Hundreds Attend Corbyn Rally In Liverpool
Today’s blog is written by political satirist Owen Smith Junior – currently on a zero-hours contract.
One of my political heroes is Margaret Hodge MP. She is never afraid to stand up to bullying and always speaks her mind. Margaret, who helped launch the leadership challenge against Corbyn by bringing forward a vote of no confidence, said the team at the top of Labour had to step in to stop MPs being “intimidated, bullied, harassed”. “If this is the new kind of politics it is a dirty politics that I want no part of,” Margaret told the Today programme. “Bricks being thrown through windows, people being called ‘scum’, people being insulted, people being bullied, people being intimidated”.
Bearing in mind her vision and insight I decided to take my camera along to a Momentum rally in Liverpool last Thursday. Before I went I made sure I topped up my health insurance.
The Momentum meeting was held at the Liner hotel which offers “one of the largest event spaces in the City Centre”. Momentum estimated there were at least 50,000 people at the rally (typical of the lies peddled by the extreme left) but, as the ‘Brittanic Suite’ seats only 600 people, there could only have been around 750 people as there was also a lot of people standing up.
The meeting was kicked off by the so called ‘Liverpool Socialist Singers’. Listening to them I thought to myself how wonderful the music of Cliff Richard was compared to their boring songs about peace, Trade Unions and workers rights.
Councillor Alice Bennet banged on about how shocking it was that people now had to pay £25 to register to vote in the leadership election. She said this was “designed to disenfranchise the poor and low paid”. It is precisely because thousands of poor and low paid people paid £3 and voted for Jeremy Corbyn, that the Labour Party is now in such a mess!
Dr Alex Scott Samuel droned on about how privatisation was destroying the NHS. He criticised the record of Owen Smith and talked about Owen’s career history working for major international pharmaceutical companies. Personally I will be voting for Owen. His lucrative highly paid jobs working for multinational drug companies equip him for the role of Prime minister. Yes he’s had a couple of low points in his career but you can’t blame him for the $762 million fine Amgen got for illegally promoting the drug ‘Aranesp’ to cancer patients in a way that increased the likelihood of their deaths. Yes prosecutors said that the company was “pursuing profits at the risk of patient safety” as it promoted a non-approved use of Aranesp. Still you can’t blame Owen because he was only in charge of corporate affairs, corporate and internal communications and public affairs at the British division of Amgen while the biotech company was being investigated in 2008. Owen has gone on record with great ideas about improving the NHS. He has no problem with the involvement of private companies in delivering NHS services and welcomes them, “Where they can bring good ideas, where they can bring valuable services that the NHS is not able to deliver”.
Owen has gone on record reflecting many of the ideas of my hero Tony Blair; On PFI (Private Finance Initiative) schemes, Owen said “We’ve had PFI in Wales, we’ve had a hospital built down in Baglan through PFI. If PFI works, then let’s do it.” Again Owen has shown vision when talking about education: “City academies in certain parts of inner city Britain, where schools were failing, where children were not being well served, have made great inroads”.
Another of my political heroes is Hilary Benn. Thankfully he hasn’t inherited the dreadful political genes of his father. Now that he writes for THE SUN he has really gone up in my estimation. Hopefully, like Tony Blair, he will now become a close personal friend of Rupert Murdoch (another one of my heroes). Writing in the Sun recently in support of Angela Eagle he said “just look at what she’s had to deal with in the last few days. A tide of abuse, much of it homophobic and misoginistic. A brick through her office window the day after she announced her candidacy. Death threats”. Ok it’s since emerged that no brick was thrown through her window and the leading LGBT publication ‘Pink News’ investigated the homophobic claims and found they were unfounded. However I agree with Hilary Benn (again writing in THE SUN) when he said that Angela ‘has that elusive and essential personal quality; courage”. Yes Hillary because it took courage to vote for the war in Iraq and courage to vote to bomb Syria.
Phil Maxwell is away (with the fairies)
Good overdose of irony. For a while, I thought that Margaret Hodge was worthwhile. She chaired parliamentary committees in a way that challenged political untouchables. What a shame, then that her vitriolic put-downs of Jeremy on Broadcasting House (BBC) a couple of weeks ago were a demonstration NOT of her intellect, but of her prejudice. She is, perhaps, MP for BARKING. Margaret, in a few short minutes you destroyed all goodwill that I felt toward you. I never had you down as unworthy. I do now.
I thought exactly the same, Nick
You have to remember that Margaret Hodge became Leader of Islington Council in 1982, following the defection of many Labour councillors to the SDP.
The long serving MP for The Islington North constituency, Michael O’Halloran, also defected to the SDP, but by the 1983 general election had defected to be ” Independant Labour”. The rump of the Labour Party in Islington North chose an outsider, from Haringey, as the Labour candidate, and Corbyn won that and every election since with a landslide. His relationship with the Council was never close.
As Council Leader, Hodge may have hoped for an early start to a political career. Instead she got stuck with GLC abolition, then the child abuse scandals, and did not get a winnable seat until 1994, when she was already 50, with a party leader a decade younger than her.
I love this piece its just sums up the third dimension these Blairites live in. They completely ignore what’s happening and are more than ready to use lies and distortion and personal attacks rather than reasoned argument. Owen Smith has pledged to have a better gender balance in his Cabinet. He chooses to ignore the fact that Jeremy Corbyn had a fifty/fifty gender balance in his cabinet and has always supported the fight for equal pay.
How much longer can they go on making up tales of bullying and intimidation. The latest laugh was from Conor McGinn who whined that Jeremy had threatened to phone his dad cos Conor said something Jeremy didn’t approve of. Pathetic!!
It is beyond satire and I think they know it.How much longer can they spin these lies.I remember Orgreave and the miner’s strike and Hillsbourough when they told us we were all a rabble.We are not a rabble,we are just ordinary people grasping for what is left of democracy.
I find this article completely irritating. Clearly Jeremy Corbyn poses a threat to the right wing establishment. Unfortunately this is embedded in labour party. Jeremy Corbyn offers real policies to the masses.
I take offence at momentum being defined as a cult. Get real please!
Haha Phil what a great piece!
It’s hard now to trust any of the PLP other than known Corbyn supporters but there must be MPs who will come across to us when Corbyn wins decisively. These are unprecedented times and we seek unprecedented outcomes.
Daniel Howell permalink
July 25, 2016
Please Note: Your comment is awaiting moderation.
It is beyond satire and I think they know it.How much longer can they spin these lies.I remember Orgreave and the miner’s strike and Hillsbourough when they told us we were all a rabble.We are not a rabble,we are just ordinary people grasping for what is left of democracy.