Casdon
I wish it were different, but I believe that there is no longer any chance of bringing people together, the gap is unbridgeable. The ire of the left of the party is focussed on Keir Starmer, but fundamentally he isn’t the problem, it’s the dogmatic denial that the party has to change that’s the problem. You can keep on shroud waving on the left, but the country has moved on, and the party has to as well, if not Starmer there will be another centre right leader. That’s why a split will come.
I have a feeling you are right Casdon. I agree with this quote from Lisa Nandy: “I disliked the cults around Blair and Corbyn: one man doesn’t change things”.
There is an interview with her in the Summer Special edition of the New Statesman. The way I read it is that she sees what I have seen David Owen elsewhere call Starmer's "inexperience" as an asset. He’s not steeped in career politics. He’s come in a lot more recently, and he’s very challenging of why people hold the views they do. I think that has helped us – it’s one thing to feel the public mood, but another to turn that into a strategy. When we are together as a team, you can see how the strength of the people he has put around him makes him much more concrete.”
I also have never seen leadership as only about one person. If he can create a team that can make things happen - something we haven't had for 12 years - he could have the makings of a great leader. He will, if he becomes PM, be taking over at a time very like the post-war era when great things could, and must, be achieved.