the heavy lifting necessary to rebuild public trust and re-energise a tired movement. We embraced foggy thinking and unconvincing platitudes. As a party and a movement, we got what we deserved."
In the ten years I have known Jamie Reed I have never agreed with anything he has ever said or written as much as I agree with that last sentence.
"Harriet Harman interview: even labour supporters were glad we didn't win the election says interim leader."
Now it seems that Copeland MP Jamie Reed must also have been at the Sodium Pentathol: he writes "The Last Word" column in the "Progress" website and today's is a doozy.
http://www.progressonline.org.uk/2015/06/19/the-last-word-bring-out-your-dead/
The article is called "Bring Out Your Dead" and is full of such language, which appears deliberately designed to evoke a direct comparison between Labour's recent campaign and The Black Death.
Although I do not agree with everything Jamie says - in particular, he seems to be acutely aware of all Tony Blair's strengths and completely unable to perceive his weaknesses - he certainly does not pull any punches about the Labour campaign which he was very recently part of. He writes
"We chose not to undertake the heavy lifting necessary to rebuild public trust and re-energise a tired movement. We embraced foggy thinking and unconvincing platitudes. As a party and a movement, we got what we deserved."
In the ten years I have known Jamie Reed I have never agreed with anything he has ever said or written as much as I agree with that last sentence.
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